
$1,585+/unit
Fees may applyAutumn Woods Apartments





$730+/unit
Fees may applyEnclave at Brockport

$649+/unit
Fees may applyFrances Apartments I





$1,200+/unit
Fees may applyPresidents Village Apartments

$1,280+/unit
Fees may applyThe Meadows Apartments

$1,020+/unit
Fees may applyWillowbrooke Apartments and Townhomes
SUNY Brockport sits about 7,600 students deep in a canal village 20 minutes west of Rochester, and the Erie Canal runs right through the middle of it. Main Street is the spine of student life: a walkable strip of shops, eateries, and music venues that empties straight onto the towpath, where folks bike, run, and watch the boats lock through all summer. Campus is a tight cluster, so most people walk everywhere and grab the BSG shuttle to the supermarket. The Golden Eagles pack the stands at Homecoming every fall, and Eagle Day closes out spring with a campus-wide carnival. When you want a bigger night, Rochester and the Lake Ontario beaches are a short drive north, but the canal and a quiet village pace are the everyday backdrop here.
First-year students at Brockport have to live on campus for their first four consecutive semesters, or three for spring admits. The off-campus move usually happens junior year once you have cleared the residency requirement. Leasing off campus while you are still bound to the requirement can leave you paying for a bed you cannot legally skip.
Exemptions exist for commuters living with family nearby, married students, veterans, and older or part-time students, but you have to apply through Residential Life and get written approval before you sign anything. Talk to financial aid too, because moving off campus can shift your aid package. Most off-campus housing here is houses and small apartment buildings owned by local landlords rather than big managed complexes.
Leases vary a lot, so read the fine print on who covers snow removal, lawn care, and trash, since the village enforces those. Landlords usually want a per-person deposit and may run credit or ask for a guarantor. Leases typically run mid-August through mid-May to match the academic year.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with SUNY Brockport before signing a lease.
Brockport runs on an early calendar because the good houses are few and they go fast. Landlords here often start showing and signing the next year's leases in the fall, sometimes as early as October, so groups lock in roommates and tour places during the first semester. Start a full year ahead if you want first pick. The best walk-to-campus houses on the Main Street side draw the earliest interest.
By the time the spring semester is underway, the best walk-to-campus houses on the Main Street side are usually gone. Most rentals are spoken for by mid-September for the term that is already started. Leases typically run mid-August through mid-May to match the academic year. Groups that have lined up roommates early dominate this window.
If you are searching late, look one ring out from campus or toward the canal side, and consider a place that needs one more roommate. Spring sublets pop up when students study abroad, graduate early, or do January co-ops, so check the BSG off-campus list and campus boards then. Summer housing is a separate, smaller pool. Acting quickly when a vacancy appears matters in a tight market.
The walkable core right by campus, with older houses and apartments above the shops, lets you roll out of bed to class.
Quieter blocks along the towpath, popular with students who like to run or bike to campus.
Streets like Holley, Park, and Utica hold single-family homes split into student rentals, a short walk or bike from the quad, with more space the farther you drift from Main Street.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
A room in a shared house or apartment near campus usually runs about $400-$700/month per person once you split it three or four ways. Walk-to-Main-Street spots and newer units sit at the top, while houses a few blocks out or on the canal side land lower. The whole-unit average in the village is higher, but Brockport students almost always share to bring the per-person number down.