
Should You Buy a Home in Bloomington for Your IU Student?
If you have a kid heading into IU Bloomington and you are sitting on enough equity or cash to make a purchase, this question comes up faster than most people expect it to. Not because buying is always right, but because the numbers make you at least think about it.
I have been doing this for over 20 years in Bloomington. I see Indianapolis and Chicago parents in this market every year, sometimes with a clear plan, sometimes after they have already paid two years of rent and done the math too late. What follows is the honest version of how this works.
What the Housing Cost Looks Like if You Do Nothing
IU Bloomington just approved room and board rates for 2026-27 at $12,679 per year for the standard package. (Source: IU Board of Trustees, December 2025.) That covers one bed in a shared room with a meal plan attached.
Most students move off campus after freshman year, and Bloomington's rental market is not gentle. Off-campus housing near campus is often priced by the bedroom, and the number varies widely depending on the unit, the condition, and the distance to campus. Expect to pay at least $600 per bedroom per month as a starting point. A shared 3-bedroom house comes to at least $1,800/month for the unit, or $600 per person assuming full occupancy. Nicer units and anything within easy walking distance of campus push well above that.
At $600 per person per month, four years of rent is $28,800. That is your kid's share, minimum. No equity. No asset at the end. You hand that money to a landlord and walk away with nothing.
What Does Buying Actually Cost?
Two price bands show up consistently in the parent-buyer market here.
The entry range is roughly $200,000 to $275,000. At this level you are mostly looking at condos and townhomes, some older ranches on the west side, and a handful of smaller detached homes that need updating. Many of these deals are cash. The buyer is treating it as an investment property with their student as the primary occupant, not a long-term family home.
The mid-upper range is roughly $450,000 to $550,000 and above. These are real single-family homes in established neighborhoods on the east side or in areas with proximity to campus. Buyers in this range are often bringing equity from an Indianapolis or Chicago sale and are buying something they would be comfortable holding past the kid's graduation.
Closer to campus is consistently the stronger preference. The logic is simple: walkability to class, proximity to the parts of Bloomington the student will actually use, and better resale or rental demand when the four years are done.
The 4-Year Hold Math
Most parents in this segment plan around a 4-year window. Their student graduates, they either sell the property or convert it to a full rental. The question is whether the purchase makes financial sense across that window.
Based on most recent Indiana Regional MLS data, the Bloomington median sale price is $350,000, down from where it was 12 months ago but still holding. The market has recalibrated, not crashed. Days on market is 26, inventory is 453 average daily units, and well-priced homes are still moving.
The value case for buying rests on a few things working together: equity accumulation from paying down principal, potential appreciation over the hold period (Bloomington has averaged meaningful appreciation over the past decade even through volatility), and the elimination of rent payments that would otherwise produce zero return.
This is not a guaranteed winner. Bloomington prices have softened year-over-year. Carrying costs on a $250,000 property at current mortgage rates, taxes, insurance, and maintenance add up. And the spring 2026 market has gotten meaningfully tougher on inspections and negotiations regardless of where prices land. You need to price your entry carefully.
What You Need to Know Before You Make an Offer
Property taxes. Indiana's 2026 property tax law (Senate Enrolled Act 1) includes a new 10% homestead credit up to $300, but that only applies to your primary residence. If you are buying in Bloomington and your primary home is elsewhere, this property does not qualify for the homestead credit or the standard homestead deduction. Budget accordingly.
Rentability. If your student has roommates contributing to the mortgage, that changes the math significantly. But Bloomington's off-campus rental market near campus has specific tenant demand patterns. Summer occupancy is not guaranteed. Plan for some vacancy.
School district. The 47404 zip code covers parts of Bloomington that use Ellettsville/Richland-Bean Blossom schools, not Bloomington schools. If resale to a family buyer matters to you at the end of the hold, verify the district at the property level, not by zip.
IU's enrollment. Total IU Bloomington enrollment hit a record 48,626 students in fall 2025, with about 46% coming from out of state (Source: IU News, September 2025). That population drives consistent housing demand. It is part of why Bloomington real estate prices have proven more resilient than comparable-sized Indiana cities.
Who This Works For and Who It Doesn't
Buying makes the most sense if you have the cash or equity to put at least 20% down, you are planning a minimum 4-year hold, you are buying something with actual resale appeal rather than just tolerable student housing, and your kid is staying through graduation.
It makes less sense if you are carrying a high mortgage rate on a property you are not sure about, if your student's program might shift to another campus or online, or if you are factoring in travel and management costs you have not priced honestly.
I am not a financial advisor and this is not investment advice. What I can tell you is what I have watched play out in this market for over two decades. Some families do this and look back on it as one of the best financial decisions they made. Some do it without asking the right questions first and end up with a property that complicates their life for five years.
The difference is usually preparation.
What to Do Next
If you are seriously running the numbers on this, I am happy to walk you through what is actually available in Bloomington right now at both price points, what has sold recently and for how much, and what questions to ask before you make a move.
Call or text me at (812) 360-3863. I know this market and I will give you a straight answer.
Related reading:
What to Expect in the Bloomington Real Estate Market This Summer: Read it here
Bloomington vs. Indianapolis Cost of Living: Read it here
Hidden Costs of Moving to Bloomington: Read it here
Lesa Miller, Broker | REALTOR®
Lesa Miller Real Estate
RE/MAX Acclaimed Properties
Serving Bloomington, Bedford and the Surrounding Indiana Communities
(812) 360-3863
[email protected]
https://LesaMillerRealEstate.com
