




$899+/unit
Fees may applyThe Rive Atlanta





$1,289+/unit
Fees may applyThe Standard at Atlanta





$1,115+/unit
Fees may applyUniversity House Midtown





$589+/unit
Fees may applyWestmar Student Lofts





$940+/unit
Fees may applyWhistler





$994+/unit
Fees may applyYugo Atlanta Summerhill





$925+/unit
Fees may apply1066 Ashby Grove SW





$1,025+/unit
Fees may apply1295 West Apartments





$1,200/unit
Fees may apply1868 Mercer Ave





$999+/unit
Fees may apply200 Edgewood | Student Housing





$950/unit
Fees may apply432 Atwood St





$1,600/unit
Fees may apply460 Peyton Rd





$1,350/unit
Fees may apply737 Liberty Commons Dr





$2,500/unit
Fees may apply954 Parsons St





$930/unit
Fees may applyBeautiful Beltline Bungalow Walk to AUC





$1,264+/unit
Fees may applyBower Westside

$1,040+/unit
Fees may applyCampus Crossings Briarcliff





$1,216+/unit
Fees may applyCentennial Place

$895+/unit
Fees may applyFurnished Rooms for Lease - All Utilities Included -Across the Street from AUC Library





$1,085+/unit
Fees may applyInspire

$1,330+/unit
Fees may applyKinetic
The Georgia Institute of Technology sits right in Midtown Atlanta, which means its 45,000 Yellow Jackets get a real campus and a major city in the same few blocks. Tech Square spills across the highway into a cluster of startups, coffee shops, and the late-night study spots an engineering school runs on. Piedmont Park and the BeltLine are a short walk for green space and weekend crowds, and Midtown's restaurants and music venues sit right outside the door. Game days bring out the Ramblin' Wreck and a fight song everyone somehow knows by October. It's the rare campus where the city is a feature, not a distraction.
Georgia Tech does not require first-year students to live on campus, though the large majority do. The freshman residence hall experience is the strong default, and most incoming students take it. The live-on choice is about the freshman experience here rather than a rule.
Tech does not approve, certify, or inspect off-campus rentals, so everything beyond the campus edge is a standard Atlanta lease with no university involvement. Purpose-built student housing near campus fills through pre-leasing like any college market, but conventional Midtown apartment buildings run on big-city rules, with income requirements, guarantor forms, and application fees that assume a salaried tenant. Get a parent or guarantor lined up before you apply, not after.
The real housing decision hits at sophomore year, because on-campus space is not guaranteed for upperclassmen, and the off-campus migration is heavy by junior year. Most student-oriented leases run August-to-August, so plan your dates around that turnover. Read your lease closely, because Georgia law leans landlord-friendly and the terms you sign are the protections you get.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with Georgia Institute of Technology-Main Campus before signing a lease.
Tech's timeline splits by housing type. The purpose-built student buildings in Midtown and West Midtown pre-lease October through February for the following August, with the closest-to-campus options going first. Early searchers who want walk-to-class housing should commit by February to secure the best spots. Treating the near-campus student buildings like a competitive market is the surest path to the closest beds.
Home Park houses, the classic Tech move, turn over on a looser spring rhythm, with most signing happening February through May as current groups decide whether to renew. The peak for walkable housing runs from late winter into spring as both student buildings and Home Park houses clear. Most students at Georgia Tech chasing walk-to-class housing are competing hardest in this stretch. Fall semester starts in mid-August, but the closest housing fills months earlier.
Conventional Atlanta apartments typically list only 30 to 60 days before move-in, so that inventory does not even exist to browse until early summer. If you are fine with a MARTA ride or a Stinger stop between you and campus, you can wait until May or June and still land somewhere good. Atlanta always has another building going up, which keeps options open for late searchers. Last-minute hunters who stay flexible on location have real choices well into summer.
Directly north of campus, the definitive Tech student neighborhood, with older houses, group leases, and a straight walk to class.
The high-rise splurge, with MARTA access and the city's best food within blocks.
Along Howell Mill, with newer buildings and the brewery-and-warehouse scene.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
Shared rooms near Georgia Tech typically run $800-$1,100/month. Home Park group houses anchor the affordable end, purpose-built student buildings sit mid-range, and Midtown high-rises push well past the top of that range. This is central Atlanta, and rent acts like it.
Other universities in Atlanta share a similar off-campus housing market.
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