In my experience, here are the 6 best places to look when searching for a place to live in downtown Farmington, Maine:
1. Chapman Family Rentals: Bonnie Chapman has been a fixture of the UMF community since 1983. Her family business hosts rental properties around the college campus and surrounding areas. Chapman specializes in 1-4 unit homes, smaller apartment buildings, and individual rooms.
Accordingly, they are the go-to for many UM Farmington students when they seek off-campus living space.
Different homes have different vibes, even within the Farmington Village. Since Bonnie and her family are very involved in the management, they can help fit tenants in the right environment.
However, like many of the UMF area management companies, Chapman’s portfolio of rental homes is mostly booked as of Summer 2024.
You can check buildings and current vacancies online at Chapman Family Rentals.
* Full disclosure, my daughter was a tenant of Bonnie. Her experience with Bonnie’s company was excellent. She really appreciates tenants who respect her properties.
2. Foothills Management:
Foothills Management is probably the largest locally owned property management company in Farmington. They manage a large portfolio of properties with an emphasis on the UMF / downtown area.
Fortunately for them (unfortunately for potential renters) their buildings are mostly occupied as of Spring 2024. However, they have a direct link to vacancies on their website that is worth checking regularly. You can find Foothill’s list of available apartments here.
However, in my experience new Farmington vacancies appear & disappear quickly. Sometimes this happens before websites are even updated at all.
Thus, don’t just passively check the website. Make contact with a person at Foothills directly. Preferably go in person or at least engage with someone by phone. If they like you and you’re in the right place at the right time you may secure one of those momentary vacancies.
3. ForRent, ApartmentGuide, ApartmentFinder. These websites show up when searching for”Farmington Apartments” on Google or Bing.
These are definitely worth a gander but are not ideal for searching in smaller markets like Farmington, in my opinion. Unlike the local Farmington-based management companies, these have no local connection to the community and the information presented often reflects that.
Algorithm updates (and possibly deference to advertisers) have pushed large comprehensive database sites to the top of localized search results.
Thus, they are large databases of properties for rent around the US. Mot a particularly great local resource.
Often information may be curated from other sites at the expense of accuracy and/or timeliness.