
Living in Portland, Maine — A local relocation guide. Updated June 2026. Neighborhoods, cost of living, the job market, schools, and honest trade-offs.
Portland is Maine’s largest city, its economic engine, and by a wide margin the most sought-after place to live in the state. A working waterfront that became a nationally celebrated food city, a walkable peninsula packed with brick and Victorian architecture, real cultural amenities, and the ocean at the end of every eastern street — Portland offers a genuine small-city life that draws relocators from Boston, New York, and well beyond. After thirty years covering Maine — and running JobsInMaine.com, the state’s longtime job board — here is the honest picture, neighborhood by neighborhood, of living in Portland.
Quick answer: Portland offers Maine’s strongest and most diverse job market (healthcare, finance, tech, hospitality, education), the state’s best food and cultural scene, and a walkable, coastal, genuinely urban lifestyle. The trade-off is cost: the median home price is around $695,000 and average rent near $2,300 — by far the highest in Maine, and the city has priced out many longtime residents. If you can afford it or bring a strong income, Portland is the best all-around city in the state. If affordability is the priority, nearby Lewiston, Biddeford, or Westbrook offer the Portland economy at lower cost. For current Greater Portland job openings, see JobsInMaine.com.
Portland Neighborhoods: Where to Live
Portland is really two cities in one: the dense, walkable peninsula (the historic urban core) and the more residential, family-oriented mainland neighborhoods that stretch inland. Where you land depends on budget, life stage, and whether you want to walk to dinner or have a yard.
Munjoy Hill / East End
The signature Portland story. Munjoy Hill — “the Hill” — rises above the eastern end of the peninsula, crowned by the 68-acre Eastern Promenade with its sweeping views of Casco Bay. For most of the 20th century it was a working-class immigrant enclave with a rough reputation; over the past two decades it has transformed into one of the city’s most desirable (and expensive) neighborhoods, where million-dollar condos now rise among the old triple-decker houses along narrow side streets. Longtime residents have real, complicated feelings about the change — rents that were a few hundred dollars a generation ago now run thousands, and much of the old community has been priced out. What you get for the price: ocean views, the Prom, East End Beach, walkability to the Old Port, and the best of Portland’s urban energy. East-End home prices are the highest in the city, often well over $1 million. Best for buyers with strong budgets who want the iconic Portland peninsula lifestyle.
West End
The Hill’s rival for “most beautiful neighborhood.” The West End is a preserved district of grand Victorian mansions and mature street trees on the western side of the peninsula, walkable to the Arts District and the Old Port. It has long been one of Portland’s most established, sought-after addresses — architecturally stunning, quieter than the Old Port, and still central. Expensive, but for buyers who want historic character over new construction, this is the classic choice.
East Bayside
The city’s most diverse neighborhood and, until recently, its underdog. Once an industrial pocket with a rough reputation, East Bayside has become one of Portland’s liveliest districts — home to a remarkable concentration of breweries, distilleries, and international restaurants along and around Washington Avenue, alongside immigrant families, artists, and the city’s largest public housing complex. It sits within a short walk of downtown across Franklin Street. Housing is a mix — renovated lofts and townhouses alongside more affordable multi-family — though prices have risen sharply as the neighborhood’s star has climbed. Best for those who want energy, diversity, and food/drink culture at (relatively) more accessible peninsula prices.
Parkside
Wrapped around the 55-acre Deering Oaks Park, Parkside historically carried a seedier reputation and consequently some of the peninsula’s cheapest rents — which makes it popular with students and younger renters wanting a central location on a budget. It has cleaned up considerably in recent years, helped by the Portland Farmers Market, proximity to Hadlock Field, and easy access to restaurants. Best for renters who prioritize location and price over polish.
Back Cove & Deering (mainland)
Off the peninsula, ringing the tidal basin of Back Cove, the neighborhood marks the start of Portland’s more residential, suburban side — brightly colored Victorians and single-family homes on quiet streets, with the popular 3.5-mile Back Cove Trail at the doorstep. North Deering and the greater Deering area continue that family-friendly, more affordable pattern inland. Best for families and anyone wanting a yard, more space, and lower prices while staying inside Portland.
Stroudwater, Libbytown & the more affordable pockets
For relative affordability inside Portland, look to Stroudwater (a historic village neighborhood near the Jetport), Libbytown (under-the-radar, central, near the Portland Transportation Center — great for commuters, with some of the lower home prices around $369,000), and North Deering. These areas trade peninsula walkability for lower prices and easier parking. Best for first-time buyers and commuters who want a Portland address without peninsula prices.
Cost of Living in Portland
There’s no way around it: Portland is expensive by Maine standards. The median home price sits around $695,000 as of early 2026, and average rent runs near $2,300 a month — both by far the highest in the state and comparable to some larger metros. Peninsula neighborhoods (East End, West End) run dramatically higher; mainland and inland pockets (Libbytown, North Deering, Stroudwater) are more attainable. Compared nationally, Portland is still cheaper than Boston, New York, or coastal California, which is exactly why so many people relocate here from those markets — but compared to the rest of Maine, it is the premium option. As everywhere in Maine, energy and winter heating add meaningful cost. Maine has no sales tax on groceries and a state income tax of 5.8%–7.15%.
The honest affordability reality: Portland’s rapid rise has priced out many longtime residents, and locals feel it. If you’re relocating with a strong income or from a more expensive city, Portland will feel like a relative bargain with a spectacular quality of life. If you’re moving on a Maine-scale budget, you may find better value in the surrounding communities — Westbrook, South Portland, Biddeford, or Lewiston — all within commuting distance of the Portland economy.
The Portland Job Market
This is Portland’s decisive advantage and the reason it tops every Maine relocation list: it has the strongest and most diverse economy in the state. Healthcare anchors it — Maine Medical Center, the state’s largest hospital and one of its largest employers, is based here — alongside a genuine finance and professional-services sector (Portland is a regional banking and insurance hub), a growing technology and startup scene, education, and the hospitality and food industry that made the city nationally famous. Unemployment is low and the range of professional opportunity is unmatched anywhere else in Maine.
For relocating professionals, this is the practical bottom line: if your field exists in Maine, it most likely exists in Portland, and often only in Portland at any scale. That depth is what justifies the higher cost of living for many newcomers. Browse current Greater Portland openings on JobsInMaine.com to see what’s available in your field before you commit.
Schools, Getting Around & Lifestyle
Schools: Portland Public Schools serve a large, diverse student population; many families seeking top-rated schools also look to the surrounding suburbs — Falmouth, Cape Elizabeth, Scarborough, and Yarmouth are consistently among the highest-rated districts in Maine and are popular with families who work in Portland but want suburban schools.
Getting around: The peninsula is genuinely walkable and bike-friendly — a rarity in Maine — and the Greater Portland Metro bus system serves the city, with I-295 running along the peninsula’s edge and the Portland International Jetport just four miles out. Off the peninsula, life is more car-dependent. Winter parking on the peninsula’s narrow streets is a real consideration.
Lifestyle: This is Portland’s draw — a nationally recognized food and brewery scene, the Portland Museum of Art, minor-league baseball (the Sea Dogs at Hadlock Field), working waterfront, island ferries to Casco Bay, and immediate access to both ocean and, within a couple hours, the mountains. Few cities its size offer this much.
Is Portland a Good Place to Live?
Portland is the best all-around city in Maine, and an excellent fit for: professionals who want the state’s deepest job market, remote workers and relocators from more expensive cities who want coastal urban life at a relative discount, food and culture lovers, and anyone who values walkability and the ocean. It’s a harder fit for: buyers on a Maine-scale budget (the peninsula especially), families set on top public schools (who often choose the suburbs), and anyone wanting to avoid a high cost of living. For many, the honest answer is to work in Portland and live just outside it.
For the bigger relocation picture, see our complete Moving to Maine guide, and compare with Living in Bangor and Living in Lewiston (an affordable option 30 minutes north). To see what work is available in Greater Portland, browse JobsInMaine.com — Maine’s job board for nearly 30 years.
Living in Portland FAQ
How expensive is it to live in Portland, Maine?
Portland is the most expensive city in Maine, with a median home price around $695,000 and average rent near $2,300 a month as of early 2026. Peninsula neighborhoods like the East End and West End are considerably higher; inland pockets like Libbytown and North Deering are more affordable. It remains cheaper than Boston or New York, which drives much of the relocation demand.
What is the best neighborhood in Portland, Maine?
It depends on budget and lifestyle. Munjoy Hill/East End offers iconic ocean views and walkability at the highest prices; the West End offers historic Victorian character; East Bayside brings diversity and food/drink culture at somewhat lower peninsula prices; Back Cove and Deering suit families wanting more space; and Libbytown, Stroudwater, and North Deering are the more affordable options.
Is it worth moving to Portland, Maine?
For those who can afford it, yes — Portland offers Maine’s strongest job market, best food and culture, and a walkable coastal lifestyle rare in New England. The main obstacle is cost; many newcomers choose to work in Portland and live in more affordable surrounding communities like Westbrook, South Portland, or Lewiston.
What is the job market like in Portland, Maine?
The strongest and most diverse in Maine, anchored by healthcare (Maine Medical Center), finance and insurance, a growing tech sector, education, and hospitality. If a profession exists in Maine at scale, it usually exists in Portland. Check current openings at JobsInMaine.com.
MaineGuide.com has been helping people explore, visit, and relocate to Maine since 1995 — one of the longest-running State resources on the web, and part of a Maine network that includes JobsInMaine.com.
Want central-Maine affordability instead? See our Living in Waterville guide.
Want an affordable capital-city alternative? See our Living in Augusta guide.
Priced out of Portland but want to stay close? See Living in Biddeford (20 min south) and Living in Brunswick (30 min north).