




$579/unit
Fees may applyCampus East Apartments
$499+/unit
Fees may applyCottages at Greensboro





$410+/unit
Fees may applySebastian Villages





$499+/unit
Fees may applyThe Letterman Greensboro





$585/unit
Fees may applyThe School at Spring Garden and Spartan Place Apartments

$499+/unit
Fees may applyThe Vic





$549+/unit
Fees may applyWest Quad

$599/unit
Fees may apply1112 W Market St





$599/unit
Fees may apply1508 W Friendly Ave





$499+/unit
Fees may applyLetterman Greensboro Apartments

$399+/unit
Fees may applySchool at Spring Garden Student Apartments
University of North Carolina at Greensboro plants about 20,000 Spartans in the middle of Greensboro, a mid-size North Carolina city, on a green, walkable campus where students pile into hammocks and study by the fountain. The campus opens straight onto Tate Street, a small arts-and-eats strip that's the neighborhood's front porch, with the Weatherspoon Art Museum and campus theaters anchoring a visual and performing arts district. Just west, the historic College Hill neighborhood gives the area its character: a dense, tree-canopied grid of Victorian and Craftsman homes, Greensboro's oldest neighborhood since the 1800s. For green space, students head to Piney Lake to paddleboard, and the city greenway links parks across town. Campus and the streets around it carry the daily rhythm.
UNCG does not require any class year to live on campus, so technically you can live off campus from day one. Thousands of first-year Spartans still choose the residence halls to settle in and meet people, but there is no live-on rule to plan around. Most students who move off campus at UNCG do it after freshman year.
Because there is no live-on requirement, the off-campus search is on you early if you want it. The Greensboro rental process is standard, with an application, credit check, and usually a guarantor if you do not have income yet. The big thing to watch near campus is the housing stock, since a lot of it is older houses in College Hill and the surrounding historic blocks that vary in condition, insulation, and upkeep.
Confirm what is included and check the unit in person before you commit. In historic-district houses, ask about occupancy limits before signing with a group. Most leases here run a standard term, so line up roommates and paperwork ahead of the August start.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with University of North Carolina at Greensboro before signing a lease.
Greensboro is a calmer rental market than the big football-town college towns, so you have a bit more breathing room. Even so, the best spots near campus still go early. The newer by-the-bed complexes along Spring Garden Street start preleasing for the next fall during the fall and winter. If you want walkability to campus, aim to search by winter.
The prime houses in College Hill and near Tate Street get claimed by groups in late fall and winter for the following August. Because UNCG has no live-on requirement and a steady supply of houses and apartments, demand spreads out more than at schools with a frenzied early cycle. Most students at UNCG who want the best older houses lock them down over the winter. Plan to sign in this window if proximity matters to you.
If you are searching late, you can still land something within reach of campus, just with fewer of the prime older houses. You will typically find more availability into spring and summer than at schools with a tighter cycle. Spring brings sublets from students leaving for summer, which is your route to a short-term or mid-year lease. Check listings often, since openings turn over steadily here.
College Hill sits right against campus and is the oldest neighborhood in Greensboro, dense and tree-lined with Victorian and Craftsman houses. It is walkable and full of character, making it the default for students who want to be close to class.
The Tate Street area is the arts-and-eats strip at the campus edge, steps from class and the social scene. It puts you in the middle of the neighborhood's restaurants and culture.
Spring Garden Street runs along campus and holds many of the newer by-the-bed student complexes within walking or biking distance. It suits students who want modern amenities close to campus.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
A shared room or by-the-bed spot near UNCG usually runs about $500-$750/month per person, with newer complexes along Spring Garden Street at the higher end and older houses in College Hill or Glenwood split among a group at the lower end. A private bedroom in a newer building runs closer to $750-$950. Add roughly $40-$100/month for utilities if they aren't included.
Other universities in Greensboro share a similar off-campus housing market.
North Carolina A&T State University is home to roughly 12,800 Aggies in Greensboro, a mid-size North Carolina city with a creative streak and a real downtown. As the largest historically Black university in the country, A&T carries a deep sense of pride and history that shows up everywhere on campus. Aggie traditions…
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