The 20 Best College Towns To Spend Your Summer

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Summer is a great time to explore other parts of the country. Assuming that kickass social media marketing internship you really wanted didn’t pan out, you probably have an extra month or two to kill you didn’t plan on having before. I feel that. Rarely will you get an opportunity to travel freely with limited expenses or responsibilities again for the rest of your life. If you’re not looking to go abroad, these places where you might have friends are worth visiting this summer.

10. New Orleans (Tulane)

New Orleans and its infamous Bourbon Street don’t particularly need an explanation. If you haven’t been to New Orleans, it’s a must-visit. With Louisiana, you get a great lineup of casinos always close by. You can make a full summer salary at the blackjack table if you play your cards right. (Did you like this pun? Please rate this pun 1-10.) The only problem with New Orleans is that you always feel slightly dirtier than you would in any other city in the country. Personally, I’d rather spend a weekend in New Orleans. Anything over a week might feel like overkill.

9. Wilmington/Wrightsville Beach (UNCW)

Wrightsville Beach is probably one of the most underrated beach towns on the east coast. There are so many good restaurants and places to get shitty summer jobs on the island alone, you wouldn’t have to leave and could cross “beach bum” off your lifelong bucket list. All you need in Wrightsville is a bike. If you don’t like seafood, this might be the perfect beach for you. The two best places to eat on the island are a Mexican restaurant and a hot dog stand. (No offense Dockside fans, but technically that isn’t on the island.) There are also four or five island bars right next to each other. Shit, now I am craving a Trolley Stop Carolina Dog.

8. Phoenix (Arizona State)

I’ve only been to the airport in Phoenix, so I can’t personally endorse this one. But, come on. Phoenix has tons of stuff to do, is relatively inexpensive and is well known for having awesome bars and sporting events. It’s also a great place to go hiking, and it has a lot of camping options all around it, including the Grand Canyon. Have you seen the girls that go to Arizona State? I think that is reason enough to add them on the list.

7. Athens, Ga. (Georgia)

A legit mini-Austin, Athens has more bars than just about any city you’ll ever visit. You can stay 12 weeks and basically find a new bar every night. Nobody wants to leave, so most UGA students just hang out there over the summer. It is, by far, the most fun SEC college town. Sorry, Oxford. It also has unreal live music, and I don’t think anyone will argue that Georgia has some of the nicest golf courses in the nation.

6. Santa Barbara (UC Santa Barbara)

Hot girls. Great bars. The beach. Rinse. Repeat.

5. Boulder (Colorado)

I don’t think this one needs much of an explanation, either. It’s for a certain type of lifestyle. Do you like the mountain lifestyle? Do you like being right next to Denver? When I say the word “nugget”, does something other than chicken come to your mind? Yeah, Boulder is probably for you.

4. Madison (Wisconsin)

One of those “You can only enjoy this town for three months out of the year, so make them count” college towns. The city is on a lake and there are a bunch of outdoor activities you can do. Madison is littered with good bars (State Street), so your night activities are covered. It also has a lot of hot girls.

3. Charleston (College of Charleston)

If you hate pastel, this probably isn’t the place for you. Charleston isn’t exactly on the beach, but it’s close enough that you can make it out there in 20 minutes. The rest of the time can be spent hanging out in the city, which is one of the coolest places you’ll visit. The bars are right by the water, and there are a bunch of parks and places to hang in the city that you don’t have to spend every day at the beach. The bar covers kind of suck, but it’s worth it for the experience.

2. Austin (Texas)

Yes, it’s hot, but it’s tough to find a cooler town than Austin. All summer long, the city offers free concerts in Zilker Park, home of Austin City Limits. Downtown is hopping, and you can find some great bars on Sixth Street, or Rainey if you’re feeling a little artsy. You can also sign up for a card that lets you play golf all summer at the local public courses for a meager $100. Oh, and the city is on a lake, with lakes all around it, and nobody complains about the cold temperatures of Barton Springs when it’s 97 degrees out.

1. Chicago (Northwestern, Loyola, DePaul)

It’s sort of cheating to call this a college town, considering it is the third largest city in the U.S., but it still deserves the top spot on this list. Almost everybody in college has at least one friend who is headed to Chicago this summer. Whether it’s to work in advertising or finance or insurance, the chance you know somebody in the Windy City this summer is somewhere between 95-99 percent. Just watch this timelapse of Chicago in the summer and try and tell me it doesn’t look awesome:

It’s a clean, fun New York. Hitting up Wrigleyville for an afternoon Cubs game, drinking at one of the thousands of downtown bars, or spending every day hanging out by the lake is why Chicago a must-visit between April and August.

Rounding out the Top-20:

11. Washington D.C. (GWU)
12. Los Angeles (UCLA, USC)
13. Dallas (SMU)
14. Seattle (Washington)
15. Athens (Ohio)
16. Bloomington (Indiana)
17. Pittsburgh (Pitt)
18. Boston (Boston College)
19. Minneapolis (Minnesota)
20. Orlando (UCF)
….
4,736. Lubbock (Texas Tech)

Image via YouTube

  1. NightriderNoisewater

    Pretty good list. But really? Chicago is number 1? I’d rather spend my summer in Canada.

    10 years ago at 11:53 am
      1. Mickormack

        Chicago is my hometown. I am also a cub fan, we take jokes about our sports teams pretty well.

        10 years ago at 7:48 pm
    1. Henry_Eighth

      Sometimes I like to scroll down to the bottom and leave a snarky reply to the comment with the most laps.

      10 years ago at 8:44 pm
  2. ThursdayNightClub

    While I’m a huge fan of the city of New Orleans, there is NO WAY I would want to spend a summer there. It’s oppressively humid – actually, it’s so humid one can barely stand being outside. Give me Santa Barbara any day of the week …

    10 years ago at 11:54 am
  3. Carolina_deltasig

    Good ol trolley dogs and the beach bars of Wilmington that serve 40s by the way. Tough to beat

    10 years ago at 12:03 pm
    1. Tommyhockey

      Trolley stop has got it down with that Carolina dog. Tower 5 fish tacos are also tftc

      10 years ago at 7:41 pm
      1. JohnFratYatesSommers

        Please elaborate. How is Chicago’s bar scene so special? There are plenty of other big cities that have tons of bars.

        10 years ago at 7:56 pm
    1. Roadkill Rager

      First time my school is mentioned by TFM and it’s at the top of the list

      10 years ago at 1:04 pm
    2. Tuco_1855

      Chicago is absolutely deserving of the top spot for summers, and you can’t disagree if you haven’t experienced it. Cubs/Sox are always on, the Blackhawks play into late May every year, and the Bulls are always in the playoffs. The professional sports make the spirit of the city really lively whether you’re a fan or not. There are festivals and shit every weekend, the lakefront beaches are always packed, and Chicago isn’t a massive pile of litter overpopulated with tourists like New York. Chicago sucks so bad for half the year that when the weather changes, everyone wants to be outside.

      10 years ago at 4:29 pm
      1. JohnFratYatesSommers

        Tuco, normally I agree with you and I’m sure Chicago is fun, but you could make that argument about basically every other major city that isn’t New York or LA. Pro sports and being near the water don’t make Chicago special.

        10 years ago at 7:34 pm
      2. JohnFratYatesSommers

        I’ll show you what I mean.. by taking everything from your comment and replacing it with the Boston (where I went to college) version:

        Boston is absolutely deserving of the top spot for summers, and you can’t disagree if you haven’t experienced it. The Sox are always on, the Bruins play into late May every year, and the Celtics are always in the playoffs. Oh by the way the Pats won the super bowl this year. The professional sports make the spirit of the city really lively whether you’re a fan or not. There are festivals and shit every weekend, the oceanfront beaches in the city and along the Cape are always packed, and Boston isn’t a massive pile of litter overpopulated with tourists like New York. Boston sucks so bad for half the year that when the weather changes, everyone wants to be outside.

        Despite the fact that I’m massively biased, like you Chicago people, you won’t find me raving about Boston being the best college town.. because it isn’t one. It’s a big city that happens to have colleges in it. The way you can tell we’re both talking about cities with colleges in them rather than “college towns” is that we both just defended our city’s sports scenes without mentioning a single college team.

        10 years ago at 8:40 pm
      3. Tuco_1855

        You really can’t make that argument for any big city. It’s Boston and Chicago that share that combo, no one else. Clearly the writer of the article has been to Chicago and not Boston in the summer months. Either way, I’ll agree that neither are “college towns”, especially not Chicago

        10 years ago at 12:10 am
      4. friendlyreminder

        Lolla and Spring Awakening are fun as shit weekends too, its a great time to just relax and get high on whatever drug you want to try, sure its full of some weird kids but if you’re with a good group of friends honestly anything is a blast.

        10 years ago at 10:01 pm
  4. duckdog

    Blacksburg, VA is a solid Summer College Town. Low Humidity, Avg. Highs around 80 degrees and Tubing the New River with a Cooler full of beer.

    10 years ago at 12:24 pm
    1. JohnFratYatesSommers

      Seriously dude? Blacksburg is a ghost town in the summer and is tiny and boring any time of year. Not to mention the fact that you have to drive 4 hours in any direction to get anywhere interesting.

      10 years ago at 7:40 pm
  5. RedPill

    I’d say your own college town is the best. You know people and you don’t have to move twice in three months.

    10 years ago at 12:26 pm
  6. Theta_Theta

    #FireHelmetStickers

    That’s right asshole we don’t forget and we don’t forgive

    10 years ago at 12:28 pm
  7. inhocFaF

    If you’re going to include Chicago, might as well put Manhattan (considering you referenced is as a comparison to Chicago). But don’t do that, considering neither are college towns.

    10 years ago at 12:33 pm
    1. Shoeless.Bro.Jackson

      If you were to count up the number of college students who live in Chicago’s Loop, it would be the largest college town in the country. There are something like 6 or 7 University campuses within a mile radius.

      10 years ago at 7:49 am
    1. ChillwaterBroklahoma

      “Best cities to spend your summer in that happen to have a college nearby” would be a more accurate title

      10 years ago at 9:09 pm