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Fees may apply220 Madison

$820/unit
Fees may apply4050 Lofts





$1,930+/unit
Fees may applyApella on Newport





$909+/unit
Fees may applyBellarmine Hall
$749/unit
Fees may applyCollege Town @ USF

$859+/unit
Fees may applyHalo 46





$520+/unit
Fees may applyHawks Landing





$925+/unit
Fees may applyHub on Campus Tampa
$1,870+/unit
Fees may applyNoHo Flats





$1,599+/unit
Fees may applyNuMi Living





$679+/unit
Fees may applyReflections Apartments





$150/unit
Fees may applySouth Willow Flats





$849/unit
Fees may applyStation 42





$1,239+/unit
Fees may applyThe Henry





$996+/unit
Fees may applyThe Retreat at Tampa





$890+/unit
Fees may applyThe Standard at Tampa





$845+/unit
Fees may applyULake Apartments


$644/unit
Fees may applyVue Tampa

$899+/unit
Fees may applyCigar Lofts
The University of Tampa sits about 9,605 Spartans on a riverfront campus in downtown Tampa, with the silver minarets of historic Plant Hall and the Henry B. Plant Museum as its front door. The Hillsborough River runs right past campus, with Henry B. Plant Park along the water and the free TECO Line Streetcar linking students to Channelside, Ybor City, and the Riverwalk. Neighborhoods spread out fast from there: the boutiques of Hyde Park, the nightlife of SoHo, the high-rises of the Channel District. Every winter the whole city turns out for the Gasparilla pirate invasion and parade. Between a walkable urban campus, the streetcar, and beaches a short drive west, Tampa feels less like a college town and more like a city you happen to study in.
The University of Tampa doesn't require students to live on campus, but it prioritizes housing for first and second year students and tries to place incoming freshmen in the halls. On-campus space isn't guaranteed for anyone, and when it fills, the university has housed students in nearby hotels along the Riverwalk. Plenty of students end up off campus by choice or by capacity.
The university runs an off-campus resource map and lists a preferred downtown high-rise to help students get settled. Tampa's rental process is big-city standard, with applications, credit and income checks, and a guarantor if you can't show income, plus application fees that add up if you apply to several buildings. Downtown and Hyde Park lean toward managed apartment buildings rather than student complexes.
Expect individual 12-month leases instead of by-the-bed terms in most managed buildings. Read parking carefully, since downtown spots often cost extra, and confirm flood and renters insurance expectations in a coastal city. Matching the lease term to your plans keeps you from paying for unused months.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with The University of Tampa before signing a lease.
Tampa moves on a city rhythm more than a college one, so timing is about beating the broader rental crunch downtown. If you want a place in Hyde Park, the Channel District, or downtown, start touring in late winter and through spring. The best-located buildings lease quickly and rates climb in peak season. Booking tours early gives you the widest choice.
Classes start in late August, and managed buildings here lease year-round, so you're competing with young professionals, not just students. Spring is the strongest window. That cuts both ways, since you can often find something later than in a small college town, but the closest and nicest units go first. Moving in spring keeps you ahead of the peak-season climb.
If you're searching late, look at Seminole Heights and buildings a streetcar or short drive from campus. Ask about move-in specials, which downtown buildings use to fill units. Subletting is doable given the city's size, but standard leases dominate. Widening your search beyond the downtown core opens up more availability.
Walk-to-campus high-rises and managed buildings, the most convenient and priciest option. The free TECO Line Streetcar links you to Channelside, Ybor City, and the Riverwalk.
Leafy, walkable, and full of boutiques and historic homes just south of campus, a longtime student favorite. SoHo, the South Howard nightlife and dining strip inside Hyde Park, keeps things lively and central.
The Channel District offers modern high-rises near the water, the cruise port, and the streetcar, popular with students wanting a new-build feel. Seminole Heights is an eclectic, more laid-back area a short drive north, where rents ease up and houses open for groups.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
A room in a shared downtown or Hyde Park apartment near the University of Tampa usually runs $900-$1,500/month per person, since these are managed city buildings rather than by-the-bed student complexes. Splitting a larger unit or heading to Seminole Heights lowers it. Budget another $50-$150/month for utilities and often extra for parking.
Other universities in Tampa share a similar off-campus housing market.
The University of South Florida packs 50,000 Bulls into north Tampa, close enough to the Gulf that a beach day is a normal Tuesday. Clearwater and St. Pete sand sits a short drive west, while Ybor City handles the nightlife with its old cigar-factory streets and late hours. On campus, the Wednesday Bull Market turns…
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