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Fees may applyThe Stables at Tifton





$1,150+/unit
Fees may applyCasey's Court Luxury Apartments





$1,100+/unit
Fees may applyCypress Apartments





$1,200+/unit
Fees may applyThe Apex Luxury Apartments

$625/unit
Fees may applyThe Stables Student Living
Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College was founded in 1908 and sits on a compact campus in Tifton, a south Georgia city at the I-75 and US-82 interchange. ABAC serves roughly 3,500 students with programs in agriculture, veterinary technology, business, education, and arts and sciences. Tifton is a genuine agricultural town, home to a USDA research station and the University of Georgia Tifton Campus, giving the area a research presence alongside the student community. The surrounding landscape of pecan orchards, cotton fields, and peanut farms is the economic fabric many ABAC students are preparing to work in.
ABAC does not impose a universal freshman live-on mandate, though incoming students are encouraged to consider on-campus housing to ease the transition to college life at the Tifton campus. Students who prefer to start in the residence halls can do so without committing to a full academic year in all cases, though standard housing contracts apply.
All students at ABAC are eligible to live off campus. Given the limited commercial apartment supply in Tifton, many students choose off-campus housing from their first semester, particularly those who are from the local area or who already have housing arrangements in place.
Tifton is a small city and its rental market operates on a different rhythm than a major college town. Standard 12-month leases are common, but landlords here are often local investors who may offer more flexible terms than large property management companies. It is worth asking directly about lease length, renewal terms, and what utilities are included before signing.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College before signing a lease.
Because Tifton's rental inventory is limited, students who want their pick of off-campus options should start looking in February or March for a fall semester start. The pool of apartments, houses, and duplexes within a practical distance of the ABAC campus is not large, and the best-maintained properties at reasonable prices do not last long once listed. Students coming from outside the area will want to schedule a visit or coordinate with local contacts to see units in person. Starting early also leaves time to sort out roommate arrangements, which makes a real difference in managing costs in a modest-inventory market.
Demand for off-campus housing near ABAC picks up in the spring semester as returning students sort out their fall plans. April and May represent the tightest window, when most of the desirable inventory within a few miles of campus has been spoken for. Students looking for housing near the Highway 82 corridor or in the established neighborhoods north of campus will find the most competition during this stretch. Having a clear sense of budget and roommate situation before entering the market in spring will speed up the process significantly.
Tifton's rental market, while limited in size, does not freeze up entirely in summer. Landlords who did not secure tenants in the spring will still have units available in June and July, and local listings on Facebook Marketplace and Craigslist are the most reliable channels for finding them. Students willing to live a bit further from campus, in south Tifton or toward the Omega Road area, will find more options. Commuting into campus by car is easy given the small scale of Tifton, so distance is a manageable tradeoff.
The residential streets north and northwest of the ABAC campus offer houses and duplexes in close proximity to academic buildings. This is the most walkable zone for students and housing here is typically smaller older homes rented individually or shared among two to three students.
The Highway 82 commercial corridor runs through Tifton and has the highest concentration of apartment complexes in the area, along with most of the city's dining and retail. Students who want apartments with standard amenities rather than older rental houses tend to gravitate here, and the commute to campus is a short drive.
A small number of rentals exist near the downtown Tifton area around Central Avenue and Ridge Avenue. These properties tend to be older homes converted to rental use and attract students who want proximity to the limited downtown dining and services. The supply here is thin but steady.
South of the Highway 82 and I-75 interchange, rents drop and the housing is more spacious. Students with reliable transportation who prioritize cost savings over proximity to campus find better value in this part of Tifton. The extra drive time to campus is typically under 10 minutes.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
Tifton is one of the more affordable college towns in Georgia. One-bedroom apartments near ABAC typically rent for $550 to $800 per month, and two-bedroom units commonly run $750 to $1,050. Shared houses and duplexes in the residential neighborhoods near campus can bring per-person costs down further. The rural south Georgia market means students face lower housing costs than those attending schools in Athens or Savannah.