
$465+/unit
Fees may applyCapstone Quarters

$750+/unit
Fees may applyCastle Property Services





$1,325+/unit
Fees may applyChapter (19 Meals Per Week

$905/unit
Fees may applyLancaster Apartments

$929+/unit
Fees may applyLatitude | Student Housing

$895+/unit
Fees may applyLegacy202

$899+/unit
Fees may applyMaywood Apartments

$869+/unit
Fees may applyPacifica on Green

$575+/unit
Fees may applyPfeffer Apartments - NOW LEASING AUGUST 2026


$575+/unit
Fees may applyTHE ALCOVE @ SECOND & JOHN

$1,115+/unit
Fees may applyThe Dean Campustown





$995+/unit
Fees may applyThe Peer





$939+/unit
Fees may applyThe Tower at Third

$839+/unit
Fees may applyYugo Champaign South 3rd Lofts
The University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign spreads 56,000 Illini across the twin cities of Urbana and Champaign, flat, gridded, and built for biking everywhere. Green Street is the main artery of Campustown, a dense run of restaurants, bars, and bubble tea that stays busy at basically every hour. The Main Quad is the heart of campus, and every fall Quad Day carpets it with hundreds of clubs trying to recruit you at once. The Krannert Center punches way above its weight for theater and music, the Illini pack Memorial Stadium and the State Farm Center on game days, and Roger Ebert's film festival still draws cinephiles downtown every spring. It's a massive school that somehow still feels easy to get around.
The University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign has one of the more unusual first-year rules in the country, because freshmen must live in University Certified Housing. That does not only mean the dorms, since privately owned, university-certified buildings like Illini Tower, Bromley Hall, and Hendrick House count too. Some technically off-campus addresses are fair game in year one as long as they carry the certification.
A regular Campustown apartment does not qualify until sophomore year, with the usual exemptions for students living with family nearby. Beyond the certified system, the university does not approve or inspect private rentals, but Off-Campus Community Living, the campus office formerly known as the Tenant Union, keeps complaint records on local landlords. Check a landlord's file before you sign, because it is free, public, and worth ten minutes.
From second year on, you are free to live anywhere, and most students do, with the sophomore exodus to Campustown basically a campus tradition. Nearly all leases run August-to-August, so plan your dates around that fixed turnover. Many buildings advertise installment pricing that looks like monthly rent but is really an annual sum split twelve ways, so read the math before comparing prices.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign before signing a lease.
Campustown leases earlier than almost anywhere, with buildings starting to sign for next August in October. Current tenants get renewal offers first, and the marquee high-rises near Green Street can be largely full by Thanksgiving. Early searchers set on a specific Green Street tower should move in the fall to have a real shot. Aim to sign between October and February for the best mix of selection and sanity.
The early frenzy peaks before Thanksgiving for the marquee Green Street high-rises. The classic freshman mistake is assuming that means everything is gone, but it is not, because with 50,000-plus students this market is deep. Most students at Illinois chasing a Green Street tower are competing hardest in this fall stretch. Fall semester starts the last week of August, well after the trophy buildings have filled.
A second wave of solid apartments, older walk-ups, and houses lists from January through spring, so late searchers have genuine options. Summer sublets are abundant and cheap if you only need short-term coverage. The depth of a 50,000-student market means inventory keeps surfacing long after the early rush. Last-minute hunters should target the spring wave and summer sublets rather than the marquee high-rises.
The Green Street high-rise core on the Champaign side, with the newest buildings, biggest crowds, shortest walk to the Quad, and the first inventory to disappear every October.
East of campus, quieter and grad-heavy, with older, cheaper apartments near Lincoln Avenue.
Brings the bars and restaurants, a quick MTD ride from class.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
Shared rooms near UIUC typically run $500-$750/month, which is genuinely cheap for a flagship this size. Private bedrooms in the newer Green Street high-rises cost more, while older walk-ups and houses on the Urbana side anchor the budget end.