




$559+/unit
Fees may apply25Twenty





$533/unit
Fees may applyPark East Student Living





$419+/unit
Fees may applyRaiders Pass





$513+/unit
Fees may applyThe Bloc





$575+/unit
Fees may applyThe Collective at Lubbock





$320+/unit
Fees may applyThe One at Lubbock





$479+/unit
Fees may applyThe Republic at Lubbock

$459+/unit
Fees may applyThe Scarlet





$499+/unit
Fees may applyTHRIVE in Lubbock





$659/unit
Fees may applyU Club Townhomes at Overton Park





$549+/unit
Fees may applyUniversity Pointe





$619+/unit
Fees may apply21Hundred at Overton Park

$550+/unit
Fees may applyCentre Suites I

$611+/unit
Fees may applyRaiders Walk

$549+/unit
Fees may applyThe Edge | Student Housing


$425+/unit
Fees may applyThe Grove at Lubbock





$449+/unit
Fees may applyThe Holly

$400+/unit
Fees may applyThe Maddox


$580+/unit
Fees may applyWildwood Lubbock
Texas Tech University packs roughly 40,322 Red Raiders into Lubbock, the hub of the West Texas plains. Campus is known for its Spanish Renaissance architecture and wide-open layout, and game days revolve around Jones AT&T Stadium, where the Masked Rider charges the field and the Goin' Band keeps the crowd loud. Basketball fills United Supermarkets Arena, and every December the Carol of Lights drapes campus in tens of thousands of bulbs. Lubbock claims Buddy Holly as its favorite son and honors those music roots downtown. Mackenzie Park gives you trails, disc golf, and an amphitheater on the northeast side. The city is flat and spread out, so most students drive, bike, or hop the campus shuttle, and the student-heavy blocks just north and south of campus stay walkable to class.
Texas Tech University requires most first-year students to live in the residence halls, a standard live-on policy. Most freshmen at Texas Tech spend their first year in the halls before pouring into the off-campus blocks around campus. The policy shapes when students begin their off-campus search for sophomore year.
Exemptions cover students who are older, married, have dependents, live at home with a parent or guardian within commuting distance, or have enough prior college credit. Once that first year is behind you, students move into the off-campus blocks around campus. The Lubbock market is heavily geared toward students, with lots of purpose-built, by-the-bed complexes plus older houses in the close-in neighborhoods.
By-the-bed leasing is the big local quirk: you're usually responsible only for your own room, not the whole unit, which simplifies roommate risk. Expect an application with income or guarantor verification and a deposit or admin fee. Read leases for what's included, since furniture, utilities caps, and parking vary a lot from complex to complex.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with Texas Tech University before signing a lease.
Lubbock runs on an early, aggressive preleasing cycle typical of a big student town. The purpose-built complexes around campus open leasing for the next fall as early as the previous fall, and the best units and floor plans can be spoken for by winter or early spring. If you want a specific complex or a prime spot in Overton, start touring and signing from roughly October through February for the following August. Lock in roommates early, since by-the-bed complexes often let you match or request specific people before they fill.
The best units and floor plans can be spoken for by winter or early spring, so October through February is the prime signing window for the next August. Houses in Tech Terrace tend to lease a bit later, often spring into early summer, but the good ones still go. Classes start in late August, and the closest, most walkable spots get claimed well before then. Groups chasing a specific complex should sign during this stretch.
If you wait until summer you'll be picking from leftovers, usually farther out. Spring brings sublet and lease-takeover opportunities when students graduate or study abroad, which can be a solid fallback. Late searchers can still find houses in Tech Terrace that lease into early summer. Widening the search beyond Overton opens up more options for students searching last-minute.
Overton, just north of campus, is the dense student hub, packed with modern by-the-bed complexes and walkable to class and nightlife. North Overton has been heavily redeveloped and runs trendy and newer.
Tech Terrace, south of campus, is the classic house neighborhood, tree-lined streets with rental homes popular for roommate groups. It suits students who want a house to share with friends.
Arnett Benson sits northwest with more everyday, often lower-cost housing. It offers a quieter, more affordable option a short drive from campus.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
A by-the-bed room in a student complex near campus usually runs $500-$800/month per person, with newer Overton buildings sitting at the higher end and older spots lower. Renting a room in a shared Tech Terrace house can land around $450-$700/month per person. Budget another $40-$120/month for utilities, depending on whether the complex caps electric and what's bundled in.