




$600/unit
Fees may applyWWU Living





$455/unit
Fees may applyThe Sandpiper Apartments
Western Washington University brings about 15,000 students to Bellingham, a Pacific Northwest town wedged between the Salish Sea and the Cascade foothills. The campus climbs a forested hillside above Bellingham Bay, so you get water views one direction and mountains the other, with Sehome Hill Arboretum trails right at the edge of campus. The town runs on the outdoors: Boulevard Park and Taylor Dock hug the waterfront, Whatcom Falls Park hides a waterfall in 240 acres of forest, and the Outdoor Center lends gear for kayaking, climbing, and ski trips into the Cascades. Historic Fairhaven anchors the south end with brick storefronts and a green for summer concerts. Most students bike or ride the free transit pass, so a car is rarely needed.
Western does not require freshmen to live on campus, though about 90 percent choose to anyway. The residence halls cluster in three walkable neighborhoods and ease the first-year transition, so most students stay in the halls their first year.
There is no live-on mandate, so students are free to go off campus whenever they like, and most move out as sophomores once they've found a roommate group. When you do head off campus, Bellingham's rental process is fairly standard: expect an application fee, a credit and background check, and first month plus a deposit up front. The city enforces caps on unrelated tenants per house in some zones, so confirm occupancy limits before a large group signs.
The big local quirk is timing, since student houses near campus get spoken for unusually early. Watch leases for who covers yard care and utilities in the older houses, and read the renewal clause, because landlords often ask early whether you're staying.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with Western Washington University before signing a lease.
Bellingham's student rental cycle starts early and moves fast. Many landlords and property managers begin preleasing in February, March, and April for houses and apartments that won't open until fall, so the prime spots near campus and in Fairhaven are often claimed by spring. If you want a good house with roommates, start lining up your group and touring in winter quarter, well before you'd expect to. Landlords frequently contact current tenants months ahead about renewals, which is why so much inventory never hits the open market.
Fall classes start in late September, so a spring or early summer signing is normal here. The strongest demand falls across late winter and spring, when student groups compete for the best houses near campus. Inventory close to campus and in Fairhaven thins out fastest during this window. Most students at WWU who want a walkable spot aim to sign before the term ends.
If you're searching late, look toward the Lettered Streets, Sunnyland, or apartments farther from campus, where turnover is steadier. Summer sublets from students leaving for the season can also bridge a gap while you keep hunting. The free transit pass means a place a little farther out still keeps your commute easy. Setting alerts and checking local boards helps you catch the openings that surface over summer.
The Lettered Streets sit just north of downtown with older homes and easy campus access, a longtime student pick that runs lighter on the wallet.
Fairhaven is the historic district to the south, full of brick character and waterfront trails, charming but quite a bit pricier.
Sehome and the Happy Valley area hug the campus hillside and put you within a walk or short bus ride of class.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
A room in a shared house near campus typically runs about $600-$900/month per person, which is how most WWU students keep it manageable. A studio or one-bedroom on your own lands closer to $1,000-$1,400/month. Older houses in the Lettered Streets sit at the lower end, while Fairhaven and newer units sit higher. Budget another $50-$100/month for utilities.