

$829/unit
Fees may applyAlight Blacksburg





$1,049+/unit
Fees may applyBrexx at Blacksburg





$1,020+/unit
Fees may applyChasewood Apartments





$945+/unit
Fees may applyCollegiate Suites of Blacksburg





$650+/unit
Fees may applyHaven Blacksburg





$965+/unit
Fees may applyMaple Ridge Townhomes





$1,095+/unit
Fees may applyShawnee Apartments




$810+/unit
Fees may applyTerrace View Apartments





$1,190+/unit
Fees may applyThe Edge Apartments & Townhomes





$550+/unit
Fees may applyThe Mill at Blacksburg





$999+/unit
Fees may applyUnion Blacksburg


$485+/unit
Fees may apply1711 Apartments

$819+/unit
Fees may applyChase Apartments

$950/unit
Fees may applyClover Valley Phase II

$700/unit
Fees may applyEast Roanoke Street


$975+/unit
Fees may applyFourteen35 Apartments

$1,195/unit
Fees may applyOld Row on North Main

$1,010/unit
Fees may applyPark37

$595+/unit
Fees may applyStonegate and Carlton Scott Apartments

$799+/unit
Fees may applyTech Terrace

$941+/unit
Fees may applyThe Summit at Uptown
Virginia Tech anchors Blacksburg with about 37,024 Hokies in a mountain town tucked into the Blue Ridge of southwest Virginia. The campus is built from its signature gray Hokie Stone, and life centers on the Drillfield, the wide green students cut across between classes, with the War Memorial Chapel nearby. Fall Saturdays belong to Lane Stadium, where Enter Sandman cues the whole crowd to jump and the place earns its reputation as one of the loudest anywhere. Downtown butts right up against campus, so the walk to the main drag is easy, and the Huckleberry Trail runs out from town for biking and running when the leaves turn maroon and orange. It's a true college town: compact, walkable, and ringed by ridgelines.
First-year students at Virginia Tech are required to live on campus, so most students start the off-campus search as sophomores. The main exemptions cover students living at home with a parent or close relative who is an established resident of the area, or those released under another binding agreement with the university, and you request that through Housing rather than just declining.
Once you move off, Blacksburg leasing is fairly straightforward but worth reading carefully. Many student rentals are joint leases, meaning all roommates share liability, so vet your group. The town enforces occupancy rules in residential neighborhoods, capping how many unrelated people can live in a single house, so confirm the legal number before you sign a big group house.
Almost every off-campus place runs a full 12-month lease, unlike on-campus housing that follows the academic year, so plan to pay through the summer whether or not you stay. Ask about parking, since some areas require town permits.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University before signing a lease.
Blacksburg leases early because demand is steady and the town is small. Preleasing for the next fall kicks off in the fall before, and the closest walk-to-campus complexes and the most popular houses start signing as early as September and October. If you want a prime spot near campus or downtown, plan to tour and commit over the fall semester.
Classes start in late August, and most leases begin in August to line up. The good news for Hokies is that the market does not fully clear, since off-campus housing has historically stayed available into spring and summer. Lock your roommate group early to get the best addresses.
A late search still has options, just farther from the core or with fewer amenities. Spring also brings sublets from students leaving for co-ops, internships, or graduation, which is a reliable fallback if you need a place mid-year or for a single semester. Keep checking listings through the summer as those turn over.
Steps from campus and the main strip, so it is the most walkable and stays in demand.
A mix of older student houses with newer complexes that tend to fill fast.
More practical and a bit easier on price, still a quick bus ride in.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
A room in a shared apartment or house near Virginia Tech typically runs about $500-$1,000/month per person. Walk-to-campus and downtown units sit toward the top, while houses split among more roommates farther from the core land lower. Budget another $40-$120/month for utilities depending on the place.