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Brookings SD Living

Cost of Living in Brookings SD: Housing, Utilities, Groceries & How It Compares to Sioux Falls

Brookings SD Cost of Living: The Real Numbers

Brookings, SD consistently ranks as one of the more affordable mid-size college towns in the Upper Midwest. With a cost of living index approximately 8–12% below the national average and South Dakota’s complete absence of state income tax, the actual purchasing power of a Brookings salary extends significantly further than equivalent incomes in nearby Minnesota or Iowa.

Housing Costs: Brookings vs. Sioux Falls

Renting

  • Brookings 1BR apartment: $750 – $900/month
  • Sioux Falls 1BR apartment: $950 – $1,200/month
  • Difference: Brookings is approximately 20–25% cheaper for rentals

Buying

  • Brookings median home price: $295,000
  • Sioux Falls median home price: $335,000
  • Difference: Brookings homes approximately 12% less expensive

Monthly Budget Breakdown for a Single Person in Brookings

  • Housing (1BR apartment): $800 – $900
  • Utilities (electric, gas, internet): $120 – $200
  • Groceries: $300 – $400 (Hy-Vee and Walmart serve Brookings)
  • Transportation (car ownership): $350 – $500 (insurance, gas, maintenance)
  • Health insurance (employer-sponsored): $150 – $300
  • Dining out / entertainment: $150 – $300
  • Total estimated monthly spend: $1,870 – $2,600

Utility Costs in Brookings, SD

Electricity

Brookings Municipal Utilities (BMU) provides electricity to city residents. Rates are among the lowest in the region — residential rates run approximately $0.09–$0.11/kWh, well below the national average of $0.17. An average 800 sq. ft. apartment uses 500–700 kWh/month, yielding $45–$77 in electric bills.

Natural Gas

Used for heating most Brookings homes. Black Hills Energy is the primary natural gas provider. Winter heating bills can run $80–$200/month for an average rental home, peaking in January and February when temperatures regularly drop below 0°F. Request the prior year’s utility history from your landlord before signing a lease.

Internet

Midco and Vast Broadband both serve Brookings with cable and fiber options. Typical plans: $45–$70/month for 200–500 Mbps service, adequate for streaming and remote work.

Groceries and Food in Brookings

Brookings has a Hy-Vee (full-service grocery), Walmart Supercenter, and Sunshine Foods. Prices are roughly 5–10% below what you’d pay in the Minneapolis suburbs for comparable items. The SDSU campus area has a growing restaurant scene, with average sit-down meals running $12–$18/person.

Transportation in Brookings

Brookings is a car-dependent city for most residents, though the compact campus area is walkable and bikeable. SDSU operates a limited campus bus system. Car insurance in South Dakota averages $1,100–$1,400/year — significantly below national averages due to low population density and minimal theft/crime rates. Gas prices in Brookings typically run $0.05–$0.15 below the national average.

South Dakota’s Tax Advantages: Real Dollar Impact

For a Brookings household earning $65,000/year, the absence of South Dakota’s state income tax represents savings of approximately $2,900–$4,500 compared to equivalent income in Minnesota (9.85% top rate) or Iowa (6% top rate). This invisible savings effectively makes every Brookings salary worth more in take-home pay, directly improving housing affordability.

Is Brookings Affordable for SDSU Graduates?

With starting salaries for SDSU engineering graduates averaging $60,000–$75,000 and entry-level positions in agriculture tech, healthcare, and education running $42,000–$58,000, Brookings’s housing costs remain within the 28–30% PITI-to-income guideline at current prices — making it one of the few college towns in the Midwest where graduates can realistically afford to buy a home within 3–5 years of graduation.

Marcus Thompson

Marcus Thompson is a Brookings, South Dakota-based real estate analyst and writer with over 12 years of experience covering the Upper Midwest housing market. A South Dakota State University graduate (Economics, Class of 2012), Marcus spent nearly a decade as a licensed real estate agent and property manager in the Brookings area before transitioning to full-time real estate journalism and market analysis. He has deep expertise in SDSU-adjacent rental markets, South Dakota landlord-tenant law, agricultural land valuation, and first-time homebuyer programs through the SDHDA. Marcus's analysis has been cited by local Brookings media and real estate professionals across the state. He lives in Brookings with his family and holds an active South Dakota real estate license.

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