
$940+/unit
Fees may applyArtwood Apartment Homes

$1,400+/unit
Fees may applyAuberge of Tyler





$855+/unit
Fees may applyCypress Flats

$1,099+/unit
Fees may applyDeerwood Apartments

$949+/unit
Fees may applyEastwood Apartments

$929+/unit
Fees may applyFox Run Apartment Homes

$1,204+/unit
Fees may applyStonebrook Apartments

$1,241+/unit
Fees may applySummerwood





$970+/unit
Fees may applyThe Dodson

$909+/unit
Fees may applyThe Evergreens
$1,505+/unit
Fees may applyThe Midtown Apartments

$1,088+/unit
Fees may applyThe Rose on Sybil





$754+/unit
Fees may applyUniversity Pines




$875+/unit
Fees may applyVarsity View Apartments





$3,068+/unit
Fees may applyVictory Village





$774+/unit
Fees may applyFinley Apartment Homes





$1,596/unit
Fees may applyHaverhill Place





$895+/unit
Fees may applyThe Woodlands
Tyler Junior College enrolls about 11,749 students in Tyler, the rose capital of East Texas, a city that leans hard into its gardens and tree-lined streets. The central campus sits near the Azalea District, a historic neighborhood famous for stately homes and the springtime blooms that draw visitors for the Azalea and Spring Flower Trail. Bergfeld Park anchors recreation nearby with tennis courts and a splash ground, and the Tyler Rose Garden, the largest municipal rose garden in the country, gives the town its identity. TJC is a residential community college with more than 1,100 students living in eight on-campus halls, and the Apache spirit shows up at football and other athletics. Tyler is compact and green, with downtown a short trip from campus.
Tyler Junior College does not require most students to live on campus, which sets it apart from four-year schools with strict freshman live-on rules. The exception is select athletic teams and certain student organizations, whose members are housed on campus by requirement. Everyone else chooses freely between the eight residence halls and renting in Tyler.
Because there is no broad live-on rule, most students rent off campus or commute from around East Texas from day one. The local rental process is straightforward and friendlier than big-city markets. Tyler landlords run the usual credit and background checks, and students without credit history or income often bring a co-signer.
Leases vary widely, from larger student-style complexes to small houses in the Azalea District owned by individual landlords. Read the term length, since some places want 12 months even if you only need the school year. Confirm parking and whether yard upkeep is on you, which is common in the older neighborhoods near campus.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with Tyler Junior College before signing a lease.
Tyler's rental market moves at a relaxed pace compared to big four-year college towns, which gives students room to plan. The larger student-style complexes near campus prelease in late winter and spring, so January through April is a good window for first pick. Houses in the Azalea District turn over more unpredictably since many are owned by individual landlords. Checking listings often beats waiting for one big release.
Demand for the close-in complexes builds through late winter and spring as students lock in the next school year. TJC's heavy transfer and commuter population means demand can shift, but the close-in spots still thin out as fall nears. Classes start in late August, and the most walkable units clear first. Touring in this window keeps the best options open.
If you arrive late or transfer in mid-year, spring openings and December turnover from graduating or transferring students give you a fallback. Summer is quieter, which can mean more flexible move-in dates if you ask around. Because so many landlords list individually, new openings surface in waves rather than all at once. Late searchers should keep checking and widen the search beyond the closest blocks.
The historic neighborhood near campus with tree-lined streets, older homes, and the spring blooms, walkable and full of character.
The blocks right around TJC, a mix of student-style complexes and rental houses, the easiest commute.
Newer complexes and more space, usually a short drive and a touch higher for the upgrades.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
A room in a shared apartment or house near campus usually runs $450-$750/month per person, while a one-bedroom often lands around $800-$1,000/month. Older houses in the Azalea District sit lower, and newer south Tyler complexes run higher. Budget another $50-$130/month for utilities, since East Texas summers mean real air-conditioning bills.
Other universities in Tyler share a similar off-campus housing market.
The University of Texas at Tyler is a regional public university serving approximately 10,000 to 12,000 students in Tyler, the largest city in East Texas. UT Tyler offers undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral programs across business, education, engineering, and health sciences. The campus is situated in a residential…
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