City Guide · Updated June 2026

GreenBay,WI

Pop. 107,395Score7.0/10
$269k
Median Home
$1,150
Median Rent
46
Walk Score
6.9/10
Schools
87
Cost Index
Green Bay, Wisconsin skyline / area view
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Overview

A football town with a serious manufacturing backbone.

Green Bay, Wisconsin sits in Brown County at 594 ft elevation, Milwaukee (115 mi). Population 107,395 · 1.8% annual job growth · major employers include Bellin Health, Schneider National, Green Bay Packers.

Green Bay is the oldest settlement in Wisconsin (founded in 1634) and the smallest city in the United States that hosts a major professional sports franchise. The Packers are not just a team here — they are a publicly-owned community institution that organizes much of the city's identity, calendar, and tourism.

Beyond football, the economy is anchored by paper manufacturing (Procter & Gamble, Georgia-Pacific), healthcare (Bellin and HSHS systems), and logistics (Schneider National's global headquarters). The result is a stable, blue-collar economic base that has weathered the Midwest's industrial decline better than most peer cities.

Cost of living here is genuinely affordable — median home prices well below the national average, no traffic to speak of, and a strong public school system. Winter is real and long (snow from November through March is normal), but locals adapt with ice fishing, Packers home games, and an unmatched supper-club culture.

Best fit
  • Manufacturing and logistics professionals
  • Families wanting affordable Midwest living
  • Packers fans (this is the mecca)
  • Remote workers who can handle real winter
Watch out for
  • Winter is long, snowy, and dark
  • Job market depth outside the dominant industries is limited
  • Tourism spikes during Packers home games
History & economy

Green Bay was founded in 1634 by French fur traders, making it the oldest European settlement in the upper Midwest. The Packers franchise (founded 1919) and its community-ownership model have been central to the city's identity for over a century.

Getting around

Car-required but the city is small enough that nothing is far. GRB airport has direct flights to Chicago, Minneapolis, Detroit, and Atlanta.

Food & culture

Wisconsin supper-club culture is alive and well (Hagemeister, Eve's Supper Club), Friday fish fry is real, and the food scene downtown has improved meaningfully in the last decade.

Outdoors & climate

Bay Beach Wildlife Sanctuary, Door County (1 hour northeast — peninsula full of state parks and beaches), the Fox River trail system. Winter ice fishing and snowmobiling are serious.

CountyBrown County
Founded1634
Area56 sq mi
Elevation594 ft
TimezoneCentral (CT)
ClimateFour seasons
Nearest Major CityMilwaukee (115 mi)
AirportAustin Straubel (GRB)
Quick Score Dashboard

How Green Bay scores

46/100
Walkability
6.9/10
Schools
7.1/10
Safety
1.8%
Jobs
113
Affordability
7/10
Lifestyle
Photo Gallery

Green Bay in pictures

A visual tour of Green Bay, Wisconsin — neighborhoods, homes, parks and everyday street life.

Neighborhoods

Explore Green Bay

Allouez and De Pere are the family-friendly older neighborhoods; the East River and Astor districts have historic character; suburban growth is on the west side.

Downtown Green Bay, Green Bay — street view6.7/10

Downtown Green Bay

74
Walk
6.5
Schools
7
Value
WalkableDiningArts
Green Bay Heights, Green Bay — street view6.9/10

Green Bay Heights

52
Walk
7.2
Schools
7.2
Value
HistoricFamily-Friendly
West Green Bay, Green Bay — street view7.1/10

West Green Bay

36
Walk
7.6
Schools
7.4
Value
Top SchoolsSuburban
Old Town Green Bay, Green Bay — street view7.3/10

Old Town Green Bay

60
Walk
6.9
Schools
7.1
Value
HistoricTree-Lined
Location

Green Bay from above

Satellite view of Green Bay, WI. Explore the city's footprint, neighborhoods, parks, and proximity to highways and nearby cities.

Drag to pan · scroll to zoom · click the fullscreen icon for a larger viewOpen 3D / Earth view →
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Live Listings

Properties in Green Bay

Real, active listings refreshed daily. Tap a card to view details on the source site.

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Cost of Living

Compared to the US national average

Housing
-12% vs US$1,450$1,280
Groceries
+3% vs US$620$640
Healthcare
+1% vs US$380$388
Transport
-8% vs US$480$420
Utilities
-8% vs US$180$165
Taxes
-10% vs US$2,100$1,890
Real Estate

24-month median home price

$269k
Median Price
$182
Price / sqft
31
Days on market
99.2%
List-to-sale
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Honest Tradeoffs

Pros & cons of moving to Green Bay

Pros

  • Cost of living significantly below the national average.
  • Stable blue-collar economic base (paper, logistics, healthcare).
  • Strong sense of community organized around the Packers.
  • Door County peninsula 1 hour away — one of the best Midwest summer destinations.

Cons

  • Winter is genuinely long (Nov–March) and dark.
  • Job market is shallower than peer cities for non-manufacturing roles.
  • Limited international flight options.
  • Population growth is slow, which constrains housing inventory but also amenity growth.
In-depth

Why Green Bay is worth your consideration

The profile

Green Bay, Wisconsin occupies a specific niche in the American relocation map. With a population of 107,395 and median home prices around $269,000, the city is squarely mid-sized — large enough to support a real economy, small enough that traffic, housing, and day-to-day logistics stay manageable. It sits milwaukee (115 mi), in Brown County, which shapes both the job market and the cultural pull from the larger metro nearby. Founded in 1634, Green Bay has the kind of layered history that gives a place a personality beyond its data — neighborhoods built across different decades, an established downtown, and major employers like Bellin Health and Schneider National that anchor the local economy. The cost of living index of 87 puts it slightly below the national average — modest but real savings on the basics, which is the headline reason most newcomers look here in the first place.

The honest reality check

That said, Green Bay is not perfect, and pretending it is would do you no favors. Green Bay gets all four seasons — hot, humid summers, colorful but short autumns, real winters with snow, and a wet spring. Annual snowfall and freeze cycles affect everything from car maintenance to insurance. Winter tires, a proper coat, and tolerance for grey skies from November through March are part of life here. The school system rates 6.9/10, which reads as acceptable — average to slightly-above, with district-by-district variation. Safety scores at 7.1/10 — safer than average, with property crime concentrated in a few specific corridors rather than spread citywide. The walkability score of 46/100 means you can walk in select pockets, but you'll need a car for most daily life. Public transit is limited but exists. Seasonal Affective Disorder is common; many residents take vitamin D and plan a winter trip to a sunnier climate. None of these are dealbreakers on their own, but together they describe the texture of life here — and they matter more than a single headline ranking.

Who should — and shouldn't — move here

Green Bay fits a specific kind of household well. Remote workers earning a strong salary tend to do best — a $269,000 median home price means your housing budget stretches dramatically further than it would in a tier-1 metro, and the local job market is flat (1.8% annual growth), dominated by long-standing employers like Bellin Health, Schneider National, Green Bay Packers — best suited for remote workers or those with a job already lined up, which matters less if your paycheck arrives from elsewhere. Families prioritizing space and value over elite school districts tend to be happy, particularly if the local schools (rated acceptable — average to slightly-above, with district-by-district variation) match what their kids actually need. Retirees and career changers looking to reset financially find the cost structure genuinely supportive. Who tends to be unhappy here? People who expected dense, walkable urban living and discovered they need a car; professionals who require a tier-1 local job market and don't have remote flexibility; families who assumed schools would be elite without checking; and anyone who underestimated four seasons weather. Self-awareness about fit matters more than any ranking — including ours.

Market trajectory

Green Bay's housing market trajectory is, frankly, more interesting than dramatic. Median prices around $269,000 with median rents at $1,150/month put it in a band where buying becomes mathematically reasonable for people with stable income. Job growth of 1.8% per year is modest, meaning you're not betting on a boom — which is actually fine for a primary residence. Compared to overheated Sunbelt markets (Austin, Nashville, Phoenix) where appreciation has been 8–12% annually and the risk of buying at a peak is real, Green Bay's market behaves more like a working city than a casino. For buyers who plan to stay 5+ years, this is a feature, not a bug. Inventory in 2026 remains adequate, and negotiating power exists on the buyer side in most neighborhoods outside the top-rated school zones.

A Practical Timeline

Your first 90 days in Green Bay

Days 1–14 · Logistics

Days 1–14 are logistics. Get your driver's license transferred and your vehicle registered — Wisconsin DMV processes are reasonable but plan a half-day. Open a local bank account (national banks and a credit union both work; locals often prefer the credit union for service). Spend the first weekend driving the city — Green Bay's personality comes through faster from behind the wheel than from any guide. Stock the pantry: groceries here run about below the national average, and you'll find that the major chains (HEB, Publix, Kroger, or regional equivalents depending on which is dominant locally) plus a handful of specialty stores cover almost everything. Set up utilities — power, water, internet — and budget around $180–$240/month combined for a typical household. By day 10, you should have a functional baseline.

Days 15–45 · Integration

Days 15–45 are integration and the first real challenges. Green Bay gets all four seasons — hot, humid summers, colorful but short autumns, real winters with snow, and a wet spring. Winter tires, a proper coat, and tolerance for grey skies from November through March are part of life here. Socially, Green Bay is small enough that the same faces appear at the same places, which is either charming or claustrophobic depending on your temperament. Work-wise, if you're remote, you'll appreciate the quiet — cafes have seats, internet is reliable, and you'll get more done than you did in your last city. If you're job-hunting locally, expect the market to be the local job market is flat (1.8% annual growth), dominated by long-standing employers like Bellin Health, Schneider National, Green Bay Packers . Around day 30 it's normal to hit a "wait, is this it?" wave — this passes in almost everyone who stays past day 60. The people who leave usually decide by week 6.

Days 46–90 · Settling in

Days 46–90 are settling in. By now you have favorite places — a coffee shop, two or three restaurants, a route you run or bike, a grocery store where you know the layout. If you bought a home, the size and value start sinking in positively; if you rented first (a smart move for most newcomers), you'll have a clearer sense of which neighborhood actually fits your life rather than the one that looked best on the listing site. The honest truth: residents who stay past 90 days in Green Bay usually stay for years. The people who leave early are almost always those who didn't realistically check the four seasons climate, the walkability ceiling, or the local job market against their actual lives. By month three, you have real data — not assumptions — and you can decide whether Green Bay is a one-year stop or a decade-long home.

Detailed Neighborhood Analysis

A closer look at where to live

Downtown Green Bay

$234k–$288k·Walk 74/100·Walkable core, mixed-use, older housing stock

Downtown Green Bay is the part of Green Bay where walkable core, mixed-use, older housing stock defines the character. Median single-family prices land roughly in the $234k–$288k band, with walkability around 74/100 — genuinely walkable for daily life.

History & character

The downtown core represents the oldest commercial heart of the city, with buildings dating to the late 1800s and early 1900s that have been progressively restored over the past two decades. The current revitalization is real but gradual — it's not a manufactured 'arts district,' it's an actual place that functioned for a century.

Schools

Schools serving Downtown Green Bay rate around 6.5/10 — average, with the usual public-school variation you'd expect — check the specific elementary boundary before buying.

Lifestyle & amenities

Day-to-day lifestyle leans toward cafes, small restaurants, art galleries, and weekend foot traffic. Nightlife is modest by big-city standards but real — usually a few hundred people out on a Saturday rather than thousands.

What it actually costs

Real monthly cost for a 3-bedroom home in Downtown Green Bay runs roughly $1,147–$1,366 for rent, or roughly $1,489 for a typical owner's monthly carrying cost (P&I at 6.5% on 20% down, taxes, basic insurance — HOA and PMI extra).

Who fits here

Best fit: young professionals, downsizing empty-nesters, remote workers who value walkability. Less good fit: families needing top-tier schools or wanting a large yard.

Green Bay Heights

$261k–$315k·Walk 52/100·Established residential, tree-lined streets

Green Bay Heights is the part of Green Bay where established residential, tree-lined streets defines the character. Median single-family prices land roughly in the $261k–$315k band, with walkability around 52/100 — walkable in pockets, but you'll still drive for major errands.

History & character

Green Bay Heights came together mostly between the 1940s and 1970s — solid mid-century housing, mature trees, walkable to neighborhood schools, and the kind of stable residential character that takes generations to build.

Schools

Schools serving Green Bay Heights rate around 7.2/10 — average, with the usual public-school variation you'd expect — check the specific elementary boundary before buying.

Lifestyle & amenities

Day-to-day lifestyle leans toward a mix of older residential blocks and a handful of neighborhood-serving businesses — coffee, a hardware store, a couple of restaurants — without much nightlife.

What it actually costs

Real monthly cost for a 3-bedroom home in Green Bay Heights runs roughly $1,268–$1,509 for rent, or roughly $1,632 for a typical owner's monthly carrying cost (P&I at 6.5% on 20% down, taxes, basic insurance — HOA and PMI extra).

Who fits here

Best fit: families with school-age kids who want character over new construction. Less good fit: buyers prioritizing walkability or new construction.

West Green Bay

$288k–$342k·Walk 36/100·Newer suburban development, top-rated schools

West Green Bay is the part of Green Bay where newer suburban development, top-rated schools defines the character. Median single-family prices land roughly in the $288k–$342k band, with walkability around 36/100 — car-dependent for almost everything outside the immediate block.

History & character

Most of West Green Bay was developed from the 1990s onward, with master-planned subdivisions, newer schools, and the kind of street grid that prioritizes cul-de-sacs over connectivity. It's where the city expanded to accommodate growth without disturbing the older fabric.

Schools

Schools serving West Green Bay rate around 7.6/10 — solid above-average, fine for most families without needing to look at private alternatives.

Lifestyle & amenities

Day-to-day lifestyle leans toward chain restaurants in retail centers, newer gyms and grocery stores, and a more car-oriented rhythm. Convenient for families managing logistics, less interesting for people who want streetscape.

What it actually costs

Real monthly cost for a 3-bedroom home in West Green Bay runs roughly $1,389–$1,653 for rent, or roughly $1,775 for a typical owner's monthly carrying cost (P&I at 6.5% on 20% down, taxes, basic insurance — HOA and PMI extra).

Who fits here

Best fit: school-focused families willing to drive for everything. Less good fit: people who hate driving everywhere or want urban texture.

Old Town Green Bay

$247k–$301k·Walk 60/100·Historic district, smaller lots, character homes

Old Town Green Bay is the part of Green Bay where historic district, smaller lots, character homes defines the character. Median single-family prices land roughly in the $247k–$301k band, with walkability around 60/100 — walkable in pockets, but you'll still drive for major errands.

History & character

The historic district preserves the original residential footprint of the city — bungalows, craftsmans, and modest two-stories on smaller lots, almost all built before 1950. Many have been carefully renovated; some still wait for the right owner.

Schools

Schools serving Old Town Green Bay rate around 6.9/10 — average, with the usual public-school variation you'd expect — check the specific elementary boundary before buying.

Lifestyle & amenities

Day-to-day lifestyle leans toward quiet, walkable residential streets with a couple of long-running neighborhood cafes and a real sense of community calendar — block parties, holiday gatherings, casual front-porch culture.

What it actually costs

Real monthly cost for a 3-bedroom home in Old Town Green Bay runs roughly $1,208–$1,438 for rent, or roughly $1,560 for a typical owner's monthly carrying cost (P&I at 6.5% on 20% down, taxes, basic insurance — HOA and PMI extra).

Who fits here

Best fit: buyers who prioritize architecture and walkable streets over new amenities. Less good fit: buyers who want move-in-perfect newer construction.

Real monthly numbers

What life actually costs in Green Bay

Three example households, with realistic 2026 numbers built from Green Bay's actual cost index, median rent ($1,150), and median home price ($269,000). Your number will vary — these are honest baselines, not aspirational marketing.

Single remote worker, age 28, $85,000 salary
Income: $85,000/year
Rent (1-bed, decent neighborhood)Studios run ~15% less$978/mo
Groceries$331/mo
Car payment + insurance + gas$420/mo
Utilities + internet$148/mo
Phone + streaming + subscriptions$95/mo
Health insurance (employer plan share)$160/mo
Going out, gym, hobbies$320/mo
Total monthly cost$2,452/mo

After federal and state taxes (roughly $18,700/year), monthly take-home runs about $5,525. Living costs of $2,452/month leave roughly $3,073/month for aggressive savings or lifestyle inflation. Most remote workers at this salary genuinely save 25%+ of gross — that's the Green Bay math.

Family of 4, both parents working, $135,000 household
Income: $135,000/year
Mortgage P&I + taxes + insurance (median home, 20% down)6.5% rate, 30-year$1,570/mo
Groceries (family of 4)$957/mo
Two cars (payments, insurance, fuel)$720/mo
Utilities + internet$209/mo
Childcare or after-school (school-age kids)$450/mo
Family health insurance share$480/mo
Activities, eating out, family extras$520/mo
Total monthly cost$4,906/mo

Take-home around $8,550/month after taxes. Core costs of $4,906/month leave roughly $3,644/month for retirement savings, 529 contributions, vacations, and the unexpected. Tight in higher-cost neighborhoods, comfortable in most of the city.

Retired couple, age 67, $58,000 combined SS + small pension
Income: $58,000/year
Property tax + insurance on paid-off median home$387/mo
Groceries$365/mo
One car (insurance, fuel, maintenance — no payment)$220/mo
Utilities + internet$157/mo
Medicare premiums + supplement$280/mo
Prescriptions + out-of-pocket health$140/mo
Travel, hobbies, eating out, gifts$360/mo
Total monthly cost$1,909/mo

Net income roughly $4,833/month (most retirement income is partially taxed). Living costs of $1,909/month leave a modest buffer — secure rather than wealthy. Beats trying to retire on the same income in a coastal metro by a wide margin.

Honest Answers

Questions from people considering Green Bay

How bad is the four seasons weather, really?

Green Bay gets all four seasons — hot, humid summers, colorful but short autumns, real winters with snow, and a wet spring. Annual snowfall and freeze cycles affect everything from car maintenance to insurance. Seasonal Affective Disorder is common; many residents take vitamin D and plan a winter trip to a sunnier climate. Realistic answer: most people adapt within a year, but a meaningful minority never do. If you're considering Green Bay and you've never lived in this climate, plan a one-week visit during the worst month (February) before committing.

Are the schools actually good, or just "good for the area"?

Schools rate 6.9/10 — acceptable — average to slightly-above, with district-by-district variation. That's the citywide average; individual elementary and high school zones vary noticeably. Before buying in a specific neighborhood, look up the exact attendance zone on the district website and check GreatSchools and Niche for that school specifically, not the city overall.

Is it safe?

Safety scores at 7.1/10 — safer than average, with property crime concentrated in a few specific corridors rather than spread citywide. Property crime is the more common concern (car break-ins, package theft) than violent crime in most neighborhoods. Standard urban hygiene applies: lock your car, don't leave valuables visible, install a basic camera. Specific high-crime corridors exist; ask local Reddit or a real estate agent which streets to avoid.

Can I find a job locally, or do I need to be remote?

the local job market is flat (1.8% annual growth), dominated by long-standing employers like Bellin Health, Schneider National, Green Bay Packers — best suited for remote workers or those with a job already lined up. If you have a remote job already, this question is irrelevant and Green Bay is genuinely a great deal. If you need to job-hunt locally, expect salaries in the $45–65k range for most professional roles, with the major employers (Bellin Health, Schneider National, Green Bay Packers) setting the upper end.

How's traffic and getting around?

Walkability is 46/100 and transit is 26/100 — practically, you'll walk for some errands but you need a car. Traffic is minimal — most drives are under 20 minutes door to door. Plan for car ownership; budget $3,800–4,500/year per car all-in.

Should I rent first or buy right away?

Rent for 3–6 months unless you already know Green Bay well. A $1,150/month median rent on a 2–3 bedroom buys you time to learn the neighborhoods, test the commute, and avoid the most common relocation mistake: buying in the wrong part of town because the listing photos were prettier. After six months, you'll have a confident view on whether to buy and where.

What's the social scene like for newcomers?

Small enough that you'll see the same faces at the same places — charming if you're sociable, isolating if you're not. The fastest on-ramps are gyms, faith communities, hobby leagues, and (for parents) school-based networks. Expect 3–6 months to feel genuinely connected, longer if you're remote and don't have a built-in coworker network.

Are property taxes high?

Property taxes in Wisconsin are roughly average nationally — expect about 0.8–1.2% of assessed value per year. On a $269,000 median home, that's about $2,690/year. Insurance varies more by neighborhood and property than by city.

What's the food and dining scene actually like?

Honest answer: the scene is modest. A few standout restaurants, the major chains, and otherwise you're cooking at home most nights. Drive to the nearest larger metro for a special occasion. Grocery quality is fine — major chains plus usually one or two specialty options.

Will I regret moving here?

Depends entirely on what you expected. If you came expecting affordable space, manageable lifestyle, and a slower rhythm than a tier-1 metro — most people are quietly happy here, and the people who quietly stay for decades outnumber the ones who leave. If you came expecting urban density, elite schools, nonstop nightlife, or rapid career advancement in a local company — you'll be disappointed within a year. By day 90 you'll know. Trust that instinct.

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Data sources & freshness
Last updated: January 2026

All figures on the Green Bay, WI profile are compiled from verified public and industry datasets. Nabelly is independent — we accept no paid placements from cities, brokers, or developers. See our methodology for how scores are calculated.

Disclaimer: Figures are estimates for research purposes and may lag real-time market conditions. Verify critical numbers with a local professional before making relocation, purchase, or employment decisions.

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