Where Rmit Point Cook Students Live (2026)

Where RMIT Point Cook Students Live — what to expect, where to go, what locals actually pick. Independent guide for Point Cook, Melbourne. Updated April 2026.

Where RMIT University Point Cook Students Live (2026)

Understanding where RMIT Point Cook students actually live helps you make smarter housing decisions. With around 2,000 students attending this campus, the residential patterns are well-established and the nearby suburbs have adapted to serve a student population.

This guide maps the most popular student suburbs around RMIT Point Cook, typical rent in each area, and the trade-offs between cost, commute time, and lifestyle.

The Overview

RMIT Point Cook students spread across several residential patterns:

  1. On-campus or immediate vicinity (5-10% of students). Walking distance to lectures. Highest cost per week but zero transport expense and maximum convenience.
  2. Point Cook and adjacent streets (20-30%). Share houses and apartments within a short walk or cycle of campus. The core student zone.
  3. Nearby suburbs within 15 minutes (30-40%). Williams Landing, Werribee, Laverton. These suburbs offer cheaper rent with a short train or tram commute via Williams Landing (bus).
  4. Further suburbs and family homes (20-30%). Students living with family or in outer suburbs commuting 30-60 minutes. Lowest housing cost but highest time cost.

Point Cook: The Core Student Zone

Living in Point Cook itself puts you closest to RMIT Point Cook. The suburb’s character is shaped by its student population, which keeps the food and retail scenes oriented toward affordability.

Typical rents in Point Cook:

  • Share house room: $150-220/week
  • Studio: $220-300/week
  • One-bedroom: $260-360/week
  • PBSA: $280-400/week

Advantages: Zero or minimal commute. Spontaneous study sessions and social events are easy. No transport costs. You become embedded in the campus community.

Disadvantages: Higher rents than surrounding suburbs. Noise during O-Week and exam periods from student activity. Demand means rental competition is intense in January and July.

Williams Landing

Commute to RMIT Point Cook: 10-20 minutes via Williams Landing (bus) Why students choose it: Lower rents than Point Cook, with a character and food scene that makes the commute worthwhile. Williams Landing is close enough that you can be on campus in 15-20 minutes but far enough that rent drops by $30-60 per week.

Werribee

Commute to RMIT Point Cook: 10-20 minutes via Williams Landing (bus) Why students choose it: Lower rents than Point Cook, with a character and food scene that makes the commute worthwhile. Werribee is close enough that you can be on campus in 15-20 minutes but far enough that rent drops by $30-60 per week.

Laverton

Commute to RMIT Point Cook: 10-20 minutes via Williams Landing (bus) Why students choose it: Lower rents than Point Cook, with a character and food scene that makes the commute worthwhile. Laverton is close enough that you can be on campus in 15-20 minutes but far enough that rent drops by $30-60 per week.

The Commute vs. Cost Trade-Off

The central question for every RMIT student choosing where to live: is a longer commute worth the rent savings?

Quick maths:

  • Saving $50/week on rent by living 20 minutes away = $2,600/year
  • Transport cost (concession Myki): $26.50/week = $1,378/year
  • Net saving: approximately $1,222/year
  • Time cost: 20 minutes x 2 x 5 days = 3.3 hours/week = 172 hours/year

For most students, living 1-2 suburbs away from campus strikes the best balance. The rent savings are real, the commute is manageable, and you are still close enough for evening study sessions and social events.

Living much further out (30+ minutes) usually only makes financial sense if you are living with family rent-free.

Several trends are shaping where RMIT students live in 2026:

  1. PBSA growth. Purpose-built student accommodation is expanding, offering all-inclusive pricing and student-specific amenities. The convenience comes at a premium over share houses.
  2. Share house competition. Quality share houses near campus fill within days of listing. Start searching 6-8 weeks before you need to move.
  3. International student concentration. International students tend to cluster in PBSA and newer apartment buildings closer to campus, where the all-inclusive model simplifies the moving process.
  4. Cost-of-living pressure. Rising rents across Melbourne mean students are increasingly sharing with more housemates or looking further from campus than previous cohorts.
  5. Work-from-home flexibility. Hybrid learning means some students choose cheaper suburbs and only commute 2-3 days per week, reducing the importance of proximity.

How to Choose Where to Live

  1. Map your weekly schedule. If you have 5 days on campus, proximity matters more than if you are only in 2-3 days.
  2. Calculate total cost, not just rent. A cheaper suburb plus transport costs may not actually save money.
  3. Visit suburbs before committing. Walk around on a weekday and a weekend. The character of a suburb changes dramatically between Tuesday afternoon and Saturday night.
  4. Talk to current students. University housing services, student Facebook groups, and O-Week events are the best places to get honest suburb recommendations.
  5. Consider your social life. Living far from campus can mean missing out on spontaneous socialising, group study sessions, and campus events.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where do most RMIT Point Cook students live?

Most RMIT Point Cook students live in Point Cook itself or in Williams Landing, Werribee, Laverton. Share houses in Point Cook are the most common arrangement at $150-220/week.

Is it better to live near RMIT or commute?

Living within walking distance saves transport costs and time. But living 1-2 suburbs away in Williams Landing can save $30-60 per week on rent, which adds up to $1,560-3,120 per year.

What percentage of RMIT students live on campus?

Typically 5-10% of students live in on-campus accommodation. The majority live in share houses, private rentals, or with family in the broader Melbourne area.


Data sourced from university websites, Domain.com.au, ABS Census 2021. Compiled April 2026.

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