UT Knoxville’s housing crunch is well-documented and persistent. The university is welcoming record enrollment while students describe a housing crisis, with upperclassmen facing overcrowded options and longer commutes as they search for affordable housing off campus. Knoxville has seen a nearly 50% increase in rent costs over recent years due to high demand for housing, and with only freshmen required to live on campus, each record-breaking incoming class creates a larger wave of upperclassmen entering the off-campus market the following year. University Walk on Forest Avenue is positioned to capture that demand with a quality, purpose-built product in a market that consistently outpaces supply.
Knoxville is a high-demand student housing market where UT’s enrollment growth has created a genuine and ongoing supply shortage. At a recent off-campus housing fair, officials noted that nearly all complexes were already at full occupancy for the upcoming academic year, including communities with hundreds of beds – a clear signal that well-managed, purpose-built student housing near campus commands consistent demand in this market.
University Walk is a purpose-built student housing community on Forest Avenue in Knoxville, offering University of Tennessee students a high-quality off-campus living experience in one of the most sought-after areas near campus. With 526 beds across 176 units and a location that keeps residents connected to the university, the Fort Sanders neighborhood, and everything that makes Knoxville one of the SEC’s most beloved college towns, University Walk delivers on what Vols are looking for.
University Walk is a 176-unit, 526-bed purpose-built student housing community serving the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, Tennessee. UT enrolls over 35,000 students with 73% living off campus, a first-year on-campus residency requirement that drives a consistent annual pipeline into the off-campus market, and a housing shortage that has pushed rents up nearly 50% in recent years – making Knoxville one of the most supply-constrained student housing markets in the Southeast.