
$439+/unit
Fees may applyHawks Pointe





$635/unit
Fees may applyHelix 24

$640/unit
Fees may applyThe Rockland
The University of Kansas spreads about 26,700 Jayhawks across a literal hill in Lawrence, a college town an hour west of Kansas City. Campus climbs Mount Oread, so your legs learn the slope fast, and Potter Lake sits near the top for study breaks. The whole place orbits basketball: Allen Fieldhouse, the deafening barn known as the Phog, is regularly the loudest arena in college hoops, and game days turn campus into one big tailgate. Walk down the hill and you hit Massachusetts Street, the historic strip everyone calls Mass Street, lined with local shops, galleries, music venues, a Saturday farmers market, and festivals. Lawrence is compact and walkable, so students walk, bike, or grab the bus, and Kansas City is a quick drive away.
KU doesn't make freshmen live on campus, so there is no residency requirement and you can technically rent off campus from day one. Plenty of first-years still choose the dorms for the built-in social scene.
With no requirement, students at KU are free to rent off campus immediately, though most move into the surrounding neighborhoods after a year in the residence halls. Lawrence rentals run through private landlords and a handful of big student-focused complexes, so expect a credit and income check, a cosigner or guarantor, and a security deposit.
Watch for tiered pricing at the purpose-built complexes: the rate climbs as units fill, so the same floor plan costs more the longer you wait. A lot of the housing near the Oread is older houses split among roommates, so read the lease for who covers utilities, yard work, and snow. Newer complexes fold in furniture and amenities.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with University of Kansas before signing a lease.
Lawrence leases scary early. Many KU students start hunting in October for the next school year, and some sign more than a year out. Complexes open renewals and new leases early in the fall semester, and the closest, most popular units near the Oread and just off campus go first, sometimes selling out months ahead. Signing early usually locks a lower rate under the tiered pricing model.
The peak builds from October as students sign for the next school year, with the closest units selling out months ahead. Standard leases run 12 months and start in early August, lining up with fall classes. Because most complexes use tiered pricing, waiting costs you both selection and money. Sign early to lock a lower rate.
If you miss the early wave, you are not doomed: complexes and houses farther into West and South Lawrence stay open later, and sublets surface around winter break and at semester's end. Spring searchers find thinner inventory but more willingness to deal, since landlords would rather fill a unit than leave it empty over summer. Expect to look farther out.
Hugging campus on the hill, the Oread District is the closest and most convenient walk to class and the priciest for it.
West Lawrence and the West Campus area lean quieter and more residential, popular with students who want newer complexes and a calmer street.
South Lawrence offers more space and gentler rates a short drive or bus ride out.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
A shared room or a bedroom in a split house near the Oread usually runs about $500-$850/month per person. Older shared houses land at the bottom, while newer by-the-bed complexes close to campus sit higher, often $700-$1,100/month per bed. Plan on another $40-$100/month for utilities if they aren't included.