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WINTER 2026
| non-traditional average1 | traditional 2BR ÷ 22 | average 1BR rented solo3 |
| 650 | 772 | 1203 |
roomiematch.com’s Raleigh/Durham/Chapel Hill roommate rundown:
Raleigh, Durham, and Chapel Hill are a triad city complex clustered together, often nicknamed The Research Triangle or just The Triangle, for the large research universities in each. They also share an airport and a lot of lab and office space, including the enormous Research Triangle Park.
All three host multiple museums, botanical gardens, and athletic clubs. All three sport multiple suburbs and satellite towns, all spread out with a mostly suburban feel. Everyone drives.
Raleigh is the capital and largest, with the largest state university (North Carolina State University), and a lot of state government. Raleigh is also home to the area’s largest performing arts venues.
Chapel Hill grew up around the University of North Carolina. UNC’s students love their campus basketball, live music, and all the bars and restaurants catering to them. All three cities are properly college towns, or the whole clump is colossally collegiate . . . but Chapel Hill has a more typical college vibe just because there’s less non-college stuff going on, than in the capital and Durham . . .
. . . whose reputation was once a bit dangerous, now just funky.
Durham is still associated with tobacco warehouses and old-fashioned textile mills in the public imagination. They’re not wrong, just a bit behind, as Durham shipped its last traditional cigarette back in 2000. Tobacco is still produced in rural areas of NC, but Durham’s dominant economic forces are now healthcare, biotech, pharmaceuticals, and advanced textiles.
And while North Carolina is still more smoking-friendly than other states, most of Durham’s older tobacco warehouses have been restored and reimagined into mixed use housing, retail, and restaurants.
Durham is also home to Duke University, that owns an entire forest, unsurprisingly known as Duke Forest. It’s 7000 acres of lush forest ecosystem, and they’ve been teaching and researching within it since 1931. They’re also keeping a long-term scientific record, and hosting the largest Herbarium in the country.
(Yeah, that was a lot on one destination, but “largest Herbarium in the country” might be an encapsulation of Durham’s vibe. If you’re thinking “hey that huge Herbarium sounds cool” you’ll probably like other stuff Durham does too.)
And anyone in the Triangle likes the whole area’s still reasonable real estate plus lower property taxes, especially for someplace this saturated with cultural and educational possibility.
The Triangle has more traditional amenities too, not just ex-tobacco warehouses and prodigious plant catalogs. Remember the athletic clubs? Too many to mention, as again, three large universities, all with dozens of their own teams.
And even though the Triangle plays well together . . . other ways?
There are a lot of enthusiastic college fans here. If you are spending time with one, especially near gametime, one university’s team might be angelic . . . while the other team is clearly hellbound.
And exactly who’s bound for hell can be hard to know. All three have a huge number of fans and you can’t always tell who’s who, definitely not by the accent. So if your roommate attended college at one of the most competitive sporting three, and you disrespect their team(s)? They might have to challenge you to a duel at dawn. Or something awkward.
Not everyone here takes college sports so seriously, of course!
But most public places, you’ll need to assume some that do are nearby and will hear you talking about them.
The rest of The Triangle roommate lowdown:
So mostly, you and your roommates will be miserable unless at least one of you has a decent car. With air conditioning. |
After you’re settled down, you and your roommates should experience The Triangle’s:
Here’s the city of Raleigh’s official .gov featuring an extensive index of local services, which you or your roommates might need.
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.