Houses for Rent in College Park, MD: A 5-Bedroom, 3,244 Sq Ft Brick Home at $4,500/Month — Who It's For, and How It Compares
Quick Answer for Renters
7322 Edmonston Road is a 5-bedroom, 3-bathroom brick home in College Park, Maryland, available for rent at $4,500 per month. At 3,244 square feet with a finished walkout basement, slate patio, and 5-car driveway, it offers substantially more space than typical College Park rentals in the $4,000–$5,000 range. It sits less than a mile from the College Park-UMD Metro station (Green Line) and is within minutes of NASA Goddard and the University of Maryland campus. The upcoming Purple Line light rail, currently in active testing and scheduled to open in 2027, will add direct connections to Bethesda and New Carrollton from the same station.
If you're searching for a house to rent in College Park, MD — especially a larger single-family home with real square footage, outdoor space, and commuter-friendly location — this post covers what the rental market looks like in 2026, how this property compares to what's currently available, and what you need to know before you apply.
For landlords and property owners in the area, there's also a section on what makes College Park rental properties move quickly in the current market and what $4,500/month actually signals to qualified tenants.
The College Park Rental Market in 2026: What Tenants Are Competing For
College Park's rental market is dominated by apartment stock — and most of that is priced for students or young professionals. The average apartment in College Park runs around $2,574/month, with three-bedroom units topping out around $3,390 for well-located, newer buildings. Single-family homes are a different category entirely.
For tenants who need five bedrooms, multiple bathrooms, a real yard, dedicated parking, and the kind of square footage where a family or professional household can actually spread out — the options thin out quickly. Active Redfin listings for 5-bedroom houses in College Park in 2026 range from about $3,500/month on the low end (smaller, less updated) to over $6,000 for larger or better-positioned homes. At $4,500/month for 3,244 square feet with the features this property offers, the price-per-square-foot works out to roughly $1.39 — competitive for brick construction in this zip code.
Sources: RentCafe, Zillow Rental Manager, Redfin active 5-bedroom listings College Park MD, May 2026.
About This Rental: 7322 Edmonston Road, College Park, MD 20740
This is an all-brick Cape Cod/Colonial built in 1951 and maintained by its original owners before coming to the rental market. It reads smaller from the street than its actual footprint — a common characteristic in this section of College Park. The 3-level layout, which includes a finished walkout basement with its own entrance, creates a range of living configurations that few rental properties in this price range offer.
A Few Features Worth Calling Out Specifically
Several things about this property stand out from standard rental listings in the area:
Three bedrooms on the main floor is rare. It supports multi-generational households, live-in caregivers, home office arrangements, or simply keeping certain occupants on one level without stairs.
The finished basement has a full bathroom and walkout entrance. This functions as a fourth zone of the house — not just storage space — and the rear entrance adds genuine flexibility.
The sub-metered sprinkler system means exterior irrigation runs on a separate water meter with no sewer surcharge. In practice, your water bill for lawn care is lower than it would be with a standard metered system.
Five-car driveway with no HOA. If you have multiple vehicles, or if household members work different shifts and need reliable parking at different hours, this matters.
Mature landscaping — established azaleas, a slate patio, a goldfish pond — takes years to develop. Renters get a finished outdoor space without maintaining a renovation project.
Lease Terms & Availability
Contact Ryan Hehman at 443-990-1230 or email at Ryan.Hehman@compass.com for current availability, lease terms, and to schedule a showing. This property is listed at $4,500/month.
Where You're Located: Commutes, Amenities, and the Purple Line
Location is where College Park's value proposition gets compelling for renters who work in or around the DC metro area. Edmonston Road sits in the southern portion of College Park, close to the city/county line and within easy reach of the Metro, major federal campuses, and the university.
Purple Line — Active Testing as of Spring 2026
Live vehicle testing on the Purple Line began in March 2026 between the College Park Metro station and the Adelphi Road UMGC station, with overnight testing runs from 10pm to 6am on weekdays. The full 21-station line from New Carrollton to Bethesda is scheduled to open in 2027. Five stations will serve the UMD campus corridor. For tenants who work in Bethesda, Silver Spring, or Montgomery County, the Purple Line will eventually eliminate the need to route through downtown DC.
What's Nearby
College Park-UMD Metro Station (Green/Yellow Line + MARC) — approximately 1 mile
University of Maryland main campus — approximately 1.5 miles
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (Greenbelt) — approximately 10 minutes by car
USDA Agricultural Research Center (Beltsville) — approximately 10 minutes by car
College Park Airport (oldest continuously operating airport in the US) and Aviation Museum
Lake Artemesia Natural Area and the Northeast Branch Trail system
College Park Farmers Market (seasonal)
Grocery: Lidl on Route 1, Whole Foods in Riverdale Park, Aldi in Hyattsville
Dining: Riverdale Park Station (Denizens Brewing, Franklins, Town Hall), Old Town College Park corridor
Who Rents a House Like This in College Park?
Based on what I see in this market, a 5-bedroom, 3-bath brick home at $4,500/month typically attracts one of several specific household profiles. Understanding which one fits you helps clarify whether this property is worth prioritizing in your search.
Federal Employees and Government Contractors
NASA Goddard and the USDA Research Center together represent thousands of jobs within 10 minutes of this address. Federal employees and contractors at these agencies often have income stability that supports this rent level, and they typically want single-family space — not apartment living — for the duration of their assignment. The Metro access matters for those who also need to reach DC agencies periodically.
UMD Faculty, Staff, and Post-Docs
University employees at the associate or senior level, post-doctoral researchers, and visiting faculty often need a real home — not student housing — and College Park is the obvious choice for campus proximity. Five bedrooms works for households that include a dedicated home office or two, which has become a baseline expectation for many academic professionals.
Families Relocating to the DC Metro Area
Families moving into the area from out of state — particularly those waiting to buy or still deciding on a neighborhood — often want a single-family home with a yard and parking as a landing point. At $4,500/month, this is competitive with Northern Virginia single-family rentals of similar size, with better Metro access and a shorter commute window to downtown DC for most federal or contractor destinations.
Group Households
Five bedrooms and three bathrooms is a configuration that works for professional housemates sharing a home. At $4,500 split among four or five people, the per-person cost drops to $900–$1,125/month — well below what a private one-bedroom apartment in College Park costs. The layout, with bedrooms spread across three levels, provides enough separation to make this practical rather than cramped.
For Landlords in College Park: What This Property Signals About the Market
If you own a single-family rental property in College Park or anywhere along the Route 1 corridor, the current market has a few dynamics worth understanding.
The Apartment-to-House Premium Is Real
The average apartment in College Park rents for around $2,574/month. A well-maintained 5-bedroom house in the same market commands $3,500–$6,000 depending on size, condition, and location. That's a meaningful premium — and it's driven by scarcity. Single-family rental inventory in College Park is limited, and the tenants who need that kind of space (families, multi-person professional households, federal employees with relocation packages) are willing to pay for it.
Transit Access Drives Qualified Tenant Profiles
Properties within reasonable distance of the College Park Metro station draw a different tenant pool than properties further out. Federal employees and contractors with DC agency ties specifically prioritize Metro access because parking downtown is expensive and unreliable. The Purple Line's 2027 opening will add another layer of value for properties in this transit corridor — it connects College Park directly to Bethesda and Silver Spring without requiring a transfer through DC, opening up an entirely new set of commuter profiles.
Brick Construction Commands Longer Tenancies
In my experience, tenants who rent well-maintained brick homes in established College Park neighborhoods tend to stay longer than those in newer construction. The quiet, the solidity, and the outdoor space create the kind of home environment that makes people reluctant to move. For a landlord, that means lower turnover cost and more predictable income.
Pricing Strategy: The $4,000–$5,000 Window
At $4,500/month, this property sits in what I'd call the qualified-tenant sweet spot for College Park. It's above the threshold that filters out tenants who can only afford apartments, and below the $6,000+ range that limits the applicant pool to a narrower slice of high-income households. For a 3,244 sq ft brick home with this feature set, $4,500 should generate competitive interest from the tenant profiles described above.
Thinking About Renting Your Property in College Park?
If you own a home along the Route 1 corridor and are considering converting it to a rental — or if you need help pricing, marketing, and placing qualified tenants for an existing rental — I can help. I work with both tenants and landlords in College Park, Hyattsville, Riverdale Park, and throughout Prince George's County. Call or text Ryan Hehman at 443-990-1230, or email at Ryan.Hehman@compass.com
Frequently Asked Questions: Renting a House in College Park, MD
How much does it cost to rent a house in College Park, MD in 2026?
Single-family homes in College Park vary widely by size and condition. Three-bedroom apartments average around $2,700–$3,390/month, while 5-bedroom houses in active listings range from approximately $3,500 to $6,000+ depending on square footage, location, and amenities. A 5-bedroom home with 3,200+ square feet, brick construction, and Metro access in the $4,500 range is competitive for this market.
Is College Park, MD a good place to rent for federal employees?
Yes — it's one of the more practical locations in the DC metro for federal workers assigned to NASA Goddard, the USDA, or any agency requiring occasional DC access. The College Park-UMD Metro station (Green/Yellow Line) provides roughly a 30-minute ride to downtown DC, MARC train offers BWI and Union Station connections from the same hub, and the Purple Line launching in 2027 will add direct east-west connectivity to Bethesda and Silver Spring.
What is the Purple Line and how does it affect College Park rentals?
The Purple Line is a 21-station light rail system connecting New Carrollton (Prince George's County) to Bethesda (Montgomery County). Five stations will serve the University of Maryland campus area, including College Park Metro and Riverdale Park North. Vehicle testing is actively underway as of spring 2026, with a 2027 opening target. For renters, it means that a College Park address will soon offer direct access to major employment nodes in both counties without routing through downtown DC.
How do I apply to rent a home like 7322 Edmonston Road?
Contact Ryan Hehman directly at [PHONE NUMBER] or through ryanhehmanrealestate.com to schedule a showing and receive application information. Standard applications in this market include credit check, income verification (typically 2.5-3x monthly rent), and rental history. For a $4,500/month rental, most landlords look for a household income in the range of $135,000–$162,000 annually.
Is splitting a 5-bedroom College Park rental among housemates common?
Yes, particularly for professional households and graduate students. At $4,500/month split four or five ways, the per-person cost ($900–$1,125) is below what a private one-bedroom apartment in College Park typically rents for. The key is finding a property with a layout that provides adequate separation — multiple bathrooms and bedrooms spread across different levels, as this property has.
How far is 7322 Edmonston Road from the College Park Metro?
The College Park-UMD Metro station is approximately 1 mile from Edmonston Road, accessible by car (5 minutes), bike via the local trail network, or short ride-share. The station serves the Green and Yellow Metro lines as well as MARC commuter rail service to Baltimore and BWI.
Schedule a Showing — 7322 Edmonston Road, College Park, MD
This 5-bedroom, 3-bath brick home is available for rent at $4,500/month. To schedule a showing or ask questions about the property, contact Ryan Hehman at 443-990-1230 or email Ryan.Hehman@compass.com. I represent both tenants finding homes in the area and landlords placing qualified renters in Route 1 corridor properties.

