<p>I am just wondering what my chances are of getting the housing that I want.</p>
<p>For Fall I chose Wildwood, Degraff, Reynolds, and Gilchrist. My priority # is 5169.
For Summer I chose Degraff, Reynolds, Gilchrist, and Cawthon. My priority # is 1357.</p>
<p>Summer is probably a go. Fall, unfortunately, not as likely. You could see if any living and learning communities are still taking applications.</p>
<p>I applied for the same dorms (Wildwood, Degraff, Reynolds, and Gilchrist) for fall, but my priority number was about 2200. You think I’ll get one of them?</p>
<p>The number you get for fall housing is the number you will keep for as long as you stay in FSU housing. Your priority number follows you. SUMMER is a separate housing priority number, separate assignment, separate contract. Summer is just for the 6 weeks of summer C. Fall means all academic year, fall and spring.</p>
<p>If you are accepted for summer, you need a fall (permanent) number and a separate summer number. Each summer the summer housing priority starts over. Summer is always separate from fall.</p>
<p>If you are accepted summer, you need a summer number and housing contract with ranking choices and you need a fall (ie academic year) number and housing contract with ranking choices. Both require SEPARATE contracts and deposits. You have 10 days to submit the housing contracts by mail if you are under 18 and need a parents signature. You have 10 days to pay both deposits. Otherwise you LOOSE your priority number and start over.</p>
<p>I have a question, I wanted to room with a friend, but he just applied for housing today, his number is 17xxx…will he get housing? if i put him down on my application (I am 4000) do I risk not getting housing because of his high number? or if they dont find housing for him, will I still get it regardless?</p>
<p>Are you serious? I’m so glad I applied before I went to sleep at 4 AM yesterday. Wow, sorry I don’t know how far the list goes but I only heard that they have a little more than 6000 spaces, so the best thing I can say for your friend is the housing waitlist.</p>
<p>How’s this work with housing priority number: if you got a low number like 10 and you room with your friend with number 1000–will you get stuck with the 1000 number forever too or can you use the 10 next year if you don’t room again with the same friend who had the original 1000 priority number?</p>
<p>You only inherit the number for the purpose of that assignment. In the future, assuming you are not rooming with someone else, you would have your priority number (the ten).</p>