Dublin City University
Looking to live near Dublin City University? Our curated guide covers rooms, shared flats and purpose-built student accommodation in Dublin for September 2026 intake arrivals.
Planning to study at Trinity College Dublin? Browse verified student rooms, shared houses and purpose-built accommodation in Dublin for the September 2026 intake.
Trinity College Dublin sits in the heart of Dublin 2, right on College Green, which is one of the best locations in Ireland for a student who wants a short walk to lectures, libraries, cafes, and public transport.
That central location changes the accommodation strategy:
Trinity’s own guidance for 2026-2027 shows how competitive the process is:
If you want the simplest answer, the best approach is:
The most practical options are the ones that keep you close to campus and reduce transport stress during term.
| Option | Typical price signal | Best for | Why it works |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trinity Hall | About EUR 7,227 per academic year | First years | University residence, social, and one of the clearer routes into Trinity housing |
| Kavanagh Court | About EUR 325-331 per week | Continuing students and internationals | Close to campus and strong city-centre access |
| Here! Cork Street | Current availability on Trinity guidance | Students who want a short walk | Around a 20-minute walk to campus |
| Binary Hub | From EUR 291 per week | Students who want modern PBSA | City-centre location, bills included, and a strong amenity set |
| The Loom | From EUR 300 per week | Students who want Cork Street access | Near Trinity and other central colleges |
| New Mill / The Tannery / Brewers Close | From EUR 326-328 per week | Students who want a social PBSA cluster | About 15 minutes' walk from Trinity |
For Trinity-specific living, the big trade-off is simple:
Trinity’s central campus means students do not need to live in one single neighbourhood. The best areas depend on whether you want a short walk, a lower rent, or a quieter residential feel.
Best for students who want to walk to campus in minutes. Expect the highest prices, but also the shortest commute and the easiest access to late-night libraries, cafes, and city-centre life.
The Liberties and Cork Street are strong PBSA zones. This area works well if you want modern student housing, a central location, and a short bus or walk into Trinity.
Good for students who want a city-centre feel without paying the very top end of Dublin 2 pricing. Smithfield also connects well by Luas and bus.
These are popular with students who want a more residential feel and are happy to trade a short commute for slightly better value.
These areas suit students who want a livelier neighbourhood, decent cafes, and a balance between access and price. Trinity Hall is also in the wider south-side student orbit.
Trinity’s official location guidance makes transport one of its biggest strengths:
That means you can build a housing search around transport rather than just distance.
For day-to-day travel, Dublin Bus currently offers:
If you are choosing between two rooms, pick the one that gives you the cleanest path to campus on rainy days, not just the cheapest headline rent.
Trinity’s own cost-of-living page gives a useful reality check for Dublin:
That is why PBSA looks expensive at first glance but still makes budgeting easier:
The Dublin market moves quickly, so the main risk is not indecision, it is signing the wrong thing too fast.
The RTB states that a landlord cannot ask for a security deposit greater than one month’s rent.
Trinity’s guidance for international students is straightforward:
For students arriving from abroad, I would treat accommodation and immigration as one combined project:
Before you sign anything, make sure the contract answers these questions:
The RTB also recommends putting agreements in writing, even when a verbal arrangement exists.
Most Trinity PBSA rooms are furnished, but you should still check the listing carefully.
Usually provided:
Usually worth packing:
If you need step-free access, an adapted bathroom, a wheelchair-accessible room, or a quieter living environment, do not assume the standard room type will work.
Ask about:
Some Dublin PBSA providers list wheelchair-accessible room types, but availability is limited, so early contact matters.
If I were choosing for a Trinity student, I would rank the options like this:
The main advantage of Trinity is obvious: you can live well without needing a long commute. The main disadvantage is equally obvious: if you wait too long, the best rooms disappear fast.
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