
$2,549+/unit
Fees may apply170 W 225th St





$9+/unit
Fees may applyEHS Hudson Yards Residence
Monroe College anchors about 6,500 students in the Fordham section of the Bronx, a dense, fast-moving stretch of New York City that's been the school's home since the 1960s. The campus is a cluster of buildings woven into the Fordham commercial district, one of the busiest shopping corridors in the borough, so daily life happens on real city sidewalks rather than a quiet quad. The neighborhood sits next to Belmont, the Bronx's old Italian heart, and a short walk from the New York Botanical Garden and the Bronx Zoo, two great public landmarks. The subway and Metro-North put the rest of New York within easy reach, so students treat the whole city as campus. Public transit, not cars, is how everyone gets around, and the energy of the Bronx is the everyday backdrop here.
Monroe runs residence halls in the Bronx, but on-campus beds are limited and there is no broad freshman live-on mandate the way big state schools have one. A lot of students commute or rent off campus from the start. If you want a campus room you apply through housing and space is first come, so locking in early matters.
Students are free to rent off campus from the start, renting in the New York City market, which has its own rules. Most apartments come through a broker who typically charges a fee, and landlords usually want proof of income at roughly forty times the monthly rent or a guarantor, plus first month and a security deposit up front. Watch the legal occupancy limit, since packing extra roommates into a unit can violate the lease and city housing code.
Buildings here are mostly older walk-ups and small apartment houses, so check the heat, hot water, and whether the unit is rent-stabilized, which affects how much your rent can climb. Most leases run a straight twelve months from whenever you sign, not a tidy August-to-May term. Confirm lease length before you sign.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with Monroe College before signing a lease.
The Bronx rental market moves fast and does not wait for a school calendar, so apartments turn over year-round and the listing you like today can be gone in a week. Because leases run twelve months from whenever you sign, timing is more about when your current place ends than a single preleasing season. Bring your paperwork to every showing, including pay stubs or an offer letter, ID, and guarantor info. Units go to whoever can sign first.
Summer is the busiest stretch as students and recent grads shuffle, so start looking four to six weeks before you need to move. Be ready to act the same day you tour, since units move quickly during this window. The Fordham core right around campus draws the heaviest competition. Having your documents ready is what wins a unit here.
If you are searching last minute, look one or two subway stops out from Fordham where there is more inventory. Roommate-share and room-rental listings refresh constantly online, so check daily rather than once a month. The subway and Metro-North put the rest of New York within easy reach, so a unit a few stops out still works. Acting the same day you tour is essential.
The busy core right around campus, with older walk-ups above a major shopping strip and everything within steps.
The historic Little Italy of the Bronx just east, with tight-knit blocks and a short walk to class.
University Heights runs residential and a bit farther west toward the Harlem River for more space, while Bedford Park offers quieter streets near the Botanical Garden and Metro-North.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
A room in a shared Bronx apartment near campus usually runs about $700-$1,100/month per person once you split a unit with roommates. Renting a whole one-bedroom near Fordham trends higher, so sharing is how most students keep it manageable. Spots right on the Fordham strip sit at the top, while rooms a few stops out in Bedford Park or Pelham Parkway land lower.