How to Avoid Fighting With Your Roommate | CollegeXpress
White male in backwards cap and Black male with curly hair yelling at each other

Good Vibes Only: How to Avoid Fighting With Your Roommate

Learning to live with your college roommate can be a trying experience. Here are a few tips to help you communicate, avoid a fight, and vibe well together.

She leaves her dirty clothes on the floor every day and never cleans them up. You hate how cluttered your room is because of it. You wish she would just grow up a little and clean up after herself—after all, she’s in college, for heaven’s sake, and you’re not her mom. You’re incredibly irritated but don’t want to say anything for fear of causing a fight. Fear not: you don’t have to feel aggravated whenever you’re in your dorm. In fact, there are three simple strategies for preventing feuds and frustrated feelings between you and your roommate.

Establish ground rules from the jump

Learn from the mistake I made as a freshman: If you don’t set up rules with your roommates at the beginning, you’re at risk for serious clashes throughout the school year. Avoid this by setting up a time with your roommate early in the semester to sit down and hash out your expectations for the year. You might even fill out a college roommate agreement form or write your "house rules" down on a big poster and hang them up in your dorm room. Examples of these rules could include who cleans up when, quiet hours, when can guests come over, and who will be buying basic dorm necessities (such as tissues and cleaning supplies).

Related: 4 Quick and Easy Tips to Break the Ice With Your New Roommate

Speak up

This is seemingly obvious, but many people keep mum when they’re upset about something and instead hash it out with their roommates via passive-aggressive methods. If something is bothering you, say something! “Hey, do you think you could pick up your clothes when you have a second? I would really appreciate it because a clean room makes me feel more focused and calm with midterms coming up!” That's a completely reasonable request. If you’re kind and respectful (and never sarcastic), you’re creating a tension-free, open environment. 

Learn what bugs your roommate

By knowing what annoys your roommate, you can avoid disputes and hostility. If they hate toothpaste in the sink, make sure you wash out the sink. If wrappers on the floor get on their nerves, clean them up pronto. If they simply can’t stand when you leave your coat on the couch, get in the habit of hanging it up. You can’t expect your roommate to abide by your rules if you don’t accommodate theirs. Make sure you’re being considerate (in all aspects of life—not just dorm situations), and you’re likely to make a good friend out of your roommate and fight minimally.

Related: Dorm Etiquette: 7 Simple Ways to Be a Considerate Resident

Agree to disagree

Learning about different and opposing viewpoints is a big part of what makes college so great. You can learn a lot about yourself and the world that way. It's also okay to disagree with someone—even a friend—as long as you're being respectful and open minded. But, sometimes, you're just not going to see eye-to-eye with your roomie, whether it's a touchy political subject or a simple difference of opinion. Just agree to disagree, shake it off, and let it go. You still have to live together after all. 

Follow the Golden Rule

Do you want to know the real secret to not fighting with your college roommate? Follow the Golden Rule you've known since childhood: Treat others the way you want to be treated. If you do that, you really can't go wrong. (Unless you're a Grinch hell-bent on breaking your college roommate's spirit, but don't be that person. Nobody likes that person.)

Related: 3 Ways to Establish a Good Relationship With Your New Roommate

Next time you feel your blood boiling because of a mistake on your roommate’s part, be sure to remember these tips. Your college experience is shorter than you’d expect, and you don’t want to waste your years on petty roommate drama that can be easily avoided.

The art of clearly expressing your feelings can be tough to master. Check out our article Living the Sweet Dorm Life: 8 Roommate Communication Tips to help you refine your interpersonal skills. 

Like what you’re reading?

Join the CollegeXpress community! Create a free account and we’ll notify you about new articles, scholarship deadlines, and more.

Join Now

Tags:

About Ashley McDonald

Ashley McDonald is a freelance writer and blogger for CollegeXpress, Her Campus, HuffPost, and more. She studied Journalism and English at Central Michigan University.

 

Join our community of
over 5 million students!

CollegeXpress has everything you need to simplify your college search, get connected to schools, and find your perfect fit.

Join CollegeXpress

College Quick Connect

Swipe right to request information.
Swipe left if you're not interested.

University of Colorado Boulder

Boulder, CO


Heather McCarty

Heather McCarty

High School Class of 2020

CollegeXpress has helped me with the college application process. The tips and tricks for important essays were so helpful. I also gained useful knowledge about college life. Even though I’m fully online, CollegeXpress has helped me develop a sense of how college is in person. The experiences from college students that were featured on their Instagram page have shown the good, the bad, and the “secret” life on campus from a reliable perspective. Not to mention, they relieved my feelings of anxiety about the workload. I can now understand how it can be stressful, but it takes self-control and willpower to get assignments completed on time and with quality.

Farrah Macci

Farrah Macci

High School Class of 2016

CollegeXpress has helped me in many ways. For one, online searches are more organized and refined by filtering scholarships through by my personal and academic interests. Due to this, it has made searching for colleges and scholarships significantly less stressful. As a student, life can already get stressful pretty quickly. For me, it’s been helpful to utilize CollegeXpress since it keeps all of my searches and likes together, so I don’t have to branch out on multiple websites just to explore scholarship options.

Jessica Rinker

Jessica Rinker

Student, Fairhaven High School; CollegeXpress Student Writer

My high school counselor introduced me to CollegeXpress freshman year. It has made such a difference in high school, and I plan to continue relying on it in college. CollegeXpress is my go-to because it addresses each aspect of being a student. There are the articles you’d expect regarding college applications and financial aid, but you will also find advice on things like de-stressing and maintaining relationships while balancing a heavy course load. CollegeXpress will also keep you updated on current scholarships through e-mails each Saturday. (They don’t harass you with any product promotion like so many other sites do.) CollegeXpress is a lot like an older sibling who has already conquered the challenges you are facing. Now, they are reaching out a helpful hand. I say take it.

Mataya Mann

Mataya Mann

High School Class of 2022

To say that CollegeXpress is a helpful tool would be an understatement as it is much more than that. Before finding CollegeXpress, all I knew was that I wanted to go to college, it was going to be insanely expensive, and I felt lost. CollegeXpress has given me access to resources such as helpful tips for applications and scholarship [opportunities], and helped guide me in a direction where I feel confident moving forward and pursuing a career. CollegeXpress has helped instill a spark in me that makes me want to continue and supports me in doing so.

Ida Akoto-Wiafe

Ida Akoto-Wiafe

High School Class of 2022

I wanted a school that wasn't too far away from home and could provide me with a full-ride scholarship. CollegeXpress helped me put into perspective the money I had to pay to attend those schools, which ultimately drove me to choose to attend a community college first to get used to being in college before transferring to the University of Michigan–Ann Arbor, one of the colleges I was able to research further on CollegeXpress.