How to apply for a university dormitory in Lithuania

By LUSH.lt editorialLast verified June 2026

A university dormitory is the cheapest and simplest way to start your life in Lithuania. You apply through your university — not through a separate website — and in most places spots are limited, so the real trick is applying early.

How the application works

There is rarely a standalone "dormitory form". You request a place through the same channel you used to get in:

  • Degree students (EU and non-EU): apply via the online admission procedure, usually by ticking an accommodation option or completing it once you accept your study place.
  • Erasmus / exchange students: apply via the online enrolment procedure your home and host coordinators send you.

After you apply you wait for an allocation decision, confirm acceptance, pay a deposit, and sign an accommodation agreement before move-in.

Apply the moment you're admitted

Most universities allocate rooms on a first-come, first-served basis. The earlier you submit, the better your chances and choice of room.

EU vs non-EU vs Erasmus

The application steps are the same for everyone, but the stakes differ:

  • Non-EU degree students need proof of accommodation for the national visa and temporary residence permit. A confirmed dormitory place is an easy way to provide this, so apply as soon as you are admitted.
  • EU degree students have more flexibility and can sort housing closer to arrival, but should still apply early to secure a cheap room.
  • Erasmus / exchange students often get a dedicated allocation. Watch your inbox: exchange registration windows can be tight (for example, VILNIUS TECH opens exchange registration in mid-June and mid-December).

What it costs

Prices vary by city, room type and whether the building is renovated. Bills (heating, water, electricity, internet) are usually included.

Room typeTypical monthly priceNotes
Triple (shared)~60–115 EURCheapest option
Double (shared)~100–160 EURMost common
Single~200–280 EURLimited, books out fast

These are indicative ranges from Vilnius and Kaunas universities in 2026 — always check your own university's current price list. For context, a private room in a flat costs far more: see €350–€700unverified as a rough monthly living-cost benchmark.

The deposit

Most universities ask for a refundable deposit when you confirm your place — commonly around 200 EUR, returned on move-out if there is no damage. Some ask for more: VILNIUS TECH requests 600 EUR for full international students. Budget for it on top of your first month.

A simple checklist

  1. Get your admission or exchange enrolment confirmed.
  2. Submit the accommodation request through that same portal, as early as possible.
  3. Wait for the allocation decision (often by early–mid July for autumn).
  4. Accept the offer and pay the deposit by the deadline.
  5. Sign the accommodation agreement and note your move-in window (typically late August).
  6. Bring documents for check-in: passport/ID, your agreement, and proof of deposit payment.

Have a backup plan

A dormitory place is rarely guaranteed (LSMU and a few others are exceptions). If you are not allocated a room, you will need private housing — line up a fallback so you are not stranded on arrival, especially if your visa or residence permit depends on a confirmed address.

If you don't get a place

Don't panic. Email your university's international office or dormitory administrator directly — rooms free up as other students decline, and being on a waiting list helps. In the meantime, look at shared private flats, student-focused rental platforms, and short-term stays for your first weeks while you keep searching.

Frequently asked

Is a dormitory place guaranteed?+

Usually not. Most universities allocate places first-come, first-served and demand exceeds supply. A few, such as LSMU, do offer a place to every first-year — check your own university's rules.

How do I apply for a dormitory?+

You apply through the same system you use for admission or exchange enrolment — degree students via the admission portal, Erasmus/exchange students via the enrolment procedure. There is rarely a separate, standalone form.

How much does a dormitory cost per month?+

Roughly 60–280 EUR depending on city, room type and whether it is renovated. A shared triple is cheapest; a renovated single is the most expensive. Bills are usually included.

Do I pay a deposit?+

Often yes. Expect a refundable deposit of around 200 EUR, though some universities ask for more — VILNIUS TECH, for example, asks 600 EUR for full international students. Confirm the exact amount with your university.

Can non-EU students apply the same way as EU students?+

Yes. The dormitory application itself is the same. The difference is that non-EU students also need accommodation confirmation for their visa/residence permit, so applying early matters even more.

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