




$1,125+/unit
Fees may applyThe Constance





$1,145+/unit
Fees may applyThe Hamilton at North Market


$1,300+/unit
Fees may applyThe Urban Flats

$999+/unit
Fees may applyVue on 5th
The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga sits about 11,728 Mocs right in the middle of Chattanooga, and the campus and downtown basically blend together. The Tennessee River wraps the city, and the Riverwalk runs for miles along it, so you can bike or jog from campus toward Coolidge Park on the North Shore by crossing the Walnut Street Bridge, one of the longest pedestrian bridges around. Student life runs through the University Center, and Mocs football and basketball pull crowds in fall and winter. Downtown and the Southside keep the energy up with galleries, the riverfront, and a steady run of festivals. Best part: CARTA buses are free for UTC students, so you can leave the car parked and still get around easily.
The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga requires all first-year freshmen to live on campus, which keeps you near the University Center, dining, and class your first year. You can apply for an exception if you will live within a 45-mile radius, are married or have children, or have a medical condition that makes campus living unworkable, and you will need documentation like a marriage license, birth certificate, or a doctor's letter. Requests have to go in before the academic year starts through the housing portal.
Once you have moved in as a freshman, you are committed for that full year, and after that most students move to the surrounding neighborhoods as sophomores. Chattanooga's rental process is typical city stuff: landlords run credit and income checks, and downtown or North Shore spots can be competitive. Student-focused buildings near campus lease differently from older houses.
Watch lease length on the student-focused buildings near campus. On older houses, confirm parking, since some blocks near downtown are permit-only or tight. Sorting these out early helps in a competitive city market where central spots move fast.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with The University of Tennessee-Chattanooga before signing a lease.
Chattanooga moves at a real-city pace, so the search starts earlier and runs more competitive than a small college town. Student-focused buildings near campus and the popular North Shore and Southside spots open fall preleasing in the winter, and the best units get claimed through spring. If you want a specific place with roommates, sign before spring finals. Starting in winter gives you the best walkable options.
The peak window runs from winter preleasing through spring, when the walkable near-campus, North Shore, and Southside spots go first. Classes start in late August. Because this is a city, regular apartment complexes turn over year-round, so summer searches are not hopeless the way they would be in a tiny town. Roommate groups should sign before spring finals to keep the walkable options in play.
The broader city market gives you fallbacks if you are late, since regular complexes turn over year-round. Spring move-ins and summer sublets are common given the larger rental pool, so transfers coming midyear have a real shot at finding a handoff. Expect the spots within walking distance of campus to be gone the later you start. The free CARTA buses make units a bit farther out workable when central options run short.
The blocks right around campus hold student-focused housing and put you in walking distance of class, the best setup if you want to skip the car.
Across the Walnut Street Bridge, walkable and lively near Coolidge Park and the river, and tends to run higher.
Southside is the artsy, revitalized district with lofts and galleries popular with students, while Riverview is quieter and more residential, leaning a bit pricier and calmer.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
A shared room or roommate setup near campus usually runs about $500-$900/month per person. Older spots and shared houses land at the bottom, while newer North Shore and Southside units sit higher. Plan on another $50-$120/month for utilities depending on whether they're capped.