
$415+/unit
Fees may applyTLH RENT

$670+/unit
Fees may applyTuscany Village





$475+/unit
Fees may applyUniversity Center Apartments

$589+/unit
Fees may applyVertex

$606+/unit
Fees may applyVilla Cristina Apartments & Townhomes





$725+/unit
Fees may applyVilla Lucia

$720+/unit
Fees may applyVilla Reanna Apartments

$763+/unit
Fees may applyWest 10

$625+/unit
Fees may applyWhitehall Apartments





$1,245+/unit
Fees may applyYugo Tallahassee Catalyst
Tallahassee State College is a Florida state college offering associate degrees, bachelor's degrees, and workforce certificates, serving roughly 12,000 to 15,000 students in Tallahassee. Formerly known as Tallahassee Community College, the institution operates as an open-admissions commuter school with no on-campus housing. Students come from throughout the Tallahassee area and the surrounding region, many balancing coursework with work and family responsibilities. The campus is located on Appleyard Drive on the western side of the city, near Florida State University and Florida A&M University.
Tallahassee State College has no on-campus housing and therefore no requirement for any students to live on campus. The college is a commuter institution and all students, including first-year students, arrange their own housing throughout the Tallahassee metropolitan area. There is no residential life program or campus dormitory infrastructure at TSC.
All TSC students live off campus, and the college does not restrict or regulate where students choose to live. The Tallahassee rental market is heavily shaped by Florida State University and Florida A&M University, which together enroll over 60,000 students and create intense competition for rentals near the college zone on the western side of the city. TSC students compete in this same market and should plan accordingly.
TSC students looking for housing in Tallahassee should begin their search in December or January for an August start. FSU and FAMU students drive the seasonal rental cycle, and housing near the college corridor typically gets claimed between January and March. Starting early ensures TSC students are not left with limited options as the market tightens heading into spring.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with Tallahassee State College before signing a lease.
Students who start looking in December or January gain a significant advantage in the Tallahassee rental market. The city's rental cycle is driven primarily by FSU and FAMU students, and the best apartments near the TSC campus on Appleyard Drive tend to fill before the spring semester ends. Getting ahead of the peak demand period means more options at better prices, particularly for students hoping to stay near the western corridor of the city. Forming a roommate group before the search begins helps move faster when a good unit becomes available.
January through March is when the Tallahassee rental market becomes most competitive, as students from FSU, FAMU, and TSC all search simultaneously. Units near the TSC campus, College Town, and the Gaines Street corridor go particularly quickly because they appeal to multiple student populations. Landlords and property management companies in Tallahassee are accustomed to this cycle and often prioritize applicants who have documentation ready. Setting up alerts on Zillow, Apartments.com, and Facebook Marketplace can help you catch new listings as soon as they post during this window.
Students searching in April or May may still find housing but will have fewer choices close to campus. Neighborhoods farther from the TSC campus such as Southside or areas along Thomasville Road may still have vacancies and can work well for students with reliable transportation. Summer sublets are common in Tallahassee because many FSU students leave after the spring semester, creating short-term opportunities that can bridge the gap until a longer-term lease becomes available. Checking university housing boards, local Facebook groups, and contacting property managers directly can surface options that do not always appear on major platforms.
The area around campus on the west side, dense with student-oriented apartments serving FSU, FAMU, and TSC students.
Stretching toward FSU's main campus, with numerous complexes, popular for proximity to multiple institutions.
Just south of FSU, a livelier district with dining, entertainment, and walkable apartments.
A quieter residential feel with independent coffee shops and restaurants, popular with graduate and professional students. Most students rely on a car given limited transit.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
No, Tallahassee State College does not have on-campus housing or dormitories. The college is a commuter institution and all students live in private housing throughout the Tallahassee area. Students should plan to secure their own rental before classes begin.
Other universities in Tallahassee share a similar off-campus housing market.
Florida A&M University crowns one of Tallahassee's seven hills with about 9,184 Rattlers, a historic HBCU whose pride runs loud through homecoming and the legendary Marching 100. Set in Florida's capital, campus sits minutes from the state Capitol and shares a leafy, hilly city with another big university nearby. Just…
View housing near FAMUFlorida State University packs about 43,569 students into Tallahassee, Florida's capital and a city of rolling hills, live oaks, and Spanish moss that feels more Old South than beach Florida. The heart of campus is the brick Westcott Building and its fountain, with Landis Green serving as the big shared lawn where…
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