$600/unit
Fees may apply5445 Ingleside by 3L Living





$685/unit
Fees may apply5540 Hyde Park by 3L Living





$1,150/unit
Fees may applyAddams Coliving





$1,899/unit
Fees may applyArc at Old Colony

$970+/unit
Fees may applyDwight Lofts
$895+/unit
Fees may applyHyde Lofts

$2,451+/unit
Fees may applyHyde Park Tower





$1,315+/unit
Fees may applyHyde Park West Apartments & Townhomes




$1,239+/unit
Fees may applyIon Lincoln Park





$1,220+/unit
Fees may applyTailor Lofts Student Living
$12,684+/unit
Fees may applyThe Academic and Residential Complex (ARC)





$2,020+/unit
Fees may applyThe Alfred





$999+/unit
Fees may applyThe Buckingham Student Living





$1,415+/unit
Fees may applyUniversity Center
$1,300+/unit
Fees may applyUniversity Manor Apartments

$2,900/unit
Fees may apply1624 S Throop St

$2,150+/unit
Fees may apply2144 N Bell Ave

$1,299+/unit
Fees may apply626 on the Park





$1,959+/unit
Fees may apply731 Plymouth by 3L Living





$2,055+/unit
Fees may apply777 South State

$1,040/unit
Fees may applyLetterman Chicago
Northeastern Illinois University sits in North Park, a quiet residential pocket on Chicago's northwest side, with around 7,100 students across a main campus and satellites like the El Centro campus near Avondale. It's a commuter school at heart, so students fan out across the city and meet for class, clubs, and intramurals rather than dorm life. The main campus is leafy and low-rise, a few miles inland from Montrose Beach. Chicago is the real campus, though: the CTA Brown Line at Kimball plus a web of buses put downtown, the lakefront, and neighborhoods like Lincoln Square and Albany Park within easy reach. Students grab the El for a concert, a museum day, or a Cubs game, then head back to North Park's calm tree-lined blocks to study.
NEIU is primarily a commuter campus, so there is no freshman live-on requirement the way you would find at a residential university. On-campus housing exists but is limited, centered on The Nest, a smaller residence option. Most students live at home or rent in the surrounding neighborhoods from day one.
Because there is no residency mandate, you are entering the regular Chicago rental market rather than a campus-run system from your first semester. Many North Park buildings are owned by smaller local landlords, so terms vary. If you are under a certain age or have no rental history, a landlord may ask for a co-signer, so line that up early.
Expect standard Chicago leases that typically run 12 months, often starting in spring or fall, with credit checks, a security deposit, and sometimes first and last month up front. Watch for who pays heat, since Chicago winters make that line item matter. Read the security-deposit clause closely, because the city has specific tenant protections worth knowing.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with Northeastern Illinois University before signing a lease.
Chicago's rental cycle moves fast, and North Park is no exception, so most students at NEIU start seriously looking in spring, around March through May, for a fall start. Good apartments near the main campus on the south and east sides go quickly once they post. Because so much of NEIU is commuter, you are competing with the broader neighborhood, not just other students. Do not wait if you want a close-in spot.
The biggest churn happens around the May to September window, when leases turn over and the most listings hit the market. Classes start in late August, so demand peaks just before the term. Apartments near the main campus and along the Brown Line move fastest during this stretch. Searching during this window gives you the most choices but also the most competition.
If you are searching late, summer still has options, and you can also look along the Brown Line toward Albany Park or Lincoln Square and commute in. Winter searches are slower with fewer listings but less competition, and you can sometimes negotiate. Sublets pop up year-round in a big city like this. Check listing pages and neighborhood groups if your timing is off.
The campus neighborhood is quiet, residential, and the closest walk to class. It is the natural first choice for students who want to be near campus.
Diverse and well-connected just south of campus, with Brown Line access and lots of rentals. It offers strong value and an easy commute in.
A livelier district to the east with shops, restaurants, and a higher price tag. Nearby Ravenswood is leafy and central along the Brown Line, popular for splitting a place with roommates.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
A room in a shared apartment near NEIU and North Park usually runs about $700-$1,100/month per person, depending on the building and how many roommates you have. A private studio or one-bedroom in the area runs higher, often $1,100-$1,500/month. Heat is sometimes included in older buildings, so always ask, since Chicago winters make that a real cost factor.
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