
$1,179+/unit
Fees may apply2000 Riverside Apartments





$950+/unit
Fees may applyAscend Richmond

$1,619+/unit
Fees may applyCirc Apartments
$1,499/unit
Fees may applyColiseum Lofts

$725+/unit
Fees may applyMarshall Park Townhomes




$1,164+/unit
Fees may applyMonroe Park Towers Apartments

$1,551+/unit
Fees may applyMutual on Main





$1,150+/unit
Fees may applyParc View at Commonwealth
$1,195+/unit
Fees may applyPark Northside Apartments





$539+/unit
Fees may applyRAMZ Lofts at Capital Garage

$729+/unit
Fees may applyThe James





$1,175+/unit
Fees may applyThe Spectrum Apartments

$2,400/unit
Fees may apply1609 W Cary Street


$810+/unit
Fees may applyChesterfield Apartments


$890+/unit
Fees may applyLiberty Circle Apartments
Virginia Commonwealth University spreads about 29,000 Rams across its Monroe Park Campus in Richmond, where campus and city blur together and the arts district basically starts at the edge of class. The Fan District wraps the campus in historic row houses and cafes, and Monroe Park is the green heart where everyone gathers. Carytown brings the local shops and restaurants, while Belle Isle and the James River, the only urban river in the country with Class III and IV rapids, sit right there for kayaking, hiking, or sunbathing on the rocks. First Fridays turns Broad Street's galleries into one of the biggest art walks in the nation every month. The free GRTC Pulse runs straight down Broad, so a car is more hassle than help here.
VCU does not require freshmen to live on campus, though it strongly recommends it and most first-years do, with more than 5,800 students in the halls. One catch worth knowing is that first-year residential students can't keep a car on campus without petitioning for an exemption.
With no mandate, students at VCU can move off campus whenever they choose, and plenty do by sophomore year into the Fan, Oregon Hill, or Carver. Richmond zoning caps single-family rentals at no more than three unrelated people, so count your roommates against that limit before you commit to a house.
The city ordinance bans separate per-room leases and locks on individual bedroom doors in those houses, so the by-the-bed model common elsewhere is restricted, and you will often sign a joint lease with your group. Larger purpose-built student complexes can still offer individual leases. Read carefully and make sure the arrangement is actually legal before you sign.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with Virginia Commonwealth University before signing a lease.
Richmond's student leasing runs on a roughly 11.5-month cycle that tracks the academic calendar, and the best-located places in the Fan and Oregon Hill go early. Plan to start searching in the fall and into early spring for the next academic year. This matters most if you want a walkable spot near campus or a house that fits your whole group under the three-unrelated-person cap. Houses tend to move before the big complexes.
Demand builds through fall into early spring as groups lock in houses near campus. Houses move before the big complexes, so if you are set on a Fan row house with friends, don't wait. Classes start in late August, and most leases begin in August to match. Sign in late winter or early spring for the best walkable options.
Late searchers lean on the larger student complexes, which hold availability longer and often allow individual leases. Summer sublets open up as students leave for internships or study abroad, giving spring and mid-year arrivals a workable fallback. Stay flexible on neighborhood and you will find something even later in the cycle. Just expect the close-in Fan houses to be gone.
The favorite among VCU students, the Fan offers historic row houses, cafes, and arts energy right next to campus, ideal if you want walkability and culture.
A historic district full of Victorian and shotgun houses, Oregon Hill is walkable and popular for its character.
Carver sits close to campus with a residential feel and a mix of housing options.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
A shared room near campus typically runs $700-$1,000/month per person. Splitting an older house in Oregon Hill or Carver lands at the lower end, while newer complexes and prime Fan locations sit higher. Budget another $50-$130/month for utilities, since many Richmond houses bill them separately.
Other universities in Richmond share a similar off-campus housing market.
Virginia Union University is a private HBCU located at 1500 N Lombardy St in Richmond, Virginia, serving approximately 1,500 to 2,000 students. Founded in 1865, VUU sits in the North Side neighborhood and carries a strong tradition of academic excellence and community engagement. On-campus housing is limited, so most…
View housing near Virginia Union University