




$529+/unit
Fees may applyAnnex





$4,200+/unit
Fees may applyCampus Commons


$499+/unit
Fees may applyLevel 27





$750+/unit
Fees may applyMiami Preserve





$999+/unit
Fees may applyPrime At Oxford





$3,400+/unit
Fees may applySouth Campus Quarter
$3,300+/unit
Fees may applyThe Courtyards of Miami

$3,500/unit
Fees may apply18 S Poplar





$15,000+/unit
Fees may apply18 S Poplar St




$2,900+/unit
Fees may apply208 W Chestnut St





$5,000/unit
Fees may apply218 University Ave





$4,875/unit
Fees may apply311 N Poplar Street





$2,500/unit
Fees may apply419 N University Ave





$5,199+/unit
Fees may apply9 West By Havenly



$4,600/unit
Fees may applyCampus Courts Apartments





$5,100+/unit
Fees may applyPour House (Main & Apartments)

$1,125/unit
Fees may applyStudent Housing- 52 East Park Place




$3,500/unit
Fees may applyTexas

$404+/unit
Fees may applyThe Commons





$4,000/unit
Fees may applyUptown Flats

$697+/unit
Fees may applyVillage Green Apartments
Oxford is a small college town in Butler County in southwestern Ohio, home to roughly 23,000 residents during the academic year, approximately half of whom are Miami University students. The city exists in a genuine symbiosis with the university: nearly every restaurant, bar, shop, and service business in Uptown Oxford caters primarily to the student population, and the rhythm of the town follows the academic calendar closely. The surrounding landscape is rural, with farmland and rolling hills stretching in most directions outside of the compact town core. Oxford sits about 35 miles north of Cincinnati, which provides access to a major city for entertainment, internships, and airport travel. The town itself is highly walkable and bikeable during the academic year, with most off-campus housing within a mile of both the central campus and Uptown Oxford. BCRTA provides some local bus service, but most residents with cars use them for trips outside the immediate town area. Oxford has a strong community identity and hosts a range of events, farmers markets, and festivals during the school year. The rental market is almost entirely student-oriented, which means off-campus housing searches are competitive and early. For Miami students, Oxford offers the classic American college town experience with a tight-knit community feel.
The streets immediately adjacent to Uptown Oxford, including High Street, Poplar Street, and the blocks just off the central square, are the most coveted addresses for Miami students. Living here means walking to class in under ten minutes and stepping out to restaurants and bars without needing transportation. Demand is extremely high, which means these properties lease earliest in the season, often by November.
The residential blocks east of the main academic core, including stretches of Campus Avenue and the surrounding cross streets, are densely packed with rental houses and smaller apartment buildings popular with juniors and seniors. The neighborhood is quieter than Uptown but still very close to classes and the library. Many properties here are older houses that rent to groups of three to five students splitting costs.
The streets north of campus along Spring Street and Patterson Avenue offer slightly lower rents and a more residential atmosphere than the Uptown core. Students who prefer a quieter living environment and do not need to be in the center of the social scene often choose this area. The walk to central campus buildings takes ten to fifteen minutes, which is still very manageable.
South Oxford is the most affordable quadrant of town for students willing to accept a longer walk or a short bike ride to campus. Rental houses here are often spacious and the prices per person can be meaningfully lower than comparable properties near Uptown. It is a practical choice for students in later years of their programs who prioritize budget and space over proximity.
Here's what you need to know about getting around Oxford.
The Butler County Regional Transit Authority, known as BCRTA, operates bus routes connecting Oxford to Hamilton, Middletown, and other Butler County communities. Within Oxford itself, transit coverage is limited and frequency is low, so most students do not rely on the bus for daily campus commuting. The most useful BCRTA routes for students are those connecting Oxford to Hamilton for shopping and services not available in town. There is no light rail or commuter rail service to Oxford.
Oxford is one of the more walkable college towns in Ohio for students who live near campus. The compact layout of the town means that most off-campus housing, Uptown businesses, and university buildings are within a fifteen-minute walk of each other. Biking is common during the fall and spring semesters, and the relatively flat terrain near the campus core makes cycling practical. Students in the spring and fall frequently bike to class, to Uptown for meals, and to local parks without needing a car at all.
Parking in Oxford is generally available but regulated carefully in the areas closest to campus and Uptown. On-street parking in residential neighborhoods requires permits for some zones, and violations are enforced actively. Most off-campus rental houses and apartment complexes include off-street parking in the rent or lease terms, which is one of the benefits of the student-oriented rental market. Students with cars find that having a vehicle is most useful for trips to Walmart in nearby Hamilton, shopping in Cincinnati, or traveling home during breaks.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
Rental prices in Oxford vary by proximity to campus and property type. Shared houses near Uptown typically run $550 to $900 per person per month when split among roommates. Apartments farther from Uptown or in South Oxford can be cheaper. One-bedroom or solo occupancy in any location usually starts at $900 and can exceed $1,200 for the closest addresses.
Browse student housing near each Oxford-area university.