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Housing & Dining

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When the Campus Commons is your front yard, you can live your best TCU life. Our residential communities are nationally recognized for good reason.

Students in purple shirts walk past a Welcome Home lobby sign
Brightly colored bicycles parked in a bike rack

Living On Campus

The experience of living on campus is more than convenient—it’s a valuable way to take part in everything TCU has to offer. Finding yourself in your new home is sure to foster lifelong friendships and personal growth. That’s why we require our first- and second-year students to live on campus.

TCU students chat in a residence hall living room area

Residence Halls

Each of our unique residence halls has been freshly updated in recent years, so they all offer comfortable, welcoming surroundings from which to start your future. More than a place to live, they’re alive with caring staff and planned activities.

18 residence halls
vegan and allergan-free food options
11 dining spots
Exterior of Molly Reid Hall, taken from the diagonal corner of Berry Street

Living Off Campus

TCU is surrounded by a friendly residential neighborhood with a number of nearby student housing options, so many upperclassmen choose to live off campus. Some apartment complexes cater exclusively to students and even provide transportation.

View of an obelisk within the courtyard of the Greek Village

Greek Housing

Greek life has been a tradition for a number of TCU students since the 1950s, and our newly reimagined Greek Village in Worth Hills offers the next chapter in spirited togetherness.

A student receives a carryout box from a TCU Dining staff member

Dining

The food possibilities at TCU are vast; our flexible dining plans extend beyond our popular campus eateries to off-campus spots. We offer scratch made comfort foods that include both vegetarian and vegan fare, and keep one of our kitchens allergen-free for students with food sensitivities.