You’ve decided you can’t afford a New York City apartment on your own. Fair — almost nobody can. So now the real question: do you find roommates and sign a traditional lease together, or do you move into one of NYC’s growing number of co-living buildings, where your rent covers a furnished room plus utilities, WiFi, and community perks? Both paths have real advantages and real drawbacks. Here’s how to choose.
What Is Co-Living, Exactly?
Co-living is a modern form of shared housing offered by companies like Outpost Club, Cohabs, SharedEasy, and Aya. You rent a private (or sometimes shared) bedroom in a professionally managed building. Your monthly payment typically covers all utilities, high-speed WiFi, weekly common area cleaning, and access to shared spaces like kitchens, lounges, or rooftops. Leases are often flexible — some operators offer stays as short as three months.
It is not the same as finding roommates on your own. With co-living, you’re renting from a company — not splitting a lease with strangers from Craigslist.
The Real Costs in 2026
Here’s a realistic breakdown of what each option costs in NYC in 2026, based on current market data from providers and platforms like StreetEasy and Roomrs.
Co-Living: All-In Monthly Costs
- SharedEasy: Shared rooms from ~$500/month; private rooms from ~$1,300/month — includes furnished room, WiFi, utilities, and bedding
- Cohabs: Private rooms $1,300–$1,550/month — includes WiFi, weekly cleaning of common areas, utilities, and a monthly community breakfast
- Outpost Club: ~$1,320–$1,760/month depending on room type and neighborhood — includes all essentials
- Brooklyn and Queens locations typically run $100–$200/month less than Manhattan equivalent options
Traditional Roommate Setup: What You Actually Pay
When you find your own roommates and sign a traditional lease, the sticker price per person is often lower — but the all-in cost is higher than it first appears:
- Rent per person: $1,000–$1,800/month in Brooklyn and Queens, higher in Manhattan (per Roomrs cost data)
- Plus: Your share of ConEd electric, gas, and internet — easily another $80–$150/month
- Plus: Broker fee (often one month’s rent, though NYC’s ban on tenant-paid broker fees has reduced this in many cases)
- Plus: First month + security deposit upfront — often $3,000–$5,000 out of pocket on day one
- Plus: Furniture if the apartment is unfurnished
5 Reasons to Choose a Co-Living Space
- You’re new to the city. Co-living gives you a soft landing — furnished room, community built-in, no need to assemble IKEA furniture on day one.
- You want flexibility. If you’re on a work visa, in grad school, or just not ready to commit to a 12-month lease, many co-living operators offer 3–6 month terms.
- You hate surprises. One monthly payment covers everything. No ConEd bill spike in July, no roommate who doesn’t pay their share of internet.
- Low upfront cost. Most co-living spaces require just one month’s deposit versus the large lump sums of traditional apartment entry.
- You want to meet people. Co-living operators actively build community — shared meals, events, Slack groups. If you don’t know anyone in the city yet, this matters.
5 Reasons to Find Roommates the Traditional Way
- Lower long-term monthly cost. A three-bedroom split three ways in a good Brooklyn neighborhood can run $1,000–$1,200/person — meaningfully cheaper than co-living once you’re settled.
- More space and privacy. You’ll likely get a real living room, your own kitchen shelves, and more square footage than a co-living pod.
- Rent-stabilization access. Traditional leases in NYC may be rent-stabilized — co-living arrangements typically are not, meaning your rate can increase more freely year to year.
- Pets. Most co-living buildings are pet-free or pet-restricted. Traditional rentals with roommates give you more control over pet policies.
- It feels like home. You can decorate, cook big meals, and build a household culture that’s actually yours — not a managed community experience.
The Hidden Risks of Each
Co-living risks: Operators can and do raise rates, change their policies, or shut down buildings. Because you’re renting from a company rather than a traditional landlord under a standard lease, your tenant protections may differ. Read your agreement carefully. Check whether the building is licensed and what eviction procedures look like.
Roommate risks: The classic NYC nightmare — a roommate who stops paying rent, leaves mid-lease, or trashes their room before moving out. Protect yourself with a roommate agreement (even an informal one), and know that as a co-tenant on the lease, you may be on the hook for their portion if they disappear.
A Note on NYC’s Office-to-Co-Living Trend
A March 2026 report from the Pew Charitable Trusts highlighted a growing movement to convert obsolete office buildings into small co-living apartments as a strategy to ease the national housing shortage. New York City is a prime candidate for this type of conversion, and several projects are already underway in Lower Manhattan and Midtown. These future units may expand the inventory of co-living options — and potentially drive prices down — in the next few years.
Action Steps: How to Decide and Move Fast
- Know your number. Calculate your true all-in budget including utilities, upfront costs, and furniture before comparing options apples-to-apples.
- If you’re leaning co-living: Browse Coliving.com NYC listings, then visit Outpost Club, Cohabs, and SharedEasy directly. Book tours — many have availability within days.
- If you’re leaning traditional roommates: Use SpareRoom, Facebook Marketplace Housing groups, or StreetEasy. Always read the full lease, check whether the apartment is rent-stabilized (look it up on the NYC HCR building search), and get a roommate agreement in writing.
- If you’re unsure: Start with co-living on a short-term lease. It buys you time to learn the city, find your neighborhood, and build up the savings for a traditional apartment deposit.
Neither path is wrong. The best housing situation in NYC is the one that fits your budget, your lifestyle, and your timeline — and keeps you housed stably in one of the most competitive rental markets in the world.

