First-week accommodation in Vilnius: book temporary, not permanent

By LUSH.lt editorialLast verified June 2026

Book temporary accommodation — a hostel or short-stay flat — for your first week or two, then find permanent housing once you're on the ground. Committing to a year-long lease before you've seen the place is how students lose deposits and end up stuck somewhere wrong.

This is the same advice whether you're a non-EU degree student, EU student or here on Erasmus/exchange: arrive, settle into a cheap short-term base, then choose your real home in person.

Why temporary first

  • You can view flats in person. Photos lie; neighbourhoods feel different on the ground. A week's buffer lets you visit before you sign anything.
  • You avoid the biggest scam. The classic trap targets students who book a year-long flat from abroad and pay a deposit before arrival. A hostel removes that pressure entirely.
  • Arrival admin takes time. You'll be sorting residence paperwork, a bank account and a SIM in your first days — a no-commitment base makes that easier.
  • It's cheap. A dorm bed costs far less than a rushed bad lease.

Check if your university has a dormitory

Many universities offer dormitory rooms that are cheaper than private rentals and skip the flat hunt. Apply early — places are limited — and use a hostel only to bridge the gap until your room is ready.

What a first-week stay costs

OptionRough price (2026)Good for
Dorm bed (shared room)€8–25 / nightTightest budgets, meeting people
Private hostel room~€40 / nightA bit of privacy, couples
Short-stay flat (Airbnb-style)Varies, often €40–70 / nightCooking your own food, longer buffer

Prices rise 20–60% on weekends and over holidays (as of 2026 — confirm on the booking platform). For your wider budget, see €350–€700unverified as a monthly planning figure.

What to know before booking a Vilnius hostel for your first week

A few checks save real hassle:

  • Location over price. Pick somewhere near your university or the bus/train station (the Old Town is central and well connected). Saving €3 a night isn't worth a 40-minute trek with luggage.
  • Check the maximum-stay limit. Some hostels cap how many nights you can book or restrict stays by age — confirm before you pay.
  • Self check-in and late arrival. Flights land late. Make sure the hostel offers an access code or 24-hour reception so you're not locked out.
  • Kitchen and laundry. A communal kitchen and a washing machine matter more for a multi-day stay than for a tourist weekend.
  • Read recent reviews. Look for comments on cleanliness, noise and how easy check-in actually was.
  • Book through a known platform (Booking.com, Hostelworld) and pay on the platform, not by direct bank transfer to a stranger.

Book 7–14 nights, not a month

A week or two is usually enough to view flats, sign a lease and handle paperwork. You can almost always extend; you can't always get a refund.

Don't sign a permanent lease from abroad

Scammers specifically target international students because you're far away and can't visit. Watch for these red flags on any flat or room offer:

  • Pressure to pay fast to "secure" a place that's in high demand.
  • Requests to pay off-platform — bank transfer, Western Union, MoneyGram or prepaid cards. These can't be traced or refunded.
  • Prices in USD or GBP. Rent in Lithuania is always in euros (€); another currency is a warning sign.
  • A deposit larger than one month's rent, or full rent demanded before you've seen anything.
  • The "landlord" can't do a live video tour or won't meet in person.

Never pay a deposit before you've seen the place

If you can't visit in person yet, do not transfer a deposit for a long-term flat. Use your hostel as a safe base, view places once you arrive, and pay deposits by traceable bank transfer only after seeing the property and reading the lease. When in doubt, ask your university's international office to sanity-check an offer.

Once you've found a real place

Your hostel is a base, not an address. When you sign a genuine lease (or move into a dormitory), you'll then declare your place of residence — which needs the property owner's consent and your tenancy agreement, something a hostel can't provide. See our separate guide on declaring your place of residence for the steps and deadline.

Keep your booking confirmation

Save your hostel confirmation and address — you may be asked for a current address when you collect your residence card or open a bank account.

Frequently asked

Should I sign a year-long lease before I arrive?+

Almost never. Book a hostel or short-stay flat for your first week or two, then view places in person. Signing a long lease sight unseen is the most common way students lose money to scams or end up somewhere unsuitable.

How much is a hostel bed in Vilnius?+

Roughly €8–25 a night for a dorm bed and around €40 for a private room, depending on season and how central it is (as of 2026 — confirm on the booking platform). Weekends and holidays cost more.

Can I declare my address at a hostel?+

Usually not. A declaration of residence needs the owner's consent and a real lease or dormitory agreement. Treat your hostel as a base while you find permanent housing, then declare that address.

How long should I book for?+

Book about 7–14 nights. That's enough to view flats, sign a lease and handle arrival admin, without committing to weeks you may not need.

What if my university offers a dormitory?+

Take it if you can — university dorms are cheaper and skip the private-rental hunt entirely. Apply early, as places are limited. A hostel still bridges the gap before your dorm room is ready.

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