




$1,185+/unit
Fees may applyEagle View Apartments and Townhomes
$1,240+/unit
Fees may applyRoxalana Hills Apartments





$541+/unit
Fees may applySouthmoor Hills
West Virginia State University is a historically Black land-grant university of about 3,638 students set in Institute, a small Kanawha Valley community just west of Charleston along the river. The campus is compact and walkable, wrapped by the hills and the Kanawha River. WVSU keeps a tight-knit, commuter-friendly feel, and its HBCU history runs through homecoming week, step shows, and a marching band that turns football Saturdays loud. The state capital is a short drive east, where the gold-domed Capitol and riverfront parks give students a bigger weekend backdrop. Most students drive, since Institute itself is quiet, but the valley strings together small towns along Interstate 64, so class, the river, and the city are all a quick hop.
WVSU requires all first-year, full-time undergraduates to live in campus housing, and students who first enroll in spring stay on campus through the following fall. There is a non-refundable housing reservation fee each academic year to hold a space. Because this is a commuter-heavy school, most students move off campus as soon as the requirement lifts, usually after freshman year.
The main exemption is living with a parent or legal guardian inside a 50-mile radius of campus, which a lot of students qualify for given how many commute from around the Kanawha Valley. The local rental process is straightforward small-market leasing, with credit and income checks, a deposit, and a guarantor if your history is thin. Many students never live on campus at all.
Leases are typically 12 months, so confirm the start date before you commit. Watch for older single-family rentals split into units in Dunbar and South Charleston, where landlords handle things informally. You will want every promise about repairs and utilities written into the lease.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with West Virginia State University before signing a lease.
This is a slower, smaller market than a big college town, so you do not need to scramble a year out, but starting early still gets you the better houses. Begin looking in spring, around March through May, for an August move-in. Inventory near campus in Institute is limited, so most students cast a wider net across Dunbar, South Charleston, St. Albans, and Cross Lanes, where there is more to choose from. An early start gives you first pick of the closer-in houses.
Classes start in mid-to-late August, and the valley's leasing picks up across June and July as students and local renters move at once. The limited inventory near campus in Institute clears first during this stretch. Spring subleases are less common here than in big markets, but they turn up. Signing before the June and July rush widens your options.
If you are searching late in summer, you will still find vacancies in the surrounding towns, just fewer of the closest-to-campus options. The wider net across Dunbar, South Charleston, St. Albans, and Cross Lanes holds inventory longer. If you commute from family in the valley, you have more flexibility and can wait longer to lock something in. Keep roommate plans ready so you can move quickly on a late opening.
The campus community itself is quiet and residential, closest to class but limited on rentals.
Just east toward Charleston, this small town has houses and apartments and an easy commute.
Across the river, South Charleston offers more rental stock and shops, a short drive in.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
Rentals in the valley near campus tend to run $600-$950/month per person for a shared place, with whole one-bedrooms in Dunbar and Charleston starting around $800-$1,100/month. South Charleston and Cross Lanes sit in a similar range. Plan on another $80-$150/month for utilities, since most older rentals here don't include them.