
Low Income Housing
13615 Michigan Ave, Dearborn, MI, 48126
The Project Has 1 Total Buildings. The Units Consists Of Both Public Housing And Section 8 Apartment Units.
The Project Has 1 Total Buildings. The Units Consists Of Both Public Housing And Section 8 Apartment Units.
The Project Has 1 Total Buildings. The Units Consists Of Both Public Housing And Section 8 Apartment Units.
Ferney Gardens Has 11 Units Available
Lapeer Gardens Has 11 Units Available
Salina Gardens Has 11 Units Available
Village Park Apartments Dearborn Has 152 Units Available
St Sarkis Tower Has 151 Units Available
Henry Ford Village Has 1 Units Available
HENRY FORD VILLAGE, INC Has 1 Units Available
OAKWOOD REHABILITATION & SKILLED NURSING CTR-DEARB Has 1 Units Available
You move to New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, Boston, Washington D.C., Miami, or another expensive U.S. city. A studio costs too much. A one-bedroom feels impossible. Traditional roommates feel risky. Then you see the new promise: a furnished private bedroom, shared kitchen, Wi-Fi, cleaning, events, flexible lease terms, and instant community. That is the modern co-living pitch. It sounds like adult dorm life with better branding: cheaper than a private apartment, easier than finding roommates, and more social than living alone. But co-living is not automatically cheap, legal, peaceful, or flexible. The real question is not whether the bedroom looks cute online. The real question is whether the full cost, lease structure, privacy tradeoff, house culture, and local housing rules actually work for your life.
Setting a strict price filter when searching for apartments may seem efficient, but it often hides better options and leads to weaker overall choices. Rent is only one part of the total cost of living, and focusing on it alone can cause renters to overlook location, quality, and long-term expenses. This guide explains why price-only filtering often leads to worse rental decisions.
The apartment listing says the rent is 2,200 dollars. You tour the building, picture your couch by the window, and start planning your move. Then the lease arrives, and suddenly the real monthly cost is not 2,200 dollars anymore. There is an amenity fee. A valet trash fee. A package fee. A utility billing fee. A pest control fee. A technology fee. Maybe even something called RUBS that sounds like a typo but shows up every month on your bill. Welcome to the world beyond base rent, where the advertised price is only the beginning.
You do not have to enter an apartment to learn whether a building is worth your time. Exterior condition, shared spaces, access control, and management signals can reveal how well the property is maintained. This guide shows what renters should check before committing to a full tour or application.