




$1,275+/person
Fees may applyEast Village Flats





$1,445+/person
Fees may applyMountainaire Boulder

$1,850/person
Fees may applyThe Gaslamp





$800+/person
Fees may applyThe Lodge

$870+/unit
Fees may applySterling Boulder Apartments





$1,874+/unit
Fees may apply3100 Pearl





$920+/unit
Fees may apply909 14th





$965+/person
Fees may applyBuffalo Canyon Apartments

$1,645+/unit
Fees may applyCoronado Apartments

$1,700+/person
Fees may applyCreekside Apartments





$1,580+/unit
Fees may applyDepot Square Apartments





$1,195+/unit
Fees may applyMountainaire





$1,838+/person
Fees may applyōLiv Boulder

$1,995+/unit
Fees may applyParker off Pearl



$2,523+/unit
Fees may applyReve Boulder Apartments





$1,722+/unit
Fees may applySaga Boulder





$1,355+/unit
Fees may applyThe Lodge Boulder





$1,599+/unit
Fees may applyThe Lotus





$1,958+/person
Fees may applyThe View on 26th





$1,514+/unit
Fees may applyU Club on 28th

$1,590+/unit
Fees may applyUnion 9Seventy
Boulder College of Massage Therapy is a vocational institution in Boulder, Colorado, offering professional massage therapy programs at its location on Iris Avenue in northwest Boulder. The school is career-focused rather than residential, drawing students who are making a deliberate professional change or entering a health and wellness career for the first time. There is no campus housing of any kind, so every student is responsible for finding their own accommodation in Boulder or a nearby community before the program begins. Boulder itself is a desirable and expensive city, with a strong outdoor recreation culture, a walkable downtown along Pearl Street, and a rental market heavily influenced by the University of Colorado Boulder's much larger student body. Students at BCMT should expect to compete with CU students and young professionals for available apartments. Those on tighter budgets often find better value in Longmont, Louisville, or Lafayette and commute into Boulder for classes. The program's professional nature means students tend to be independent and resourceful in managing housing logistics.
Boulder College of Massage Therapy does not offer on-campus housing, and there is no live-on requirement for any students. All students, including those new to the program, are responsible for finding their own housing in Boulder or the surrounding area before classes begin.
Because there is no campus housing of any kind, all students live off campus. There are no restrictions or approval processes related to housing status. Students typically secure apartments, shared houses, or rooms in Boulder, Longmont, or nearby communities.
Boulder's rental market is competitive year-round, and prospective students are strongly advised to begin their housing search at least two to three months before their program start date. Summer start cohorts face the tightest market, as the University of Colorado Boulder's lease cycle drives high demand for units across the city from May through August.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with Boulder College of Massage Therapy before signing a lease.
Prospective students admitted to Boulder College of Massage Therapy should begin searching for housing as soon as they confirm enrollment. Boulder has one of the most competitive rental markets in Colorado, and desirable units in central neighborhoods near Pearl Street or on the Hill lease months in advance. Starting three to four months before program start gives students access to the most options at the most reasonable rents. Students relocating from outside Colorado benefit most from this early window, as they need time to arrange viewings and logistics.
April through June represents the busiest leasing period in Boulder, driven largely by the University of Colorado Boulder's academic calendar. During this window, studios and one-bedroom apartments suitable for BCMT students see the most competition and the highest asking rents of the year. Students starting a summer or fall cohort who have not secured housing by early April should expect limited inventory in the most walkable central neighborhoods. Having a guarantor and first and last month's rent ready speeds approvals.
Students who find themselves searching within 30 days of program start should look at Longmont, Louisville, or Lafayette for more available and more affordable units. Commuting from these communities to Boulder is feasible by car or the RTD Flatiron Flyer bus. Boulder Facebook housing groups and Craigslist remain active for furnished sublets and room rentals throughout the year, and these channels are the fastest path to a short-term arrangement while searching for something more permanent.
The Hill neighborhood immediately south of the CU Boulder campus offers dense apartment and rooming-house inventory popular with students. BCMT students who want to live close to other young renters and walkable amenities often choose this area, though rents reflect high demand.
Apartments within a few blocks of Pearl Street Mall put students at the center of Boulder's dining, transit, and cultural life. Rents are among the highest in the city, but the walkability and access to the RTD bus network are exceptional for students without cars.
Longmont offers significantly lower rents than Boulder, with one-bedroom apartments often running several hundred dollars less per month. The RTD Flatiron Flyer provides a direct bus connection to Boulder, making this a practical option for cost-conscious BCMT students willing to commute.
These suburban communities east of Boulder offer a quieter lifestyle and lower rents with reasonable highway access via US-36. Students with cars find the commute to BCMT manageable, and both towns have small commercial cores with grocery stores and coffee shops.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
Boulder is one of the more expensive rental markets in Colorado. Studios and one-bedroom apartments in central Boulder near BCMT typically run $1,400-$2,000 per month or more. Shared apartments or rooms in houses range from $900-$1,400 per person. Students on tighter budgets often rent in Longmont, Louisville, or Lafayette, where one-bedroom units can be $400-$700 less per month, and commute in for classes.
Other universities in Boulder share a similar off-campus housing market.
Naropa University is a small, contemplative liberal arts university located in Boulder, Colorado, founded in 1974 by Tibetan Buddhist teacher Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche. With an enrollment of approximately 1,000 students, Naropa offers undergraduate and graduate programs rooted in mindfulness, social engagement, and…
View housing near Naropa UniversityBoulder's off-campus rental market is competitive and expensive for a Colorado city — the combination of CU's large student body, a strong tech and outdoor recreation workforce, and limited developable land in the valley keeps rents high and vacancy low. Most students pay $1,000–$1,500/month for a shared room. The Hill…
View housing near CU Boulder