
$3,125/unit
Fees may apply166 First Ave

$1,650+/unit
Fees may apply26A Scholes St





$5,550+/unit
Fees may applyEast Village Residence

$1,367+/unit
Fees may applyEHS 55 John Street





$4,150+/unit
Fees may applyEHS Hudson Yards Residence





$5,550+/unit
Fees may applyEHS Marymount Residence

$1,396+/unit
Fees may applyEHS St George Towers
$2,026+/unit
Fees may applyFOUND Study Brooklyn Heights

$1,600+/unit
Fees may applyFOUND Study Brooklyn Heights - Student/Intern


$1,900/unit
Fees may applyFOUND Study Chelsea- Student/Intern

$1,800+/unit
Fees may applyFOUND Study Financial District

$2,400+/unit
Fees may applyFOUND Study Midtown East - Student/Intern

$2,400+/unit
Fees may applyFOUND Study Turtle Bay- Student/Intern


$2,700+/unit
Fees may applyHeritage Collection New York

$6,300/unit
Fees may applyHeritage Collection New York – Heritage Collection on Grand Central (E 36th) – Two Bedroom

$6,300/unit
Fees may applyHeritage Collection on Grand Central (E 36th) – Two Bedroom





$3,050+/unit
Fees may applyMonarch Heights Apartments
$2,800/unit
Fees may applyStudent Housing Works – West End Avenue





$10,500/unit
Fees may applyThe 79th Residence – Hunter College





$2,495+/unit
Fees may applyThe Alabama





$170/unit
Fees may applyUnion Square Apartments
New 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 city is the backyard. Downtown's restaurants, the West Village's jazz clubs, and a subway that never sleeps mean your weekend plans are limited by stamina, not options. Every spring the Strawberry Festival builds an absurdly long strawberry shortcake in the park, one of the rare campus-wide traditions a school this scattered can pull off. You don't go to NYU to escape New York. You go to live in it.
New York University does not require anyone to live on campus, not even freshmen. Most first-years choose NYU housing anyway, because showing up in Manhattan with no apartment, no credit history, and no guarantor is a rough way to start college. The live-on choice is about practicality here rather than a rule.
There is no university approval or certification process for off-campus rentals at NYU. The university offers off-campus housing resources, but you are renting on the open New York City market like everyone else. That market demands proof of income around 40 times the monthly rent, or a guarantor earning around 80 times, or a paid guarantor service that covers you for a fee.
Most students move off campus by junior year, since residence hall rates often cost more than splitting an apartment in Brooklyn. New York City leases typically list only 30 to 60 days before move-in, so your timing follows the market rather than a school calendar. Sort your documents, including pay stubs, bank statements, and guarantor information, before you start touring, because good apartments do not wait for paperwork.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with New York University before signing a lease.
Forget everything you know about college-town leasing, because New York City apartments list only 30 to 60 days before move-in. Searching in March for September is pointless because September listings do not exist yet. For a September 1 move-in, the real search starts in July, so the earliest useful move is preparing your documents rather than browsing listings. Have your paperwork ready before you look, not after.
Summer is peak season, with the most inventory but the worst prices, and fall classes start right after Labor Day. That puts every NYU student hunting in the most competitive window of the year. When you find something good, move fast, because strong listings collect applications within 48 hours. Most students at NYU are searching in this same summer crush, so speed and preparation decide who wins a unit.
Winter is the opposite of peak season, with less competition and better prices for spring move-ins. Since mid-2025, New York City requires whoever hires the broker, usually the landlord, to pay the broker fee, so tenant-paid broker fees have mostly disappeared, though some landlords folded the cost into rent instead. Spring searchers benefit from a quieter market and looser pricing. Last-minute hunters in any season still win by having documents ready and acting within a day of a strong listing.
The classic NYU spillover zone, walkable to Washington Square and priced accordingly.
Where NYU budgets actually work, strung along the L and M lines, with the city's densest sublet scene.
Deeper into Brooklyn on the A/C and 2/3 lines, with full-sized apartments at the best per-person prices students reliably find.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
A shared bedroom near NYU typically runs $1,200-$1,800/month: lower in Bushwick or Crown Heights, higher in the East Village or anywhere walkable to Washington Square. A private bedroom in a shared Manhattan apartment usually starts well above that range. Utilities and internet add $75-$150 per person.
Other universities in New York share a similar off-campus housing market.
Pace 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…
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