
$915+/unit
Fees may applyAshley Collegetown





$1,545+/unit
Fees may applyBell Rock Springs





$1,350+/unit
Fees may applyBroadstone Pullman





$1,498+/unit
Fees may applyCentra at North Druid Hills





$1,335+/unit
Fees may applyCortland Druid Hills





$1,608+/unit
Fees may applyCortland Oleander



$1,493+/unit
Fees may applyEntra West End





$1,154+/unit
Fees may applyHub Atlanta





$1,440+/unit
Fees may applyInspire Atlanta





$1,563+/unit
Fees may applyLive 8 West

$1,139+/unit
Fees may applyPaloma West Midtown




$1,399+/unit
Fees may applyRambler Atlanta


$1,019+/unit
Fees may applyReflection

$1,475+/unit
Fees may applySmith & Porter Apartments





$1,375+/unit
Fees may applySquare on Fifth





$1,399+/unit
Fees may applyThe Connector Apartments


$950+/unit
Fees may applyThe Flats at Atlantic Station





$1,209+/unit
Fees may applyThe Hive





$995+/unit
Fees may applyThe Legacy at Centennial





$1,038+/unit
Fees may applyThe Mark Atlanta

$999+/unit
Fees may applyThe Mix Apartments
Georgia State University doesn't have a campus bubble because its campus is downtown Atlanta itself, with classroom buildings woven straight into the city grid. Hurt Park and Woodruff Park stand in for a quad, and Five Points station puts every MARTA line a few steps from class. The city does the heavy lifting for everything else: Centennial Olympic Park, the Georgia Aquarium, and Mercedes-Benz Stadium all sit within walking distance, and the Atlanta BeltLine is a quick hop for a run or a patio crawl. The College Football Hall of Fame stands across the street from campus, which feels about right for a school this stitched into the city. Panthers mostly commute, so student life here looks like real downtown life, not a gated quad.
Georgia State University does not require freshmen to live on campus. It is a majority-commuter school where living off campus or at home from day one is the norm rather than the exception. On-campus housing holds only a small fraction of the Atlanta campus's 36,000-plus students, so first-years who want it should apply early because it genuinely fills.
There is no university approval or certification process for off-campus housing at GSU, so you are renting on the open Atlanta market. Downtown buildings vary wildly in management quality at similar prices, so dig into recent resident reviews instead of trusting the leasing-office tour. If you will commute to campus, check the building against the MARTA map first, because proximity to a station is the whole game here.
The common path for students who start in the dorms is to move into a downtown student high-rise or a MARTA-line neighborhood by sophomore year. Most student high-rises and Atlanta apartments run standard annual terms, so confirm your dates before signing. Renting on the open market means your timing follows availability rather than a university housing calendar.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with Georgia State University before signing a lease.
Atlanta runs on a hybrid calendar, and the student-focused high-rises downtown open fall preleasing the previous fall and winter. Their cheapest units are gone by spring, so if you want purpose-built student housing for an August move-in, look between November and March. Early searchers in this window capture both the best pricing and the closest-to-campus beds. Treating the downtown high-rises like a competitive market pays off in selection.
Demand for purpose-built student housing peaks through winter and into early spring as the cheapest units sell out. Summer is the most competitive stretch for the general market, because the whole city moves between May and July, and student demand stacks on top of it. Most students at GSU hunting downtown beds are competing hardest before spring. Fall classes start in late August, setting the clock for everyone after a walkable address.
The general Atlanta market, including apartments in Old Fourth Ward, Grant Park, and East Atlanta, turns over year-round on 30 to 60 day notice, a safety net classic college towns do not offer. Spring move-ins are easy because individual leases turn over every December. Spring semester starts in mid-January, opening up turnover units. Late searchers should weigh nearness to MARTA over nearness to campus, because a cheaper apartment one station out usually beats an expensive one three blocks closer.
Student high-rises within a few blocks of class, the closest thing GSU has to a campus bubble.
BeltLine territory just east of downtown, pricier but the upgrade people happily pay for.
Quieter streets and split houses southeast of campus, where the group-house math works best.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
Shared rooms near GSU typically run $700-$1,000/month. Downtown student high-rises sit at the top of that range with utilities often bundled; splitting a house in Grant Park or East Atlanta can land below it. Compare total monthly cost, not sticker rent.
Other universities in Atlanta share a similar off-campus housing market.
Clark Atlanta University is a private historically Black university in Atlanta's Vine City neighborhood, west of downtown. Founded in 1988 through the consolidation of Clark College and Atlanta University, CAU sits at the heart of the Atlanta University Center Consortium alongside Morehouse, Spelman, Morris Brown, and…
View housing near Clark Atlanta UniversityEmory University sits in the historic Druid Hills neighborhood of Atlanta, with about 14,000 students on a leafy campus of quads and red-brick buildings. Druid Hills is gorgeous and green, full of stately old homes and mature trees, and Emory's own Lullwater Preserve gives students miles of trails, a lake, and a forest…
View housing near EmoryThe 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…
View housing near Georgia TechMorehouse College is a private historically Black liberal arts college for men located at 830 Westview Dr SW in the West End area of Atlanta, Georgia. With an enrollment of approximately 2,500 students, Morehouse is one of the most respected HBCUs in the United States and is a founding member of the Atlanta University…
View housing near Morehouse CollegeSpelman College is a prestigious historically Black liberal arts college for women in Atlanta, Georgia, regarded as one of the leading HBCUs in the country. Founded in 1881, Spelman enrolls about 2,200 undergraduates in rigorous programs spanning the arts, sciences, humanities, and social sciences within a community…
View housing near Spelman College