$1,745/unit
Fees may applyFox Park Apartments



$3,900+/unit
Fees may applyInter-Lakes Properties
Plymouth State University brings about 4,500 students to Plymouth, a small New Hampshire town at the foot of the White Mountains where the Pemigewasset and Baker rivers meet. Campus blends into the walkable downtown, so Main Street's shops and outdoor tables are part of daily life. Below Main Street there's a riverside amphitheater, and the Pemigewasset rushes hardest in spring when the mountain snow melts. The Plymouth Town Common and its gazebo host a free summer concert series. Come fall, the Panther Prowl walks students from campus through downtown to the football field for Homecoming, with plenty of Bleed Green pride for the Panthers across the river. The mountains are the real draw: hiking and skiing are minutes away, and most students walk everywhere.
Plymouth State requires full-time matriculated students to live on campus when space is available, and every first-year is placed in a traditional residence hall as part of the First-Year Residential Experience. Halls include Blair, Belknap, Grafton, Pemigewasset, Geneva Smith, and Mary Lyon, keeping new students close to campus life.
You can be released if you turn 21 before the year starts, finish 64 or more credits, or commute within 30 miles from a parent or guardian's home with written approval from Residential Life. That means most students don't move off campus until junior year or later.
Plymouth's rental market is dominated by a few long-running local property companies and individual landlords renting houses and apartments near campus and downtown. Leases are direct with the owner, and many include heat, hot water, electricity, plowing, and trash, which matters in a New Hampshire winter. Confirm exactly what's bundled, ask about occupancy limits, and read the lease term before signing.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with Plymouth State University before signing a lease.
Plymouth's good off-campus places go early because so few open up. The strong houses and apartments near campus get snapped up by returning students in the fall for the next academic year, often as early as October or November. If you're aiming for a walk-to-class spot, start talking to the established local rental companies before winter break, since they fill fast and rarely sit empty.
Most leases run the academic year or a full 12 months starting in late August, so the fall booking season sets the pace. Because the live-on requirement keeps underclassmen in the dorms, the off-campus pool is small and competitive. Missing the fall window can leave you commuting or settling for a place farther out. Check the university's free Places4Students listings and local landlord sites early and often.
Spring is your fallback for whatever's left after the fall rush clears. Sublets surface over the summer and around winter break when students study away or graduate. If you're searching late, be flexible on location and consider a spot a bit farther from the center. Keep an eye on local landlord sites, which post openings as they come up.
The prime student zone, steps from class, shops, and the riverside amphitheater, mostly in apartments and houses split into units. The blocks right around campus are the easy walk-to-class pick where most off-campus students land.
Toward the Pemigewasset River you get scenic riverside spots and a quieter feel, still within reach of downtown and campus.
Out toward Highland Street and the edges of town, rentals get roomier and a bit calmer, though you may want a car. Farther out near the mountains you trade walkability for space and views.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
A shared room in a house or apartment near campus usually runs $500-$850/month per person, and many Plymouth rentals fold heat, hot water, and electricity into that number. Whole units downtown go higher per unit, but splitting a house with roommates is the cheapest path per person in this small market.