Sophomore year at University of Southern California — which dorms are open, what to look for, and how to pick well.
11 dorms are open to sophomores plus other class years. Sorted by student rating.
| Dorm | Overall ★ | Style | Bath | Reviews | Features |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Birnkrant Residential College | — | Corridor | Communal | 0 | |
| Cale and Irani Residential College | — | Apartment | Private | 0 | |
| Cardinal Gardens | — | Apartment | Private | 0 | |
| Marks Tower | — | Corridor | Communal | 0 | |
| McCarthy Honors Residential College | — | Corridor | Communal | 0 | |
| New North Residential College | — | Corridor | Communal | 0 | |
| Pardee Tower | — | Corridor | Communal | 0 | |
| Parkside Apartments | — | Apartment | Private | 0 | 🍳 Kitchen |
| Parkside Arts & Humanities Residential College | — | Suite | Semi-Private | 0 | |
| Parkside International Residential College | — | Suite | Semi-Private | 0 | |
| Webb Tower | — | Apartment | Private | 0 | 🍳 Kitchen |
Sophomores typically lose access to first-year-only halls and pick from a wider pool — but with a lottery system that depends on randomized draw numbers. Pull-in groups (you + your future roommate(s)) get one shared draw number, so a strong roommate's number can lift you both.
Each college runs the lottery slightly differently. Generally: every rising sophomore gets a random number, groups can pull in one another, and rooms fill in number order. Check your housing portal for the exact rules at University of Southern California.
Most schools require sophomores to live on campus. If yours allows off-campus, it's usually cheaper but you lose the dining hall + housing-staff support. Sophomore year is often the wrong year to leave — most off-campus moves work better as a junior.
Look at the dorm table below: filter to dorms with 3+ reviews and a ★4+ average. The ones nobody talks about — but real students rated highly — are your sleeper picks.
Browse University of Southern California dorms filtered by amenity: