
$925+/unit
Fees may applyThe Phenix At Infinity Park

$1,175+/unit
Fees may applyUniversity Station Senior

$1,320+/unit
Fees may applyViewpoint 41 Lofts

$967+/unit
Fees may applyVillas

$599+/unit
Fees may applyVista





$938+/unit
Fees may applyWaterfront apartments





$1,573/unit
Fees may applyWestlink At Oak Station Apartments
CU Denver is an urban campus on the Auraria campus complex in downtown Denver, shared with Metropolitan State University and Community College of Denver. Students are mostly from the Denver metro area and commute from throughout the city — there is no single dominant off-campus neighborhood for CU Denver students the way there is for a traditional residential campus. The neighborhoods most popular with students who do live near campus include Capitol Hill, Baker, Five Points, and RiNo — walkable, transit-accessible, and affordable relative to Denver's overall market. Shared rooms in these neighborhoods typically run $900–$1,300/month. Denver's RTD light rail and bus system connects the Auraria campus to most city neighborhoods effectively.
CU Denver has no on-campus housing and no live-on requirements. Students are entirely self-directed in finding housing throughout the Denver metro area. The university is designed as an urban commuter institution, and housing is treated as a personal logistics matter rather than a campus resource.
No contracted or approved housing system exists. Students rent freely throughout Denver and the broader metro. CU Denver's student services office provides housing resources. The most important factor is proximity to an RTD route that connects to the Auraria campus downtown.
Denver's rental market runs on standard 12-month cycles with summer being the primary turnover period. Starting 2–3 months before your desired move-in is generally sufficient. Popular neighborhoods like Cap Hill and Baker have enough inventory that early searching is about getting the right unit rather than racing to beat other students.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with University of Colorado Denver before signing a lease.
Starting in April or May for summer or fall move-in puts you in the market when Denver inventory is at its highest. Cap Hill, Baker, and Five Points listings peak in spring. Early movers get to compare options carefully rather than deciding under time pressure.
May through July is the peak turnover period for Denver rentals. CU Denver students compete with the broader Denver rental market — young professionals, healthcare workers, and others — rather than primarily other students. Demand is spread across the city and reflects general Denver rental trends.
Denver is a large city with enough inventory that last-minute housing is always available. Students searching in August will find options in most desirable neighborhoods, though specific unit types (well-maintained studios in Cap Hill, large houses in Baker) will be more limited.
About a mile east of the Auraria campus, Cap Hill is one of Denver's most walkable and dense urban neighborhoods. Popular with young people of all backgrounds, including CU Denver students. Older apartment buildings, Victorian houses divided into flats, and a lively strip on Colfax. Connected to campus by bus and the 16th Street Mall free shuttle.
South of downtown, Baker has become one of Denver's most desirable neighborhoods for young renters — good restaurants, bars, and retail on South Broadway. About a 15-minute bike ride to the Auraria campus. RTD buses run along Broadway to downtown.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
Shared rooms in the neighborhoods most popular with CU Denver students (Cap Hill, Baker, Five Points) typically run $900–$1,300/month. Solo apartments in these neighborhoods start around $1,200–$1,600/month. Denver's market has risen considerably but remains below coastal cities.
Other universities in Denver share a similar off-campus housing market.
The University of Denver is a private university in the University Hills neighborhood of south Denver, and the surrounding rental market is notably more expensive than most of the city. DU students pay a premium for proximity to the campus, which is in one of Denver's more upscale residential areas. Shared rooms near…
View housing near DU