




$499/unit
Fees may applyAlight Norman





$579+/unit
Fees may applyMontara Park





$559/unit
Fees may applyThe 2900
The University of Oklahoma anchors Norman, a genuine college town where 28,000 Sooners and the campus more or less define the place. Campus Corner sits right across the street with its bars, diners, and bookstores, the default spot for a post-class meal or a game-day morning. The South Oval is the spine of campus, and few things in college sports match a fall Saturday at Gaylord Family Memorial Stadium when the whole town turns crimson. Norman has its own streak too, from the spring Norman Music Festival to a surprisingly deep local coffee and live-music scene. Oklahoma City is a 30-minute drive north when you want a bigger night out. It's warm, loud, football-crazy, and easy to love.
The University of Oklahoma requires first-year students to live on campus. The standard exemptions apply for living with a parent or guardian within commuting distance, being 21 or older, married, or a veteran, but for a typical incoming freshman, year one means the residence halls or OU's first-year towers. The live-on rule is a genuine policy here.
OU does not approve or certify off-campus housing, so once you leave the dorms you are signing a standard private lease with no university involvement. Two things make that easier in Norman than in most college towns, because rents are low enough that you rarely need five roommates to make the math work. The supply of student-oriented complexes along Lindsey Street and Classen Boulevard means you negotiate from a position of options rather than desperation.
After freshman year the migration is fast, with most students moving off campus as sophomores, and by junior year off-campus is the default. Most leases run August-to-August or offer 12-month terms, so confirm your dates before signing. The leverage of a deep, affordable market is rare in student housing, so take it when timing your lease.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with University of Oklahoma-Norman Campus before signing a lease.
Norman's timeline is mercifully relaxed compared to the Big Ten frenzy. The big student complexes along Lindsey Street start pre-leasing for fall between October and February, usually with early-bird rates worth grabbing. Early searchers who want a walkable house near Campus Corner should still move early, since that inventory goes fast. Treating the most walkable houses like a competitive market is the one place early timing really matters here.
Houses near Campus Corner, the most walkable inventory, turn over February through April, which is the real peak for the stuff that actually goes fast. If you want a specific house within walking distance of campus, treat it like a competitive market and start looking in February. Most students at OU chasing walkable houses are competing hardest in late winter and spring. Fall semester starts in mid-August, but the walkable houses clear well before then.
After the spring rush, the market stays open late, and you can still find solid apartments in June and even July, which you cannot say in most college towns. If you are flexible on location and have a car, you can afford to be patient. Norman rewards patience more than almost any major college market. Late searchers who are open on location have real, livable options well into summer.
Directly north of campus, with coffee, bars, gameday chaos, and the most walkable addresses in Norman, which is why its houses go first every spring.
Apartment-complex row east of campus, with bus access and the widest range of price points.
Budget-friendly older complexes that keep total costs down.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
Shared rooms near OU typically run $450-$650/month, which makes Norman one of the cheapest big-school markets in the country. That budget often covers a real house with a yard near Campus Corner or a newer apartment along Lindsey Street.