How to find student housing in Halifax
Halifax is the largest student city in Atlantic Canada, with six post-secondary institutions packed into a five-kilometre radius. That density is great for campus life and brutal for the rental market. Here's how to actually land a place.
Start with the right neighbourhood
Where you live in Halifax mostly comes down to which campus you walk to. The peninsula is small, but a fifteen-minute difference in commute matters when it's January and the hill is iced over.
- South End. Closest to Dalhousie's Studley campus, Saint Mary's, and King's. It's the most walkable part of the city and everyone knows it, so rooms go fast and cost the most. See our Dalhousie housing guide and Saint Mary's guide.
- Spring Garden & Quinpool. Central and walkable to both Dal and SMU, with a lot of apartment stock above the shops. A good compromise if you split time between campuses.
- North End. Closer to Dal's downtown Sexton campus. More character, usually a bit cheaper, and the bus connections are decent.
- Clayton Park, Fairview & Bedford Highway. The budget picks, and where most MSVU students end up. Cheaper rooms, longer commute.
Know what rent actually costs
The average one-bedroom apartment in Halifax runs about $1,539 a month according to CMHC's October 2025 Primary Rental Market Survey. But as a student you almost never rent one of those on your own. You split a house. On SubSwap, per-room Halifax rents usually land between $700 and $1,200, and most shared housing within walking distance of Dal, SMU, and King's sits around $850 to $1,000.
Time your search correctly
The South End has the lowest vacancy of any Halifax neighbourhood, and the September scramble realistically starts in late winter. Want a September lease? Start looking in February or March. For a January or summer sublet, six to eight weeks out is enough. We go deeper on this in when to start looking for student housing.
Where to actually look
Most students still bounce between Facebook groups, Kijiji, and word of mouth. The problem is that none of those verify who's on the other end, and that's exactly how you get scammed or ghosted, or show up to a viewing that doesn't exist. A student-only marketplace where every poster is confirmed by university email cuts most of that out. It's the whole reason SubSwap exists: verified students and business-verified landlords only, plus roommate matching based on actual compatibility instead of whoever replied first.
Protect yourself
The safety rules stay the same no matter where you search. Never send a deposit before you've seen the place, or before someone you trust has seen it for you. Be suspicious of rent that's well below market. And get everything in writing. Read our full guide on avoiding rental scams as a student.
Find your place. Find your people.
SubSwap connects verified Atlantic Canadian students for subleases and roommate matching. Free to join with your university email.
Frequently asked questions
How much is student rent in Halifax?
Per-room student rents in Halifax usually run $700 to $1,200 on SubSwap, and most shared housing sits around $850 to $1,000. The citywide one-bedroom apartment average is about $1,539/month per CMHC's October 2025 survey.
What's the best neighbourhood for students in Halifax?
The South End is most popular because it's closest to Dalhousie, Saint Mary's, and King's, but it's also the priciest and tightest. Spring Garden and Quinpool are central compromises; the North End and Clayton Park are cheaper with longer commutes.
When should I start looking for a Halifax sublease?
For September, start looking in February or March because the South End fills up early. For January or summer terms, six to eight weeks ahead is usually enough.
How do I avoid rental scams in Halifax?
Never pay a deposit before seeing the unit, be wary of rent well below market, get the agreement in writing, and use a platform that verifies posters. SubSwap verifies every student by university email and reviews landlords manually.