21 Ways To Find The Cheapest Apartment

Live inside the freezer of a 7/11, an opium ring, a mausoleum, a baby merchant operation, a 24-hour airport café or an actual Tea Party.

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1. Look for a place where the streets have no name. Not in the U2 song way, but in the the-city-wasn’t-sure-it-was-zonable-for-humans way. A place where all of the signs have been burned off by wildfire or toxic fumes and the children appear to have walked out of The Hills Have Eyes.

2. Browse EveryBlock and do the exact opposite of what all the concerned neighborhood residents tell you to do. Try to find somewhere where they take the term “rehab” literally. I am a grad student and I currently live next to a halfway house. I often wake up to one of the residents singing Whitney Houston’s “The Greatest Love of All” on repeat at the top of her lungs, or others throwing up on the lawn. I don’t mind, because my alarm doesn’t go off about half of the time, and this is a very effective substitute.

3. Get your apartment zoned as a German sex-hostel or a Bed and Breakfast for escaped mental patients. Circle or bookmark any listing that uses the words “spacious,” “cozy,” “comfortable,” “quaint,” “quirky,” “sunny” or “mold-infested.” Circle it twice if they use the words “dungeon” or “lanterns and medieval torture devices included.

4. Sublet from a guy who plans on spending his summer chopping cars in Siberia, dealing livers on the black market in Cuba or smuggling leather jackets across the border from Canada.

5. Don’t go through one of those businesses like Sudler’s or any place where they have a secretary, a website, a Twitter or an address that can be looked up by the government. Instead, use the listing recommendations of your cousin’s cousin’s cousin Tony or the weird guy on the street corner who offers you Pez and porno mags out of his trenchcoat. Or only search the listings on Craigslist that don’t have photos.

6. Look for spaces that look like they could have been in Requiem for a Dream, The Wire, Paranormal Activity or a Bobby Brown home video.

7. One bunk bed with seven of your closest friends in a one-bedroom. Sure, your bathroom schedule is going to be insane and no one will be able to own more than two pairs of pants to accommodate closet space, but think about that $1,200 rent split eight ways. I thought you’d see it my way.

8. Don’t rent out an apartment with absolutely anything included. We aren’t just talking about heat, water, gas and electricity. Be also sure to cross off the list any place with a stove, refrigerator, door, closet, ventilation system, ventilation system, air conditioner, air, fire escape or escape in general. Rent a place where the only way to exit is to pull a reverse Mission Impossible and be bungeed out through the ceiling.

9. Prioritize any properties that at one time use to serve as quarantines for tuberculosis patients. Find an apartment where the last three residents have died or been possessed and the landlord is able to perform an exorcism at little additional monthly cost. You know you’ve found a real winner if the owners are willing to come up with a budget plan for your exorcisms—in case the charges start to really rack up between the winter months, full moons, solstices and on the Day of the Dead.

10. Try to seek out a place with communal bathrooms. Especially if those bathrooms have machines that dispense cigarettes, bullets, used tampons, city government secrets, more used tampons, large knives or missing fingers.

11. Lease out a space in an abandoned sanitarium. You’ll have to contend with the ghosts and there’s always a chance that your evening might turn into Resident Evil. However, all of the places come pre-furnished, and it would be easy to have a mosh pit in your bedroom because you’ll always bounce off it you are thrown into the wall. (And for the adventurous, those shock therapy devices may have some interesting uses.)

12. Find a place that doesn’t just lease month to month, they lease second to second.

13. Does the listing say that your potential roommates will include a guitar-playing vegan, her seven un-spayed cats and the cockroaches that form dueling barbershop quartets at night? Check. That’s a music competition show waiting to happen. Install some rotating chairs and call it The Plague. Did the building used to be owned by Satanists, amateur Jackson Pollock enthusiasts, a fishmonger’s union, the mob or Al Capone’s cousin, Cheeta? Double check.

14. Watch every episode of Nightline and 20/20, check out the local fundamentalist compounds they raid (especially the ones where the wives have 7000 children) and look up their addresses.

15. Remember that it’s always about location, location, location. Living next to a part-time, unlicensed gospel church, under a pansexual orgy or across from a bar that’s only open on Cinco de Mayo is sure to knock at least a few hundred off your rent. Or live underneath a roller rink, the only remaining speakeasy in town, a tap-dancing studio, a bouncy castle or a two-story, 24-hour bowling alley.

16. Get a place that lets you have pets. Sure, you’ll want a place that allows you the option of cats or dogs. But you know you’ve found a keeper when they allow dragons, a dragonfly colony, silverfish, platypuses and a rat king. You know that 30 Rock episode where Liz Lemon’s boyfriend whose landlord runs an actual rat race in his hallway? That’s the kind of establishment you want, one where the door guy doubles as a bouncer.

17. Live inside the freezer of a 7/11, an opium ring, a mausoleum, a baby merchant operation, a 24-hour airport café or an actual Tea Party.

18. Rent out from a guy whose last job was producing John Carter or who once was the proprietor of a flea circus ran by zombies and one-legged shadow puppets. If all of his residents are pod people, the actual children of the corn, Bachmann voters or the Leatherface family, you’ve come to the right place.

19. Don’t just move to the suburbs. Move so far away that you have to take a bullet train or a plane to a plane to get to work every day. Sure, you’ll single-handedly destroy the environment and will go broke from the transit costs, but people will be totally jealous when you tell them how much you pay in rent.

20. Salivate wildly when the term “cul de sac” has an unexpected “t” in it.

21. Kill everyone else you know who is also looking for an apartment. I mean, you’ll be lonely because you won’t know as many people as you used to. But the economy is hard, and apartment hunting is like The Hunger Games. Only the strong and the ostentatiously bearded survive. Thought Catalog Logo Mark

image – Irina Fischer