
$1,900/unit
Fees may apply1114 Mound St





$1,049+/unit
Fees may applyAberdeen Apartments





$1,410/unit
Fees may applyBirge House





$941+/unit
Fees may applyChapter at Madison





$650+/unit
Fees may applyCollegiate Campus Apartments





$1,289+/unit
Fees may applyHidden Creek Residences





$699+/unit
Fees may applyHub Madison





$1,099+/unit
Fees may applyHub Madison Bassett





$1,095+/unit
Fees may applyLa Ciel Apartments





$799+/unit
Fees may applyLark at Kohl





$1,049+/unit
Fees may applyLark at Randall
$985/unit
Fees may applyMaster Hall





$1,800+/unit
Fees may applyOak Tree Campus Apartments





$875+/unit
Fees may applyōLiv Madison





$1,559+/unit
Fees may applyThe Axton


$1,000+/unit
Fees may applyThe Regent Apartments





$1,299+/unit
Fees may applyThe Rive Madison



$1,100+/unit
Fees may applyUniversity Gables





$1,065+/unit
Fees may applyVarsity Campus Apartments





$915+/unit
Fees may applyYugo Madison Lux

$1,010/unit
Fees may apply10 E Gorham St
The University of Wisconsin-Madison sits on a narrow isthmus between two lakes, which gives 48,000 Badgers one of the prettiest campuses in the country and an excuse to be on the water constantly. The Memorial Union Terrace, with its sunburst chairs right on Lake Mendota, is the unofficial student living room from the first warm day to the last. State Street runs from the capitol to campus, a car-free stretch of bars, bookstores, and the food that defines a college town. Bascom Hill handles the postcard views, Babcock Hall scoops ice cream from the university's own dairy, and Camp Randall gets loud every fall when the band plays Jump Around. Madison routinely lands on best-college-town lists, and it earns it.
The University of Wisconsin-Madison does not require freshmen to live on campus, making it one of the few Big Ten schools without a live-on rule. In practice, roughly nine in ten first-years choose the residence halls anyway for the social on-ramp. They then head off campus as sophomores.
There is no university approval or certification process for off-campus rentals, so you are dealing directly with Madison's private landlords from day one. The university does run Campus Area Housing, an official listing service for off-campus rentals worth a scan, though it does not vet much beyond the basics. Madison has strong tenant protections by college-town standards, and the Tenant Resource Center downtown will review a lease with you for free before you sign.
Almost every lease runs mid-August to mid-August, so timing is unusually rigid here. Madison leases are full of August-specific quirks you will not see anywhere else, and a free second set of eyes from the Tenant Resource Center beats learning them the hard way. Use that review before you sign, because the lease terms you accept are the protections you get.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with University of Wisconsin-Madison before signing a lease.
Madison runs on the most aggressive leasing calendar in college housing. Almost every lease runs mid-August to mid-August, and landlords start showing units for next year in October and November, roughly ten months out. The classic campus houses on Mifflin and Langdon are typically spoken for by winter break. Early searchers set on a marquee house should treat fall as the real season.
The downtown high-rises pre-lease from fall through early spring, and the early frenzy peaks before winter break for the best houses. Most students at UW-Madison chasing the marquee Mifflin and Langdon houses are competing hardest in this stretch. The pressure is real, but it is concentrated on the trophy houses rather than everything. Do not panic-sign in October just because there is a line at the showing.
Plenty of solid places re-list in spring, and sublets surface all summer, so late searchers still have genuine options. Fall semester does not start until early September, which makes the mid-August turnover its own ritual, with the whole city moving in the same 48 hours. Some leases leave a one-or-two-day gap between move-out and move-in, so plan for it like the locals do. Last-minute hunters should focus on spring re-lists and summer sublets rather than the trophy houses.
The classic downtown student zone, with old houses, big porches, and a walk to everything from State Street to the Capitol.
Greek row with Lake Mendota frontage and the best sunsets in the city.
The quieter pick near the park and the free zoo, still bikeable to class and popular with juniors and seniors who have aged out of Mifflin.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
Shared rooms near UW-Madison typically run $700-$1,000/month, with older campus-area houses at the low end and new downtown high-rises well above it. Private bedrooms in newer buildings often start north of that range. Budget for August-to-August leases. Almost nothing else exists in this market.
Other universities in Madison share a similar off-campus housing market.
Edgewood College tucks about 2,000 students onto a wooded campus on the shore of Lake Wingra, right inside Madison's leafy Dudgeon-Monroe neighborhood. The lakeside boardwalk runs the length of campus, the 1,200-acre UW Arboretum sits just across the water, and Monroe Street, a walkable strip of shops, cafes, and the…
View housing near Edgewood CollegeMadison Area Technical College, commonly known as Madison College, is a large public two-year institution serving approximately 11,000 credit students across multiple campuses in the Madison, Wisconsin area. The college offers associate degrees, technical diplomas, and certificate programs in fields including…
View housing near Madison Area Technical College