On-campus living at the University of Central Florida is about to get a lot pricier. The UCF Board of Trustees voted this week to hike housing rates for the 2026–27 school year, marking the first major increase students have seen in roughly 12 years. Under the new plan, single-occupancy rooms will climb from around $3,500 per semester to about $4,375, while double-occupancy averages will go from about $2,962 to roughly $3,317. University leaders say the extra money is earmarked to repair aging systems and tackle long-delayed maintenance across campus housing.
How Much Rents Are Rising And When It Hits Students
According to a packet posted on OnBoard Meetings, trustees signed off on an additional 21% increase for single-occupancy rooms and an additional 8% increase for double-occupancy units for Fiscal Year 2027. Those jumps come on top of a 4% increase that the board had already approved.
Together, those changes produce the new per-semester averages and are set to kick in with fall 2026 housing agreements. The same packet lays out multi-year scenarios that project more rate increases through Fiscal Year 2031 and includes a comparison of housing costs across the State University System.
UCF Says Every Extra Dollar Goes Back Into Dorms
In a statement to Spectrum News 13, UCF Executive Chief of Staff Mike Kilbride said the new money is not headed for the general fund. “Every dollar from this increase is being reinvested in the housing inventory,” he said.
Board materials list a familiar punch list for aging buildings: HVAC replacements, life-safety work, and building-envelope repairs. The packet’s pro forma shows the higher rates would generate roughly $6.4 million in additional revenue for Fiscal Year 2027. University officials presented the move as a way to handle deferred maintenance while avoiding a draw on broader university dollars.
Students Warn Of Tighter Budgets And Fewer Knights
Some students who spoke with Spectrum News 13 said the timing could not be much worse for their wallets. They worry the new rates will strain already tight budgets and might scare off future applicants…