




$2,275+/unit
Fees may apply1856 Park

$7,999/unit
Fees may apply186 #2B 8bed

$3,450/unit
Fees may apply222 East 56th Street #4C

$4,995+/unit
Fees may apply234 W 14TH ST




$3,300/unit
Fees may apply246 W 106th St

$3,295+/unit
Fees may apply251 West 117th Street

$5,287/unit
Fees may apply273 W 10TH ST

$2,600/unit
Fees may apply309 East 111th Street

$2,975/unit
Fees may apply3135 Broadway APT # 6

$3,895/unit
Fees may apply320 West 106th Street





$3,000/unit
Fees may apply345 Riverside Dr





$5,900/unit
Fees may apply350 Manhattan APT # 3F





$2,600/unit
Fees may apply371 W 117th St




$3,295/unit
Fees may apply394 East 8th Street

$2,200+/unit
Fees may apply3T

$2,895/unit
Fees may apply408 W 130th St





$5,000/unit
Fees may apply425 Riverside Dr #3j





$3,200+/unit
Fees may apply45 Tiemann Pl

$3,500+/unit
Fees may apply4C





$1,300/unit
Fees may apply4H





$3,300/unit
Fees may apply503 West 122nd Street
New York, NY is the largest city in the country and a student town on a scale nothing else matches, with campuses woven into its neighborhoods. New York University spreads across Greenwich Village, while Pace University sits downtown near the Financial District, so students are everywhere across Manhattan. There's no single campus bubble; your neighborhood is your campus extension, from the charm of the Village to the artistic energy of the East Village. Green space punches above expectations: Washington Square Park is NYU's unofficial quad, plus Central Park and the High Line. Civic landmarks, museums, and pro sports give the city endless culture. For the most connected, fast-moving student life with everything at your doorstep, New York defines it.
The heart of NYU, historic and tree-lined, where you can walk to class in minutes amid Old New York charm.
The social hub, gritty and artistic, packed with walk-up apartments, nightlife, and vintage character a short walk from campus.
For Pace students, the Financial District and Lower Manhattan put you steps from downtown campus with fast access across the city.
Here's what you need to know about getting around New York.
New York runs on its transit, and for students it's the whole game. The subway and bus network blankets the city around the clock, so you can reach class, work, and nightlife without ever touching a car. For NYU students, hubs like the West 4th Street station and the 8th Street-NYU station sit at the doorstep, and Pace students downtown have lower Manhattan lines a block away. Round-the-clock service covers late nights and early classes alike.
Walkability is world-class: in the Village and most of Manhattan you handle daily errands on foot. Getting to campus is usually a short walk or quick subway ride. Biking has exploded thanks to the city's bike-share network, though traffic demands confidence.
Owning a car is a liability here, with brutal parking, so almost no students bother. The transit network makes a vehicle unnecessary for daily life. If you do keep one, expect high costs and limited street space across Manhattan.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
It's the priciest market in the country. A one-bedroom near NYU can run $4,000-$6,500 monthly, so sharing is the norm: expect roughly $1,800-$2,500 per person in a multi-bedroom setup, sometimes more in Greenwich Village and a bit less farther from campus. Splitting with roommates is how most students make it work.
New York is home to 6 universities, each with its own student housing market.
The American Musical and Dramatic Academy occupies a Manhattan home at 211 West 61st Street, a performing-arts conservatory steps from Lincoln Center and the southwest corner of Central Park. Studying here means training in the cultural heart of New York, with Broadway theaters, audition rooms, and rehearsal studios…
View housing near American Musical and Dramatic AcademyBaker College is a Michigan-based career-focused institution with campuses spread across the state, and the Owosso campus serves students in Shiawassee County and the surrounding mid-Michigan region. Sitting in a small city of roughly 14,000 people along the Shiawassee River, the Owosso campus draws primarily working…
View housing near Baker CollegeColumbia University anchors the Morningside Heights neighborhood on Manhattan's Upper West Side, with a formal Beaux-Arts campus centered on Low Library and the Butler Library lawn between 114th and 120th Streets. As a major Ivy League research university, Columbia draws students worldwide into programs spanning the…
View housing near Columbia UniversityThe Fashion Institute of Technology sits in the heart of Chelsea on the west side of Manhattan, just blocks from the historic Garment District that once made New York the center of American fashion production. As a SUNY college, FIT offers an unusually affordable path to a design education in one of the world's most…
View housing near Fashion Institute of TechnologyNew York University doesn't sit on a campus so much as it lives inside Greenwich Village, with Washington Square Park as its unofficial quad. The arch, the fountain, the chess hustlers, and a few thousand students cutting through between classes: that's the closest thing NYU has to a college green. From there the whole…
View housing near NYUPace University drops about 12,835 students into Lower Manhattan, with its New York City campus anchored at One Pace Plaza near the Financial District and the Brooklyn Bridge. There's no leafy quad here. The campus is the city, and students spill into the streets between City Hall, the South Street Seaport, and the…
View housing near PaceBrowse student housing near each New York-area university.