Fuse
GeneralJuly 7, 2026

Flatshare, Coliving or Private Apartment: Which Fuse Living Style Actually Fits You?

Fuse offers three ways to live: flatshare, coliving, or a private apartment. Here's how they actually differ and which one makes sense for your situation.

Keera Lillywhite

Contributor

Cutaway view of a shared apartment building showing students cooking in a kitchen, working at a communal table, exercising in a home gym, and relaxing in a furnished bedroom

Flatshare, Coliving or Private Apartment: Which Fuse Living Style Actually Fits You?

When you browse Fuse listings, you'll notice three different room types: flatshare, coliving and private apartment. All three come fully furnished, all three include utilities and WiFi, and all three are available across Fuse's contract lengths of 5, 6, 10 or 12 months. So what's actually different, and how do you know which one is right for you?


This guide goes through each option honestly so you can make the decision once and not second-guess it after you've arrived.


What All Three Have in Common

Before the differences, the things that don't change regardless of which room type you pick.

Every Fuse room is fully furnished. You arrive with everything already there: bed, desk, wardrobe, bedding, the works. You don't need to buy anything or spend your first week in an unfurnished room sleeping on the floor.

Every Fuse contract includes utilities (electricity, heating, water) and WiFi in the monthly price. One number, nothing added later. This matters more than it sounds, especially in Budapest and Riga where winter heating costs in private rentals can catch students off guard.

Every Fuse booking runs on a fixed-term contract of 5, 6, 10 or 12 months with rent paid monthly. The difference between contract lengths is mainly cost and commitment, not the room type itself.

And every Fuse room goes through an application process. This isn't an extensive qualification process, but it does mean your housemates have also been through it, which affects the quality and compatibility of who you live with.


The Three Room Types

Flatshare

A flatshare at Fuse puts you in a home with 4 to 7 other people. You have your own private bedroom. You share a kitchen and sometimes a living room. That's roughly the arrangement.

The social level sits in the middle: more contact than a private apartment, less structured community than coliving. You'll see your housemates in the kitchen, you'll probably share a few meals over the course of the semester, and you'll build a group chat that gets used sometimes. Whether it becomes a proper friend group depends on the people, and a bit on you.

Flatshares tend to suit students who want a social element without making community the primary thing they're optimising for. If you already have people you're going to be spending most of your time with (friends from your home university on Erasmus together, for example), a flatshare gives you a decent home base without pushing you into a larger social structure you don't need.

The smaller group size also means less organised noise. Co-living spaces with 12 people tend to have a different energy to a flat with 5. If you're somewhere in the middle on how much social contact you want, flatshare is usually the natural answer.


Coliving

Coliving puts you in a larger setup: 7 to 15 housemates, your own private bedroom and sometimes a private bathroom, with a wider range of shared spaces beyond just the kitchen. Depending on the building, this means access to a lounge, gym, outdoor area, game room, laundry facilities or some combination of the above.

The key distinction is that community is designed in, not left to chance. The layout of the spaces, the mix of residents, the events and the move-in experience are all built around making it easy to meet people. Students arriving alone in a new city don't have to do the work of constructing a social life from nothing. The environment does a lot of that work for them.

This is the option that gets the best reviews from students who said they were nervous about not knowing anyone. The nature of a coliving space means you're sharing a kitchen with people who are also arriving new, also figuring out the city, and also open to meeting people. The first two weeks are genuinely easier here than they are in a private flat where you might not cross paths with your flatmates for days.

The trade-off is straightforward: less privacy in the common areas, more people sharing the kitchen, a higher noise floor on a Friday night. None of this is a problem if you know what you're signing up for. It becomes one if you wanted something quieter and chose coliving anyway hoping it wouldn't be that social.

Coliving makes the most sense for students who are arriving alone and want a built-in community from day one. For a semester abroad where you're only there for 5 or 6 months, the faster pace of social connection it enables is a genuine advantage.


Private Apartment

A private apartment at Fuse gives you a fully private living space, just you (or you and one other person, depending on the unit). Minimal or no shared areas. Full independence.

This is the right choice if you want complete control over your space and schedule. No communal kitchen dynamics, no shared lounge noise, no housemates at all unless you're the one bringing someone. You cook when you want, in your own space, and you're not navigating anyone else's rhythms.

It's also the option that takes the most deliberate effort to build a social life around, because nothing about the housing situation creates it for you. That's fine if you have a social network coming into the city, if you're doing a full degree and have time to build connections more slowly, or if you genuinely prefer your own company most of the time. It's less fine if you arrive knowing nobody and discover three weeks in that you've barely spoken to anyone outside of university.

Private apartments at Fuse still come with all the same infrastructure as the other room types: fully furnished, all-inclusive pricing, direct access to the Fuse team through the tenant dashboard rather than chasing a landlord. The difference is just that your living situation is entirely your own.


How to Actually Decide

Three questions that tend to clarify it quickly.

How much does meeting people matter to you in the first few weeks? If it matters a lot, coliving. If you're indifferent or already have people lined up, flatshare or private apartment.

How long are you staying? Students on a 5 or 6 month semester tend to value the faster social integration of coliving more than students on a 10 or 12 month contract who have time to build connections more gradually. The shorter the stay, the more the built-in community is worth it.

How much shared-space noise can you live with? If you recharge alone and find communal living draining, the private apartment is probably right regardless of everything else. Coliving requires a genuine tolerance for shared space. Most people who are fine with it know it within a week; most people who aren't also know it within a week, which is too late.


One Thing Worth Knowing Before You Book

Choosing the right room type is half the decision. The other half is making sure the contract length matches how long you're actually staying. Fuse offers 5, 6, 10 and 12 month options across all three room types. Pick the one that matches your programme dates rather than the one with the lowest monthly figure, since paying for months you're not there is never the right move.

You can browse current availability across all three room types in Budapest and Riga at fusestays.com/listings.


Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between a flatshare and coliving at Fuse?

A flatshare puts you with 4 to 7 housemates in a home with shared kitchen and sometimes living room. Coliving puts you in a larger setup with 7 to 15 housemates and a wider range of shared spaces, with more community built into the structure of the building.


Is coliving more expensive than a flatshare at Fuse?

Pricing varies by city, room type and contract length. Check live pricing for your specific dates and location at fusestays.com/listings.


Do all Fuse room types include utilities and WiFi?

Yes. Flatshare, coliving and private apartment all include utilities (electricity, heating, water) and WiFi in the monthly price. One number, nothing added.


Which room type is best for students who don't know anyone in the city?

Coliving. The larger shared environment, the events and the move-in experience are all designed to help students build connections quickly. It's the option that does the most of that work for you.


Can I choose my contract length regardless of room type?

Yes. Fixed-term contracts of 5, 6, 10 or 12 months are available across all three room types, depending on availability.