$600/unit
Fees may apply5445 Ingleside by 3L Living





$685/unit
Fees may apply5540 Hyde Park by 3L Living





$1,150/unit
Fees may applyAddams Coliving





$1,899/unit
Fees may applyArc at Old Colony

$970+/unit
Fees may applyDwight Lofts
$895+/unit
Fees may applyHyde Lofts

$2,451+/unit
Fees may applyHyde Park Tower





$1,315+/unit
Fees may applyHyde Park West Apartments & Townhomes




$1,239+/unit
Fees may applyIon Lincoln Park





$1,220+/unit
Fees may applyTailor Lofts Student Living
$12,684+/unit
Fees may applyThe Academic and Residential Complex (ARC)





$2,020+/unit
Fees may applyThe Alfred





$999+/unit
Fees may applyThe Buckingham Student Living





$1,415+/unit
Fees may applyUniversity Center
$1,300+/unit
Fees may applyUniversity Manor Apartments

$2,900/unit
Fees may apply1624 S Throop St

$2,150+/unit
Fees may apply2144 N Bell Ave

$1,299+/unit
Fees may apply626 on the Park





$1,959+/unit
Fees may apply731 Plymouth by 3L Living





$2,055+/unit
Fees may apply777 South State

$1,040/unit
Fees may applyLetterman Chicago
The University of Chicago anchors about 17,800 students in Hyde Park, a tree-lined neighborhood on the city's South Side seven miles below the Loop. The campus is all Gothic quads and limestone, with the green Midway Plaisance running along its south edge, a former World's Fair grounds students cross daily and skate on in winter. Hyde Park feels like its own small town inside a big city: independent bookstores, the lakefront at Promontory Point, and the Museum of Science and Industry all in walking distance. Tradition runs deep, from the wild overnight Scav hunt each spring to the quirky Latke-Hamantash debate. Students walk or bike Hyde Park, ride the free shuttles after dark, and catch the Metra or CTA downtown when the city calls.
Chicago has a serious residency requirement: traditional first-year students must live on campus through their first six quarters, which works out to roughly the first two years. Summer quarters don't count toward that total.
Transfer students are welcome in the houses but aren't bound by the requirement, and once you have cleared it, most students at UChicago move into the surrounding Hyde Park neighborhood. Hyde Park rentals run through private landlords, the university's own marketplace, and management companies, so expect a credit and income check, a guarantor or cosigner, and a security deposit.
Leases commonly run 12 months, and many landlords align move-ins with the quarter system or a fall start, though the citywide market also sees activity around standard May and October turnover. A lot of the stock is vintage courtyard buildings and converted greystones, so read the lease for heat and utility arrangements and check that radiators and windows actually work.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with University of Chicago before signing a lease.
Hyde Park doesn't run on the frantic preleasing rush some college towns do, but good units still go early. Because most students are locked into campus housing for two years, the off-campus pool turns over on a steadier rhythm. Start looking two to three months before you want to move, and if you are aiming for a fall start, tour in spring and early summer when the most listings open.
The busiest window for fall starts runs spring into early summer, when the most listings open. Leases commonly run 12 months, with many move-ins aligned to the quarter system or a fall start. The closest, best-maintained buildings near campus go first. Tour two to three months ahead of your target move-in date.
Miss the prime window and you will still find options, since the citywide market is large, but the closest, best-maintained buildings near campus go first. Sublets surface for summer when students leave for internships, and over winter break, which is handy for short-term needs. Widening your search beyond Hyde Park's core opens up plenty more inventory.
The core, Hyde Park is walkable to class, full of vintage courtyard buildings, and the easiest place to land.
Just north, Kenwood offers grand historic homes and a quieter, residential feel.
To the south past the Midway, Woodlawn runs gentler on the wallet and is increasingly popular with students as it develops.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
A shared room or a bedroom in a split vintage apartment in Hyde Park usually runs about $700-$1,200/month per person. Older walk-ups split among roommates land at the bottom, while renovated units and studios sit higher, often $1,100-$1,800/month. Plan on another $50-$150/month for utilities, since older buildings can run up heating bills in winter.
Other universities in Chicago share a similar off-campus housing market.
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