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WINTER 2026
| non-traditional average1 | traditional 2BR ÷ 22 | average 1BR rented solo3 |
| 600 | 773 | 1199 |
roomiematch.com’s Phoenix and Tempe roommate rundown:
Phoenix is extremely popular with college students, tourists, and retirees, and their economy revolves around all three. They undulate in waves just like the heat.
But unlike many similarly popular cities, summer is no one’s favorite?
Because it’s too hot. Even for natives who love living here. They love staying inside all summer long, “hibernating” in air conditioning well into fall . . . at least as much as possible.
It gets HOT. Like the highest average temperature of any major metro in the country, up to 120 degrees F hot. Like the most sunshine of any major metro in the world, with an average of about 110 days over 100 degrees F hot. Like very little rain except for monsoons hot.
Like monsoon rains with flooding, with lightning and dust storms also happening hot. Like haboob hot.
What’s haboob hot? A haboob is a dust storm carried along on a weather front. No one likes sand blowing in from the desert, especially when it cuts off power. However, this is a feature of monsoon season in hot desert climates like Phoenix.
The extreme dry heat of summer also means high UV and a risk of sunburn almost whenever the sun is out. All your roommates should wear sunscreen to avoid becoming crispy critters. If they think they’re the special exception? They’re extra especially not. Water and a hat are clever too.
Phoenix’s arid ecology is also habitable to different flora and fauna than anyone not from a desert has likely experienced . . . and we need to warn you about some of them too. Not as much inside the city limits, but definitely suburbs surrounding!
The following are possibly dangerous to humans, often lethally dangerous for outdoor pets:
Coyote, javelina, bobcat, mountain lion, Western diamondback rattlesnake, Sonoran sidewinder, Sonoran coral snake, Gila monster, Arizona bark scorpion, black widow spiders, brown recluse spiders, giant desert hairy scorpion, Arizona blond tarantula, and tarantula hawk wasp!
All Phoenicians have to slightly beware the cactus spines, particularly the giant saguaros’. It’s not like they’re going to reach out and grab you, but folks get stabbed anyway. Yes, many are large enough to hug! But definitely don’t.
(There are a lot of other sharp-spined succulents. And some less spiny succulents as well, along with many lovely native trees.)
So why so popular, what with all that sizzling danger?
It’s all about winter in the Valley of the Sun!
In summer, everyone avoids outdoors as much as possible, but in winter, visitors live for it! Wealthy “snowbirds” from colder parts of the country often spend winters in Phoenix, attracted to the mild winters and lower cost of living.
And there are many outdoor attractions for them, all winter long, including over 200 golf courses.
And it’s also all about the college students, year round. Downtown Tempe is a college town with that expected night life, and you can take light rail to and fro. Most of that’s revolving around Arizona State University, the region’s largest higher institution of higher education, but several other campuses are here too.
All that studying and traveling leads to snacking in the sunshine. Mexican cuisine is well represented, along with pizza for the perpetual college students. But also get ready for burritos the size of newborn babies, fry bread, steakhouses, street tacos, quesadillas, and . . . hot chilis on anything and everything.
No, it’s not paradoxical to eat hot chilis in the hottest weather. Nope!
The rest of the Phoenix roommate lowdown:
Otherwise, you’ll really want a car. Phoenix sprawls, urban area itself over 500 square miles, suburbs adding substantially to that. |
After you’re settled down, you and your roommates should experience Phoenix’s:
Here’s the city of Phoenix’s official .gov, including upcoming major events, some may interest you and your roommates.
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.