




$449+/unit
Fees may applyCambridge at Southern





$509+/unit
Fees may applySouthern Downs





$655+/unit
Fees may applyThe Connection at Statesboro


$605+/unit
Fees may applyThe Garden District





$649/unit
Fees may applyThe George Student Living





$500+/unit
Fees may applyThe Vine at Bermuda Run

$600+/unit
Fees may applyOne Eleven South





$585/unit
Fees may applyThe Islands Statesboro

$600/unit
Fees may applyThe Townsend
Georgia Southern University brings about 27,000 students to Statesboro, a small south Georgia town where the university is the main event and Eagle Nation runs the place. The campus is famously green and walkable, built around Sweetheart Circle and a pedestrian core that keeps cars to the edges. Fall Saturdays mean football at Paulson Stadium, where the Eagles and the GATA spirit pack the stands and tailgates spill across campus. Statesboro stays low-key and tight-knit, with a historic downtown a short hop away. For the outdoors, Mill Creek Regional Park gives students trails, fields, and a water park on the edge of town. It's a true college town: small enough to feel like everyone's a student, big enough to keep fall Saturdays loud.
Georgia Southern University requires first-year students to live on campus for a full academic year. The rule covers any undergraduate new to the university with fewer than 30 earned credit hours, including first-time full-time students and new transfers under that threshold.
You must complete the First Year Live-On Exemption Request by May 1, or within two weeks of admission if you are admitted after April 15, to be released. One common exemption category is living with a parent within a 50-mile driving distance of the Statesboro campus. You handle the request through University Housing before signing anything off campus.
Student complexes use by-the-bed leases with one person per bedroom, while houses use whole-unit 12-month leases. Confirm what utilities you owe and whether the term covers summer. The market runs heavily on purpose-built student complexes near campus plus some houses.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with Georgia Southern University before signing a lease.
Statesboro runs on a student-complex calendar, so the cycle starts earlier than in bigger cities. Preleasing for the next fall opens in the fall before your lease year, and the closest and newest complexes start filling through the winter. Twice a year the university hosts Housing Fairs near the University Store and Dining Commons where complexes pitch directly. That is a smart, no-pressure way to compare options early.
The heavy wave runs January into spring as students settle plans, and the most-wanted by-the-bed units can be claimed by February or March. Classes start in mid-August, so lock something by spring to stay comfortable. Because the town is small and student-driven, demand concentrates fast on the complexes near campus and Paulson Stadium. The prime units clear quickly once the spring rush begins.
Late searchers should look at older complexes and houses, which turn over later and sometimes have summer openings. Spring and sublet availability stays thin since most leases run a full year, with summer subleases the main short-term option. You will trade some proximity and amenities for availability. Houses off the main roads keep turning over into the warmer months.
The streets and complexes right around campus, especially along the Lanier Drive and Fair Road corridor near Paulson Stadium, are the default for students who want a short walk or shuttle to class and game days.
The Georgia Avenue area sits close to campus with a mix of complexes and houses.
Historic downtown Statesboro puts you near the town's civic core and events with a quieter feel, while larger complexes off the main roads offer more space a short drive or bus ride out.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
A shared room or by-the-bed spot in Statesboro usually runs $400-$700/month per person. Rooms in shared houses and older complexes land at the bottom, while newer buildings with pools and gyms sit higher. Plan on another $30-$80/month for utilities if they aren't bundled, which student complexes sometimes partly cover.