




$820+/unit
Fees may applyGateway on Cullen


$1,155+/unit
Fees may applyGlobal Houston

$859+/unit
Fees may applyMAC 4460


$1,249+/unit
Fees may applyThe Circle at Hermann Park
$709+/unit
Fees may applyTower 5040

$800/unit
Fees may applyUH Studios LLC
$1,035+/unit
Fees may applyUniversity Housing Phase Two

$649+/unit
Fees may applyAltitude


$849+/unit
Fees may applyHaven at Elgin
University of Houston drops 47,000 Cougars into the fourth-biggest city in the country, which is the whole point. Class lets out and Midtown and Downtown are right there, with dinner, shows, and a nightlife scene most college towns can't touch. When you need air, MacGregor Park and the Brays Bayou Greenway are made for a run, a ride, or doing nothing in the sun between classes. Every spring the whole campus turns out for Frontier Fiesta, a weekend of free concerts, a barbecue cook-off, and carnival booths swallowing a chunk of campus. UH runs on commuters, so living off campus isn't the exception here, it's the default.
The University of Houston does not require freshmen to live on campus, and most do not. As one of the largest commuter schools in the country, living off campus from day one is completely normal here rather than a workaround. On-campus housing only fits a fraction of UH's 47,000-plus students, so the university treats it as an option, not a rite of passage.
There is no university approval or certification process for off-campus housing at UH. You rent on the open Houston market, which means you vet landlords yourself, and UH offers off-campus resources through Student Affairs but does not inspect apartments for you. Tour in person, read the lease line by line, and ask about flood history, because in Houston that last one is not a joke.
Plenty of first-years pick the dorms or on-campus apartments for the built-in social scene, then move off campus sophomore year once they have locked in roommates. Most off-campus leases in Houston run on a standard term, so confirm your start and end dates before signing. Renting on the open market means you set the timing rather than following a university housing calendar.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with University of Houston before signing a lease.
Houston gives you more slack than a classic college town, but the best units near campus still move on a school-year clock. Purpose-built student properties along Cullen, Scott, and MLK start preleasing for fall in October and November and fill their best floor plans by early spring. If you want a specific unit at a specific price, start looking in January or February for an August move-in. Treating the near-campus student builds like a competitive market is the surest way to land the floor plan you actually want.
The heaviest demand for student-oriented housing lands in late winter and early spring as students lock in fall leases. Fall classes start in late August, so the months before that are when selection near campus thins out fastest. Most students at UH searching in this window are competing for the walkable, purpose-built beds rather than the wider Houston market. Signing during this stretch typically means better selection than waiting until summer.
The regular Houston market, including Third Ward houses and EaDo and Midtown apartments, runs year-round on 30 to 60 day lead times, so you can still land something decent in June without panicking. Spring move-ins are easy because students cycle out every December, and spring subleases are simple to find. Spring semester starts in mid-January, which opens up turnover units. The trap to avoid is waiting until August for student housing, when you are choosing between leftovers near campus or a regular apartment that may require a car you do not have.
The neighborhood around campus, with cheap rooms in older houses and newer student builds along Scott Street.
One Purple Line stop toward downtown, with warehouse-modern apartments and the best food in the area.
The nightlife pick, a straight rail ride from campus and priced like it knows it.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
Shared rooms near UH typically run $600-$900/month, which is genuinely cheap for a school this size. Purpose-built student housing along Cullen and Scott sits at the top of that range; splitting a house in Third Ward or University Oaks lands at the bottom. Budget another $50-$150/month for utilities depending on the setup.
Other universities in Houston share a similar off-campus housing market.
Rice University packs about 7,600 undergraduates onto a tree-lined, 300-acre campus inside Houston's loop, ringed by live oaks and a three-mile jogging trail locals love. Life revolves around the residential college system: you're sorted into one of eleven colleges your first year, and it becomes your dining hall,…
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