




$862/person
Fees may applyCedar Flats





$655/person
Fees may applyWildcat Crossing




$2,000/unit
Fees may applyFM Esatwood cuort





$720+/person
Fees may applyGateway Apartments





$2,050/person
Fees may applyRedwood Cove Apartments





$705+/person
Fees may applyTimber Creek
The off-campus market around Chico State is affordable and genuinely college-town oriented — most students pay $800–$1,100/month for a shared room, and the inventory within walking or biking distance of campus is substantial. Chico is a city of about 100,000 that functions like a college town, with CSUC as the dominant cultural and economic force. The neighborhoods north and east of campus along the Esplanade are the primary student housing zones, with a dense mix of older apartments and converted houses. The city is very bikeable, warm for most of the year, and has a lively downtown scene centered on the bars and restaurants of downtown Chico.
Chico State does not require freshmen to live on campus. On-campus housing is available and some freshmen choose it, but the off-campus market is accessible and affordable enough that many students start renting apartments immediately. There's no formal approval system for off-campus housing.
Students are free to rent anywhere in Chico. There is no contracted off-campus housing program. The university maintains a housing resource board. Most students find housing through word of mouth, Facebook groups, and standard listing sites.
Most leases near Chico State run on a summer start — units turning over in May and June for August/September occupancy. Landlords typically list in February and March. Starting your search by February for fall is advisable, particularly for units close to campus.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with California State University - Chico before signing a lease.
Starting in February or March gets you the widest selection of near-campus units. The blocks closest to the main entrance along the Esplanade go fast among returning students. Early movers also have time to do in-person tours — Chico's housing stock ranges from well-maintained to aging quickly, and seeing the unit matters.
March and April are the peak months. Returning students and incoming freshmen overlap in the search, and the best apartments in the Esplanade corridor and north Chico student neighborhoods are typically signed by April. After April, you're selecting from what others passed on.
Chico's market is more forgiving than coastal California — there is more inventory relative to demand, and units are available through summer. If you're searching in June or July, expect the near-campus premium zones to be thin but the broader Chico market to still have solid options.
The primary student housing zone — apartments and houses along and near the Esplanade, north of the main academic buildings. Walkable to campus, dense with student renters, and a mix of well-maintained complexes and older rentals. Most competitive area for near-campus housing.
Students who want access to Chico's downtown bar and restaurant scene often choose the blocks south and east of downtown. Still bikeable to campus, and puts you in the center of Chico social life. Housing stock is more varied than the north campus zone.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
Shared rooms near Chico State typically run $800–$1,100/month. Solo apartments start around $1,000–$1,300/month. Chico is significantly more affordable than Bay Area or coastal California — one of the reasons students choose it even from outside the region.