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Where UT Austin Students Actually Live — and What Parents Should Check Before Choosing

From the high-rise apartments of West Campus to the historic streets of Hyde Park, the budget-friendly complexes along Riverside, and the suburban quiet of Far West — UT Austin students cluster in five distinct housing areas. Each offers a fundamentally different experience for students, parents evaluating a purchase, and investors underwriting a rental. Here is a verified, area-by-area breakdown.

Audience: Parents, Students & Investors| UT Austin • Austin, TX|9 min read
Aerial view of residential neighborhoods and streets near the UT Austin campus, showing the mix of apartments, condos, and single-family homes

The Short Answer

UT Austin students concentrate in five distinct housing areas. Each serves a different student profile, budget, and decision purpose — and what works for a renter may be entirely wrong for a parent buyer or investor.

The five primary UT student housing areas, ordered by proximity to campus: West Campus (walk, premium pricing, undergraduate-dominant), North Campus (walk/bike, quieter, graduate and upper-division mix), Hyde Park (bike/bus, historic, graduate and professional), Riverside (bus, budget, undergraduate), and Far West (bus/car, most space per dollar, mixed). Each area has distinct implications for parent buyers, investors, and the students who will actually live there.

How the five areas compare at a glance

AreaAccessPer-Person RentProperty TypesParent Buyer FitInvestor Fit
West CampusWalk 5–10 min$1,100–$1,600+Apts, condos, co-opsCondo purchases, strong resaleHighest rent, most competition
North CampusWalk/bike 10–20 min$800–$1,350SFH, duplexes, small aptsHouses and duplexes, broader appealLess supply, moderate rent
Hyde ParkBike/bus 10–15 min$900–$1,500Historic homes, bungalowsLong-term hold, broad resalePremium pricing, non-student demand
RiversideBus 15–25 min$650–$950Large complexes, townhomesLower entry price, weaker resaleCash flow potential, mixed tenant base
Far WestBus 20–25 min$700–$1,000Apts, condos, SFHsSpace + value, less student-centricGeneral Austin rental market

Rent ranges are per person per month and reflect 2025–2026 market conditions. Actual rent varies by property, bedroom count, amenities, and lease timing. Sources: publicly available listing data; UT Off-Campus Living Resources; student-reported figures.

1

West Campus

Campus Access

Walk (5–10 min to most buildings)

Property Types

High-rise and mid-rise apartments, older condo buildings, a few single-family homes and co-ops. Densely developed, limited green space.

Student Fit

Undergraduates who prioritize walking to class, social proximity, and building amenities over space and quiet. Not ideal for students who need quiet, parking, or a yard.

Parent Buyer Fit

Condos (1–3 BR) are the most common parent-purchase option. Strong resale demand from other parent buyers and investors, but prices are high ($250K–$600K+ for condos). HOA restrictions on rentals are common — review before purchasing.

Investor Fit

Highest rent-per-bedroom potential ($1,100–$1,600+/bedroom). Rent-by-bedroom model is standard. Turnover tied to academic calendar. High concentration of competing supply — differentiation matters. Purpose-built student housing competes directly.

⚑ Important Diligence Question

Review HOA rental restrictions, owner-occupancy requirements, minimum lease terms, and parking availability. Confirm whether the condo association allows student tenants. Review the City of Austin's rental registration requirements.

2

North Campus

Campus Access

Walk (10–20 min), bike, or CapMetro shuttle

Property Types

Mix of single-family homes, duplexes, small apartment buildings, and a few condos. Tree-lined streets, more green space, quieter than West Campus.

Student Fit

Graduate students, upper-division undergraduates, and students who want quiet but still want to walk or bike to class. Popular with students who have classes near Dean Keeton Street or the northern edge of campus.

Parent Buyer Fit

Single-family homes ($400K–$700K+) and duplexes offer more space and a more traditional residential feel. Strong appeal for parents who want a house rather than a condo. May appeal to families considering longer-term Austin residency.

Investor Fit

Lower per-bedroom rent than West Campus ($800–$1,350/bedroom) but less competing supply. Single-family homes with 3–4 bedrooms can be rented by the room or by the unit. Fewer purpose-built student housing competitors.

⚑ Important Diligence Question

Review City of Austin occupancy limits (recently revised under HOME ordinance). Confirm parking availability — many North Campus streets have permit parking. Review the property's history as a student rental and any neighbor concerns.

3

Hyde Park

Campus Access

Bike (10–15 min), CapMetro bus, or drive

Property Types

Historic single-family homes, craftsman bungalows, some duplexes and small apartment buildings. One of Austin's most character-rich residential neighborhoods.

Student Fit

Graduate students, older undergraduates, and students who prefer a neighborhood feel over student-district energy. Walkable to coffee shops, restaurants, and groceries along Duval Street and Speedway.

Parent Buyer Fit

Historic homes ($500K–$900K+) with strong long-term appreciation potential and broad buyer appeal beyond the student market. Hyde Park properties can be sold to non-student buyers more easily than West Campus condos, offering a potentially broader exit market.

Investor Fit

Premium pricing makes cash-flow challenging for pure student rentals. Properties may command higher rent from young professionals and graduate students than from undergraduates. Historic district restrictions may limit renovation or expansion.

⚑ Important Diligence Question

Hyde Park has a National Register Historic District designation and local historic zoning in parts of the neighborhood. Review any restrictions on exterior modifications, additions, or demolition before purchasing. Confirm whether the property can legally be used as a student rental with multiple unrelated occupants.

4

Riverside / East Riverside

Campus Access

CapMetro Route 672 (15–25 min) or drive

Property Types

Large apartment complexes, some newer mid-rise buildings, a few townhome communities. Development has accelerated along East Riverside Drive in recent years.

Student Fit

Budget-conscious undergraduates who prioritize lower rent and newer building amenities over walk-to-campus convenience. The bus commute is manageable — CapMetro Route 672 runs frequently — but students without a car are entirely dependent on transit.

Parent Buyer Fit

Lower entry price for condos and townhomes ($150K–$300K) compared to campus-adjacent areas. However, weaker resale demand from parent buyers, who typically prioritize walk-to-campus proximity. May be more suitable as a pure investment than a parent-occupied purchase.

Investor Fit

Lower purchase prices improve cash-flow potential on paper. Rent-by-room possible but demand is thinner than in West Campus or North Campus. Tenant pool includes students, young professionals, and service-industry workers — broader than a student-only market, which can be an advantage during vacancies.

⚑ Important Diligence Question

Review CapMetro Route 672 frequency and schedule — service may be reduced during summer, holidays, and late-night hours. Confirm the complex's student population and turnover patterns. Review any planned development along East Riverside that could add competing supply.

5

Far West

Campus Access

CapMetro Route 661 (20–25 min) or drive

Property Types

Apartment complexes, some condo communities, and single-family homes in a established Northwest Austin residential area.

Student Fit

Students who want the most space for the least money and are willing to commute. Popular with students who have cars and prefer a suburban feel. Less social connection to campus life — the trade-off is real.

Parent Buyer Fit

Condo and single-family options at lower price points than central Austin. The area has strong appeal for families who may use the property themselves after the student graduates. However, the distance from campus limits appeal as a pure student-housing play.

Investor Fit

Least student-specific demand of the five areas. Rental demand is driven more by general Austin housing needs than by UT specifically. This can be an advantage — the property does not depend on the student rental cycle — but per-bedroom rents and occupancy are harder to model around the academic calendar.

⚑ Important Diligence Question

Confirm CapMetro Route 661 schedule and any planned service changes. Review the condo association's rental policies if purchasing a condo. Understand that this area competes in the broader Austin rental market, not specifically the UT student rental market.

What these area differences mean for decision-making

For parents evaluating a purchase

The area you choose fundamentally shapes the resale question. A West Campus condo likely resells to another parent buyer or investor — the buyer pool is narrow but deep. A Hyde Park home can sell to anyone — the buyer pool is broader but the entry price is higher. Think about who buys this property from you in four years before you decide where to buy.

For students deciding where to live

West Campus offers the closest thing to on-campus living without being on campus — but at a premium and with noise, density, and limited parking. North Campus and Hyde Park offer a more adult living experience with trade-offs in commute time. Riverside and Far West trade convenience for cost. The student's class schedule, transportation, social preferences, and tolerance for noise should drive the decision.

For investors underwriting a rental

The area determines your tenant pool, rent structure (by room or by unit), turnover patterns, and exit buyer profile. A West Campus rental competes with purpose-built student housing. A North Campus rental competes with other houses and small apartments. A Riverside rental competes on price. Model each area separately — do not use the same underwriting assumptions for West Campus and Far West.

Questions to ask before choosing an area

QuestionWho Should Ask
Can the student walk, bike, or take transit to their specific classes — not just to campus in general?Student + Parent
What is the actual walk or commute time at 8:00 AM on a weekday, not on a Saturday afternoon tour?Student
Where is the nearest grocery store, pharmacy, and healthcare facility?Parent
What are the parking rules — on-site, street permit, or none? Does the student plan to bring a car?Student + Parent
If buying: who would buy this property from us in four years — another parent, an investor, or a non-student buyer?Parent
If investing: what is the competing supply in this specific area — new apartments under construction, purpose-built student housing, other condos?Investor
What are the area's noise, event-day, and safety considerations — not just general statistics, but specific streets and blocks?Student + Parent

Next Step

Get area-specific guidance for UT Austin housing

Steve Johnson, the local UT Austin-area real estate broker, provides area-by-area guidance for parents evaluating a purchase, investors underwriting a rental, and students comparing neighborhood options. Contact him for current Austin campus-area listings and market insight.

Sources

  • • UT Austin Off-Campus Living Resources — Neighborhoods, offcampus.utexas.edu
  • • CapMetro — UT Shuttle routes 661, 672, and system map
  • • City of Austin — HOME Ordinance amendments (2023–2024)
  • • Publicly available apartment and real estate listing data for Austin campus areas
  • • UT Austin Park & Ride and campus parking information
  • • Travis Central Appraisal District — property data
Published: July 2026Updated: July 2026Author: CollegeHousing.ai Editorial TeamMarket: UT Austin • Austin, TX