True Lifestyle Cost Index · methodology · the citable reference

Methodology — True Lifestyle Cost Index

True Lifestyle Cost Index™ — Housing + Utilities + Commute · framework, sources and validation — in full

Data as of: ACS 2020–2024 · DOE LEAD 2022 × EIA 2026 · HUD FY2026 · FCC URS 2026 · BLS CEX 2024 · fares/tolls/parking effective June 2026. Index v1, computed 2026-06-12.

True Lifestyle Cost Index — Housing + Utilities + Commute. Published by TLCengine · Krishna Malyala, broker, NMLS #1875937 · methodology version 1, June 2026 · contact: krishna@tlcengine.com

This page is the citable reference for journalists, researchers and answer engines. It states what the index measures, where every number comes from, and how we validated it. We publish the framework and sources in full; the production routing engine and calibration internals are proprietary.


What the index measures

The True Lifestyle Cost Index asks one question: what share of a household's income does it really take to live in a place and get to work? The familiar rule of thumb — spend no more than 30% of income on housing — counts only the rent or mortgage line. Two other bills move in with you: the utilities and the commute.

True Lifestyle Cost %  =  12 × (H + U + C)  ÷  annual income

The income question — you choose the denominator

Affordability claims are extremely sensitive to whose "median income" they divide by. The index therefore publishes every figure on selectable income bases, and labels the basis on every number:

basis source what it represents
HUD Area Median Income (default) HUD FY2026 income limits the housing industry's "AMI" — a median family income benchmarked to a 4-person household
HUD 80% limit HUD FY2026 published limits HUD's "low income" threshold (capped and adjusted — in some high-cost areas it exceeds the area median itself)
Median household income ACS 2020–2024 the area's own median household — includes single people and seniors, so it reads well below "AMI"
Your income user-entered your number

In the New York tri-state pilot, HUD AMI runs on average 47% above the metro median household income. The same county can clear an affordability line on one basis and miss it on another — that is a fact about the bases, and the index shows it rather than hiding it.

Affordability line and tiers

A place is TLC-affordable when the index is at or below 48% of income — the classic 30% housing envelope, plus 15% for getting to work, plus an explicit 3% utilities allowance. Alongside the line, every place carries a percentile tier within its metro (quintiles, 1 = most affordable fifth), so rankings survive any debate about the denominator.

Sources (all public, all citable)

layer source vintage
Housing, incomes, workers per household U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey 5-year 2020–2024
Home energy U.S. DOE, Low-Income Energy Affordability Data (LEAD) 2022, price-trended
Energy price trend U.S. EIA residential price series (electricity, natural gas, heating oil) monthly, current
Income limits HUD income limits (huduser.gov) FY2026
Broadband FCC Urban Rate Survey, fixed broadband 2026
Water/sewer, cell phone BLS Consumer Expenditure Survey 2024
Fares, tolls, congestion charge, parking, fuel posted tariffs and rate schedules in TLCengine's commute-cost database effective 2026
Trash norms municipal budget research (NJ default: tax-funded, $0 as a separate bill; toggle for private-hauler townships) 2026

Every published page carries per-number source lines and as-of dates. Data quality is tiered honestly: federal sources at the target geography carry the highest tier; where the best free national source is coarser than we want (water rates are the canonical example — the national rate surveys are paywalled or discontinued), the index says so and anchors against posted local tariffs (e.g., NJ American Water's BPU-filed rates).

Validation

What we publish — and what we don't

Published: the framework above, every source with vintage, the validation results, county tables, and the full component breakdown on every page (housing / energy / water / broadband / cell / trash / commute, each with its source). Not published: the routing engine internals and calibration parameters (the index's computed-commute layer is TLCengine's proprietary technology), and any third party's licensed data.

One paragraph for citation

The True Lifestyle Cost Index, published by TLCengine, measures the combined cost of housing, utilities and the commute as a share of income. Housing costs come from the latest U.S. Census American Community Survey; utilities from U.S. DOE, EIA, FCC and BLS data; and commute costs are computed door-to-door from posted fares, tolls, congestion charges, parking and fuel prices by TLCengine's routing engine, scaled to the household by Census workers-per-household. Results are published on selectable income bases (HUD area median income by default) and validated against the Center for Neighborhood Technology's H+T® Index at r = 0.90 on comparable measures. A place is "TLC-affordable" at or below 48% of income.


TLCengine and the True Lifestyle Cost Index are not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by the Center for Neighborhood Technology. H+T® is a registered trademark of CNT. The index is research and comparison material, not financial advice.

Data vintages in this build

True Lifestyle Cost Index v1 — every layer, its vintage, and when it was pulled
LayerSourceVintagePulled / effective
Housing, incomes, workers per householdU.S. Census Bureau, ACS 5-year2020–2024fetched June 2026
Home energy (by county & income bracket)U.S. DOE LEAD Tool2022fetched June 2026
Energy price trend (per fuel, per state)U.S. EIA residential price series2022 → latest 12 monthsthrough 2026
Income limits (AMI, 80%)HUD income limits (huduser.gov)FY2026file dated April 2026
BroadbandFCC Urban Rate Survey (DA 25-1088)2026released December 2025
Water/sewer, cell phoneBLS Consumer Expenditure Survey2024Table 1400
Fares, tolls, congestion charge, parking, fuelTLCengine commute-cost database (posted tariffs)effective 2026June 2026
Benchmark (comparison only)CNT H+T® Index, © CNT2022htaindex.cnt.org

Index version: v1 (computed 2026-06-12, NYC tri-state pilot — 11 counties, 30 commute towns). Dataset: tlccosts_v1_nyc.csv.

All 11 counties Methodology FAQ Download the data (CSV)

About the True Lifestyle Cost Index™. The True Lifestyle Cost Index is an independent affordability index published by TLCengine, computed from U.S. Census American Community Survey data, U.S. DOE and EIA energy data, HUD income limits, FCC and BLS consumer surveys, and TLCengine’s own door-to-door commute-cost engine. Krishna Malyala, broker, NMLS #1875937.

Not affiliated with CNT. TLCengine and the True Lifestyle Cost Index are not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by the Center for Neighborhood Technology. H+T® is a registered trademark of the Center for Neighborhood Technology; where shown, H+T® Index data is © CNT (htaindex.cnt.org) and is used solely for comparison, with attribution. The True Lifestyle Cost Index does not republish CNT data.

Income limits. “HUD AMI” figures are HUD FY2026 area median family incomes and published income limits (huduser.gov); they are 4-person family benchmarks and differ from median household income.

Not financial advice. Estimates for research and comparison; verify fares, tolls, housing and utility costs before transacting.