Who’s best?
Who’ll pay more rent?
What’s affordable?
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FIND A ROOMMATE IN AUSTINFind a roommate in Austin and/or read everything about roommates in Austin.
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What’s currently affordable for Austin’s roommates?
WINTER 2026
| non-traditional average1 | traditional 2BR ÷ 22 | average 1BR rented solo3 |
| 850 | 1000 | 1536 |
roomiematch.com’s Austin roommate rundown:
Austin deserves its reputation for funky fabulousness, but new residents are usually shocked by the summer heat. There will be entire weeks that are 100+ degrees in the afternoon. Most spring and summer days remain warm until well after dark. This also means allergy season never ends, and expensive air conditioning is essential at least half the year.
If you live in Austin with multiple roommates, chances are excellent you’ll run into UT students and “tech bros,” which could be the same folks before and after graduation. Some resent the “tech bros” for driving the population growth which led to the rising rents which rendered Austin inhospitable to most of the “hippie artists” with less money living there before. Whatever your feeling on this issue, since Austin has become a high tech center populated with abundant computer science and engineering grads fresh from UT, it’s not likely changing anytime soon.
But if you can afford it, since most of Austin rents and everybody knows it’s not cheap, it’s typical to have roommates at any age.
Bikes are extremely popular. Bike lanes exist around UT Austin and the middle of the city. Walking around downtown or the UT Austin campus is also popular. Public transport is not, and parking (for a car, not a bike) in the middle of town is expensive and hard to find. Moving around central Austin for most means walking, biking, or paying to park your car at least periodically.
Once upon a time, for most Austin residents, the favorite thing was live music at night, with chips and queso, plus a margarita or a Shiner. Austin has expanded so extremely in the last several years, a wider range of recreation is certainly available. But live music at night, with chips and queso, plus a margarita or a Shiner is still your best bet.
The rest of the Austin roommate lowdown:
After you’re settled down, you and your roommates should experience Austin’s:
No, they won’t get tangled in your hair, IF you have a crewcut. (Anyone with longer hair should stay far away from the bridge!) (Just kidding!) (You and your hair can view bats safely, just ask locals to direct you to the best vantage point.) |
Here’s the city of Austin’s official resources for residents page.
Notes
1. The non-traditional roommate rent average for this city we’ve experienced over the last 3 years. We can’t predict future rental availability, because we’re neither in control of any rental market nor psychic, sorry!
But in most cities most of the time, the recent and relatively recent past are the best predictors.
2. This idea came from smartasset.com‘s ranking of what a roommate saves you in 50 cities. They ranked where roommates will save you the most money, based on the average cost of a 1BR as opposed to a 2BR ÷ 2. Unsurprisingly, the more expensive the city, the more you can save, but the savings are significant in all larger metros. So we got the data for the rest of our cities from Zumper too.
This is really the minimum you could save, as you could live with more than one roommate, split more services, share food or other supplies, etc. More sharing tends to lead to more savings too, as per our roommate roadmap.
As per the rest of the description at the top of this page, we’re calling this “traditional” roommate rent.
3. From zumper.com.
4. Directly quoted from the Trust for Public Land’s parkland rating system.
“The ParkScore index awards each city up to 100 points for acreage based on the average of two equally weighted measures: median park size and parkland as a percentage of city area. Factoring park acreage into each city’s ParkScore rating helps account for the importance of larger “destination parks” that serve many users who live farther than ten minutes’ walking distance.”
While each city’s rundown already includes their individual ParkScore, nature lovers might like to see all roommate cities ranked for parkland.
5. Directly quoted from Walk Score’s Cities and Neighborhoods Ranking. They’ve ranked “more than 2,800 cities and over 10,000 neighborhoods so you can find a walkable home or apartment.”
While each city’s rundown already includes their individual Walk Score, dedicated pedestrians might like to see all roommate cities ranked for walkability.
6. From various lists here on our own best roommate cities.
7. From hoodmaps.com: a collaborative map where residents use tags describing social situations you’re likely to find. Other users can thumb up or down, so the largest tags have been thumbed up the most.