Here are the most expensive places to live in America

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Unsurprisingly, some of America's biggest cities are also its most expensive.

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The Bureau of Economic Analysis recently released relative cost-of-living estimates using 2013 data for the nation's 381 metropolitan areas and the non-metropolitan parts of states. The Bureau calculated "regional price parities," which represent how expensive a particular area is, relative to the national average.

The Bureau's Regional Price Parity (RPP) is an index that sets the national average cost of goods and services at 100, with a particular region's RPP showing how the cost-of-living in that region compares to that average. For example, the New York City metropolitan area had a 2013 RPP of 122.3, which means that NYC is about 22.3% more expensive than the national average. Meanwhile, Michigan City, IN had a metro area RPP of 85, indicating that goods and services cost 15% less than average.

This map shows the RPP for each metro area, along with RPPs for the non-metropolitan parts of states, made up of small towns and rural areas. Blue regions are cheaper than the national average, and red regions are more expensive:

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Here are the 15 most expensive metro areas:

And the 15 least expensive:

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