Dollar for dollar, sharing a two-bedroom apartment near UA is almost always cheaper per person than renting a studio solo. Studios in Tuscaloosa typically run $850–$1,150 a month for one person to cover entirely, while a two-bedroom unit averaging $1,000–$1,300 splits down to roughly $500–$650 per roommate. The studio buys you privacy; the shared two-bedroom buys you savings.
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Studio Living: What You’re Paying For
A studio means no roommate drama, no shared kitchen schedule, and full control over your space — but you’re absorbing 100% of the rent, utilities, and internet bill yourself. For students who’ve had a rough roommate experience or who simply value solitude after a full day of classes, that premium is often worth it. The tradeoff is smaller square footage and a noticeably higher per-person cost.
Sharing a Two-Bedroom: What You’re Trading
Splitting a two-bedroom cuts your rent roughly in half and usually means more total square footage and shared common space (a real living room, a full kitchen) that a studio doesn’t offer. The catch is obvious: you need a compatible roommate. Roommate-matching tools like RoomSync, or simply reaching out through UA housing Facebook groups, are common ways students pair up before signing a joint lease.
Hidden Costs People Forget to Compare
Utilities and internet are typically similar in total dollar amount whether one person or two people live in the unit, which means splitting a two-bedroom also cuts your utility share roughly in half — compounding the savings beyond just rent. 
Which One Actually Fits You
If your budget is the deciding factor, a shared two-bedroom wins almost every time. If privacy and control over your space matter more than saving a few hundred dollars a month, a studio is a reasonable splurge — especially for upperclassmen or grad students who’ve outgrown roommate living. Either way, it’s worth comparing actual current listings side by side rather than relying on averages alone; Tuscaloosa Student Housing’s directory lets you filter by unit type and price to see what’s really available right now.
There’s no universally “right” choice here — just a tradeoff between cost and privacy that’s worth running the numbers on before you sign a lease.

Clay holds a Master of Education and has spent over six years working in West Alabama, giving him a firsthand understanding of the students and families this community serves. As founder of TuscaloosaStudentHousing.com, he combines that local knowledge with hands-on research of the Tuscaloosa rental market to publish practical, honest guides for University of Alabama students living off campus.
