The Ultimate Guide to Rexburg Housing for BYU-Idaho Students (2026 Edition)

Rexburg housing splits into BYU-Idaho Approved Housing ($300–$500/room) for single undergrads and community housing for married, 26+, and family students. Here's how to pick the right category, the named complexes worth knowing, and what the Honor Code rules actually look like day-to-day.

EP

Emma Perez

May 20, 2025

5 min read

Brigham Young University – Idaho

The Ultimate Guide to Rexburg Housing for BYU-Idaho Students (2026 Edition)

Rexburg housing breaks into two clean categories: BYU-Idaho Approved Housing for single undergraduates and community housing for married students, students 26 and older, and anyone with kids. Approved housing complexes typically run $300 to $500 per room per month in 2026 — meaningfully cheaper than other Mountain West college towns — and most include furniture, internet, and utilities. The trade-off is that approved complexes enforce BYU-Idaho's Honor Code rules: visiting hours, gender separation between buildings, and conduct expectations that are real, not just on paper.

This guide walks through who has to live where, what approved housing actually costs in 2026, and the named complexes that come up most often on Find My Place listings and student conversations.


Key Takeaways

  • Single, full-time undergrads under 26 are required to live in BYU-Idaho Approved Housing unless living with family. The university enforces this through registration.
  • Approved housing pricing in 2026 typically lands $300 to $500 per room per month, with utilities, internet, and furniture commonly included.
  • Married students, students 26+, and students with children live in community housing — which has no Honor Code enforcement and far more layout variety.
  • Honor Code rules in approved housing are real: visiting hours, gender separation, and conduct policies that complexes will enforce.
  • Start looking 2 to 3 months before your move-in semester. Approved housing closest to campus fills first.
  • BYU-Idaho's Housing Office maintains the official approved list. If a complex is not on that list, it does not satisfy the requirement.

Who Has to Live Where in Rexburg

Before touring a single complex, figure out which housing category applies to you. BYU-Idaho splits its students into two groups, and the wrong category equals violating the housing requirement and getting flagged through Student Records.

BYU-Idaho Approved Housing is required for single, full-time undergraduate students under 26 who are not living with a parent or guardian. This is a real requirement enforced through registration. Students who live in non-approved housing while otherwise required to be in approved housing can face holds on registration and even disciplinary action.

Community housing — sometimes called married housing or non-approved housing — is open to married students, students 26 or older, students with children, students living with parents, and part-time students who do not fall under the single-student rule. These rentals have no Honor Code enforcement, no visiting-hour rules, and the layouts vary from studios to four-bedroom houses.

The Approved Housing list is maintained by BYU-Idaho's Housing Office and updated each semester. If a complex is not on the current approved list, it does not count, even if it was approved last year. Confirm directly through the BYU-Idaho Housing portal before signing.


What BYU-Idaho Approved Housing Costs in 2026

Approved housing is one of the genuine bargains in Mountain West college housing. Most complexes price single contracts between $300 and $500 per room per month for the standard semester contracts. Most include the things students otherwise budget separately: furniture, high-speed internet, water, trash, and often electricity.

The price floor — around $300 — usually buys you a shared bedroom in an older complex farther from campus. The ceiling — around $500 — gets a private bedroom in a newer complex within walking distance, with amenities like a pool, gym, or clubhouse.

A few specific pricing notes that matter:

Shared vs private room makes a $100 to $200 monthly difference at most complexes. Private room contracts are the first to sell out every semester.

Contract length matters. Semester-by-semester contracts are standard. Some complexes offer cheaper rates if you commit to two or three semesters upfront. Worth the math if you know you're staying.

Approved complexes near campus carry a premium. The closer to the Spori Building and the BYU-Idaho Center, the higher the per-room cost. Complexes a 10- to 15-minute walk out are noticeably cheaper.


The Approved Housing Complexes Worth Knowing

These are the complexes that consistently come up in BYU-Idaho student conversations and on Find My Place reviews. The list is not exhaustive — BYU-Idaho approves dozens of complexes — but these are the names you'll hear repeatedly.

Abri sits within walking distance of campus and runs a younger, more social crowd. Newer construction and amenities push pricing toward the upper end of the range.

The Gates at Rexburg leans upscale with a clubhouse, pool, and clean modern finishes. Strong fit for students who want amenities and don't mind paying for them.

The Cove is the resort-style option — pool, hot tub, dense social calendar. Plays well for students who want a built-in community on day one.

University View is the long-standing student favorite. Pool, gym, game room, and a price point that consistently lands mid-range for the area.

Northpoint Apartments and Brookside both hit the mid-tier consistently. Spacious units, friendly management reputations, and pricing that doesn't surprise anyone.

Rockland and Birch Plaza are the recently-updated options for students who want modern interiors without paying premium. Both sit close enough to campus to walk in winter weather.

Hillcrest and Sunrise Village are the budget plays. Older buildings, basic finishes, no-frills atmosphere — but pricing that lands at the low end of the approved housing range. The right call for students prioritizing tuition savings.

For a current list of available BYU-Idaho approved contracts, browse Rexburg student housing on Find My Place, where you can sort by per-room cost, gender, and verified student reviews.


Community Housing in Rexburg

If you fall outside the single-undergrad rule, community housing opens up a different set of options — and more freedom in what you can rent. The named picks below come up consistently for married couples, students 26 and older, and anyone with children.

University Courtyard sits across the street from campus with studios and 1- to 2-bedroom units, in-unit laundry, and a social atmosphere. Solid pick for married couples wanting walkability.

Aspen Village runs an indoor pool and hot tub, which makes it popular with students who want a community feel without the approved-housing rules.

Cambridge Court is pet-friendly with a dog park and outdoor space. Worth knowing if pets are part of the equation.

At Home Rexburg sits about three blocks from BYU-Idaho with soundproofed units and capped utilities. Strong fit for couples who want predictable monthly costs.

Heartland Apartments offers two-bedroom units with free parking and updated interiors — good middle ground between price and modern finishes.

415 Flats and Eden Apartments anchor the upper end of community housing with luxury finishes, attached garages, and large closets. Costs more, but the unit quality is real.

Mesa Falls and The Grove both bring central air, modern kitchens, and quieter atmospheres than the social-heavy approved complexes. Right call for students who want a calmer base.


Honor Code Rules That Apply in Approved Housing

BYU-Idaho approved complexes agree to enforce specific rules in exchange for their approved status. These are not paperwork — they actively affect daily life.

Visiting hours are real. Most approved complexes restrict opposite-gender visitors after 10:30 PM Sunday through Thursday and after midnight Friday and Saturday. The exact hours vary by complex, so check before signing.

Gender separation between buildings is standard. Approved housing is typically separated by gender at the building or floor level — not just at the unit level. Visitors of the opposite gender are typically restricted from bedrooms even during visiting hours.

Conduct standards apply. The approved housing contract typically references the BYU-Idaho Honor Code, which covers things like clothing, alcohol, and behavior. Complexes have been known to terminate contracts for repeated violations.

If these rules are a deal-breaker, community housing is the right path. There is no shame in that math — the rules exist because students chose them, and the right housing is the one that fits how you actually want to live.


How to Choose the Right Rexburg Housing

Start with the requirement. If you have to be in approved housing, narrow to that list before anything else. If you have flexibility, both lists are open to you.

Visit complexes in person if possible. Virtual tours and photos miss the basics — wall thickness, hallway noise, the smell of the common areas. A 20-minute walkthrough on a Tuesday afternoon tells you more than a website.

Ask about the things that aren't in the listing. Wi-Fi speed (not just whether it's included), parking (covered, assigned, free, paid), laundry (in-unit, in-building, off-site), and the specific maintenance response process when something breaks at 11 PM.

Read recent reviews on a platform that shows the actual reviewer's lease term. Reviews from someone who lived in the building for two semesters are worth more than a one-night opinion.

For BYU-Idaho's official approved housing guidelines, visit BYU-Idaho's Housing Office directly.


Frequently Asked Questions About Rexburg Student Housing

Do all BYU-Idaho students have to live in approved housing?

No. Approved housing is required for single, full-time undergraduates under 26 who are not living with a parent or guardian. Married students, students 26 or older, students with children, and students living with family are not subject to the requirement.

How much does BYU-Idaho approved housing cost in 2026?

Most approved complexes price single contracts between $300 and $500 per room per month, with the lower end being shared rooms in older complexes farther from campus and the higher end being private rooms in newer walkable buildings. Utilities, internet, and furniture are commonly included.

When should I start looking for housing in Rexburg?

Two to three months before your move-in semester for the best selection. Approved complexes closest to campus and the more popular community housing units sell out first. Last-minute searches mean choosing from leftover contracts.

What's the difference between BYU-Idaho approved housing and community housing?

Approved housing is required for most single undergraduates and enforces BYU-Idaho Honor Code rules including visiting hours and gender separation. Community housing has no Honor Code enforcement and is open to married students, students 26+, students with children, and students living with family.

Are utilities included at most Rexburg approved housing?

Usually yes. Most approved complexes include water, trash, internet, and often electricity in the monthly contract price. Confirm before signing — a few complexes itemize utilities separately, which changes the real per-month cost.

Can BYU-Idaho students live with their parents instead?

Yes. Students living with a parent or legal guardian are exempt from the approved housing requirement. The parent's residence must be the student's permanent address on file with BYU-Idaho.


Bottom Line for Rexburg Housing

Figure out your category first — approved housing or community housing. Then narrow to the named complexes that come up consistently for students at your price point and walking distance preference. Tour what you can. Sign when the contract terms make sense, not when the complex pushes a deadline.

Rexburg housing is genuinely one of the cheaper student housing markets in the Mountain West, which gives BYU-Idaho students breathing room most college students don't have. Use it.

EP

Emma Perez

Find My Place — By Students, For Students

We're students and recent grads who've been through the housing grind. We built Find My Place because apartment hunting near a university is harder than it needs to be. Every guide we write is based on real experience — not a landlord's marketing copy.

Rexburg Housing Guide for BYU-Idaho Students 2026 | Find My Place