




$1,025+/unit
Fees may applyCharlton Farms





$1,349+/unit
Fees may applyCreekside at The Grounds





$1,530+/unit
Fees may applyCrowne Park
$923+/unit
Fees may applyEnclave at North Point Apartments

$1,350+/unit
Fees may applyLink Apartments Innovation Quarter





$848+/unit
Fees may applyNorthcliffe Forest Apartments





$855+/unit
Fees may applyResidences at Diamond Ridge





$990+/unit
Fees may applyThe Haven at Wake





$825+/unit
Fees may applyVictory Villages





$1,017/unit
Fees may apply1013 Paschal Dr





$1,017/unit
Fees may apply1031 Paschal Dr

$1,000/unit
Fees may apply1036 Ranch Dr





$1,000/unit
Fees may apply1048 Ranch Dr





$3,500/unit
Fees may apply112 Rosedale Cir
$625/unit
Fees may apply1211 W Friendly Ave





$6,500/unit
Fees may apply1313 Brookwood Dr





$4,000/unit
Fees may apply1457 Brookwood Drive





$4,200/unit
Fees may apply1712 Brookwood Drive





$2,355/unit
Fees may apply1932 Wilson View Cir





$1,500/unit
Fees may apply2023 Polo Rd





$3,500/unit
Fees may apply2676 St
Winston-Salem State University brings about 5,200 Rams to the southeast side of downtown Winston-Salem, North Carolina. WSSU is a respected HBCU in the heart of the Piedmont Triad, and Rams pride runs deep: game days at Bowman Gray Stadium, the oldest NASCAR-sanctioned racetrack in the country, plus Homecoming and the marching band keep fall lively. Campus sits close enough to downtown that the city's arts district and museums are an easy reach. Just southeast of campus you've got Reynolds Park, its golf course, and the rec fields for weekend room to roam. Downtown has leaned into its arts-and-innovation identity, and the surrounding Triad, with Greensboro and High Point nearby, gives you more to do without going far.
Winston-Salem State has a two-year, four-semester live-on requirement, so new first-time freshmen must live on campus for both their freshman and sophomore years. This keeps underclassmen in university housing through the first two years. The requirement shapes when most students start thinking about off-campus options.
To live off campus sooner, you have to file a Housing Exemption Form and qualify under specific criteria, such as being 21 or older before the first day of class, being married, being a veteran with two years of active service, or living with a parent or guardian whose permanent home is within 15 miles of campus. WSSU has also expanded university-affiliated off-campus housing, including options that can be billed through your student account and covered by financial aid, so read the fine print on which leases are university-managed versus fully private. For private rentals, the Triad process is standard, with an application, deposit, and proof of income or a co-signer.
Most private leases run a standard twelve-month term, so confirm the start date before signing. Watch lease length and confirm whether utilities are bundled, especially in older houses near campus where those often fall to the tenant. University-affiliated off-campus options have set application windows, so apply early through the housing portal.
Housing policies change frequently. Always verify current requirements directly with Winston-Salem State University before signing a lease.
Since WSSU keeps freshmen and sophomores on campus, the off-campus push mostly hits juniors and seniors, which makes the search smaller and slightly later than at a big public school. Even so, start looking in winter through early spring for the next fall, because the better apartments and houses near campus and on the bus line get claimed first. If you are aiming for a university-affiliated off-campus option that bills through your student account, watch the housing portal and apply early, since those have set windows. Starting early gives you the best shot at the closest units.
Classes start in mid-August, so try to sign by late spring or early summer. The units near campus and along the bus line see the heaviest demand as the term approaches. Spring also brings sublets from students leaving for internships or graduation, which helps for a partial-year stay. Signing before the summer rush widens your choices.
If you search late, Winston-Salem and the wider Triad have steady turnover. Greensboro or High Point can serve as fallbacks if you do not mind a commute. Inventory farther from campus tends to last longer into summer. Keep an eye on the housing portal in case a university-affiliated spot reopens.
The blocks right around campus on the southeast side keep you close to class and a short trip from downtown, leaning residential.
These areas put you within quick reach of both campus and downtown Winston-Salem's arts district.
The southeast pocket near Reynolds Park and Bowman Gray Stadium is good for green space and the rec fields, with a mix of older houses and apartments that often run a bit easier on the budget.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
A room in a shared apartment or house near WSSU usually runs about $550-$950/month per person. Older houses near campus and in the southeast pocket land at the low end, while newer apartments closer to downtown and the medical center sit higher. Budget another $50-$130/month for utilities if the lease doesn't include them.
Other universities in Winston-Salem share a similar off-campus housing market.
Wake Forest University gathers about 8,800 Demon Deacons onto a 340-acre Reynolda Campus just north of downtown Winston-Salem, North Carolina. The city built its name on tobacco and furniture, then reinvented itself as an arts town, which you feel wandering the brick arts district and the Saturday farmers market. Next…
View housing near Wake Forest