

$1,200+/unit
Fees may applyThe Fifty

$1,139+/unit
Fees may applyThe League Bloomington

$843+/unit
Fees may applyThe Park on Morton

$699+/unit
Fees may applyThird Apartments

$1,405+/unit
Fees may applyVerona Park





$1,315+/unit
Fees may applyWaters Edge Apartments Bloomington
Bloomington, Indiana is a limestone college town of roughly 80,000 that swells every August when Indiana University-Bloomington brings tens of thousands of students back to the hills. Campus and city blur together, so student life spills well past the gates. Courthouse Square anchors downtown, where the Monroe County courthouse and the Saturday farmers market sit a few blocks from Kirkwood Avenue, the main artery between campus and downtown. You'll find walkable districts, leafy older streets, and the B-Line Trail, a former rail corridor cutting through town for runners and cyclists. The cultural calendar stays busy with the Lotus world-music festival, the Arts Fair on the Square, and a packed Hoosier sports schedule.
Put you in the middle of the action, walkable to campus, the farmers market, and most of the nightlife, which keeps it popular with upperclassmen.
Splits the difference between campus and downtown, ideal if you want to roll out of bed and into a lecture hall.
Just southwest, a quieter older neighborhood with residential streets and quick access to the B-Line Trail.
Here's what you need to know about getting around Bloomington.
Bloomington runs on two bus systems that work together: Bloomington Transit covers the wider city with routes linking neighborhoods, downtown, and the edges of campus, while IU Campus Bus loops through the university itself. Students ride both with a valid university ID, and during the semester buses on the busiest routes come every ten to fifteen minutes. If you live near campus or on a frequent route, you can skip a car most of the year.
The campus core and downtown are genuinely walkable, with Kirkwood Avenue connecting the two in about ten minutes on foot. Cycling is a real option thanks to the B-Line Trail and a network of bike lanes. Students living close in handle most trips on foot. The trail and lanes give cyclists a clear route across town.
If you live near campus or on a frequent route you can skip a car most of the year. Plenty of students keep one for grocery runs and weekend trips. On-campus and close-in parking can be tight, so weigh that before bringing a car. The outer neighborhoods offer easier, more plentiful parking.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
It depends on the neighborhood and how many roommates you split with, but most students land somewhere around $700 to $1,400 a month per unit. Shared houses near campus and rooms in larger complexes sit at the lower end, while a downtown one-bedroom near Courthouse Square runs higher. Splitting a house with a few people is usually the cheapest path.
Browse student housing near each Bloomington-area university.