$599+/unit
Fees may applyCampus Flats





$499+/unit
Fees may applyCampustown





$549+/unit
Fees may applyThe Grove at Ames





$445+/unit
Fees may applyThe Landing Ames
$600/unit
Fees may applyThe Point at Ames



$489+/unit
Fees may apply200 Stanton Ave

$550/unit
Fees may apply210 Gray - Sunset View





$549/unit
Fees may apply225 Stanton Ave





$509/unit
Fees may apply2325 Knapp St


$559/unit
Fees may apply300 Stanton Ave





$504/unit
Fees may apply324 Welch Ave

$550/unit
Fees may applyBeach View

$489+/unit
Fees may applyLegacy Tower 119 Stanton Ave

$600/unit
Fees may applyMortensen Heights

$397+/unit
Fees may applyThe Lofts


$439+/unit
Fees may applyThe Madison

$459+/unit
Fees may applyThe Social Reserve

$399+/unit
Fees may applyThe Social West AmesĀ®
Iowa State University spreads about 31,800 Cyclones across Ames, a college town that pretty much runs on the school's rhythm. The heart of it is Central Campus, a wide green lawn anchored by Lake LaVerne and its two resident swans, with the Campanile chiming over everything. Just south, Campustown buzzes along Welch Avenue, where students cluster between classes. Fall belongs to Jack Trice Stadium, named for the Cyclone who's the only Black athlete a major stadium honors, and winter packs Hilton Coliseum for the noise everyone calls Hilton Magic. Most folks walk the flat campus or hop a CyRide bus, which students ride free, so a car's more of a luxury than a need. Des Moines sits 30 minutes south when you want a city night.
Iowa State does not force freshmen into the dorms, which is unusual. Most first-years still live on campus because it is the easy way to land friends and a routine, but it is a choice rather than a mandate.
You are free to sign a lease off campus from day one if you would rather, and plenty of sophomores make the jump. By junior year the majority have moved into Campustown or the wider Ames rental scene. The process is refreshingly low-drama, with no city certification hoops or occupancy permits to chase, so expect standard application checks, a security deposit, and often a guarantor if you lack rental history.
Most student leases run a full 12 months tied to the August cycle, not just the school year, so you will pay through summer whether you stay or head home. Leases overwhelmingly start August 1, lining up with the fall move-in crush. Read the subletting clause before you sign if your summer plans are fuzzy.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with Iowa State University before signing a lease.
Ames runs on an early clock, so getting ahead matters. Preleasing for the next August kicks off in the fall, and a lot of returning students lock in their spots by October or November for the following year. If you want the walk-to-class spots in Campustown or a specific complex near Hilton Coliseum, you are shopping in the fall and signing well before winter break. Most students at Iowa State who want a prime spot start touring early.
The heart of the signing season runs through the fall and into early winter, when returning students re-sign. The closest-to-campus units tend to go first, so the walk-everywhere zone fills fastest. Leases overwhelmingly start August 1, lining up with the fall move-in crush. Typically the prime Campustown spots are claimed before winter break.
Wait until spring and you will still find places, just fewer of the prime ones. If you are arriving for spring semester or need something short term, look at sublets that surface as students leave for co-ops, study abroad, or graduation. Those pop up on campus housing boards and local groups. Summer is the quietest stretch, which makes it the easiest time to tour without competition.
Right off campus along Welch Avenue, the walk-everywhere zone where most underclassmen want to be, full of bars, shops, and walk-to-class apartments.
Spreads toward Hilton Coliseum with larger complexes and a bit more space for the same hustle.
Just north of campus, it plays like a small urban village with a town-center feel, trails, and a quieter pace.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
A shared room or per-person rate in a Campustown complex usually runs about $500-$800/month. Studios and tighter one-bedrooms near campus land higher, often $800-$1,100/month, while splitting a bigger place in West Ames or out toward downtown brings the per-person number down. Budget another $40-$120/month for utilities depending on what's included.