SUNY Fashion Institute of Technology
Travel guide for Indian students — New York, United States. Nearest international gateway: JFK (New York JFK).
The Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT) is a public college of art, design, business and technology in the State University of New York (SUNY) system, in Manhattan's Chelsea neighbourhood. It is world-renowned for fashion design, merchandising and related creative fields, and home to The Museum at FIT.
FIT's nine-building campus sits in Chelsea around West 27th Street, surrounded by galleries, studios and the fashion district. JFK, about 13 miles away, is the main international gateway.
FIT is a specialist fashion, design and merchandising college in the heart of Chelsea, putting students steps from New York's fashion and creative industries. It draws international students into design, merchandising and business programs.
Getting around Chelsea
FIT's compact nine-building campus is around West 27th Street in Chelsea, walkable end to end. The 1 train at 28th Street and the A, C, E lines at 23rd/34th Street are closest; subway/bus is a flat $2.90 via OMNY tap. FIT has on-campus residence halls plus one nearby on West 31st Street.
From JFK to campus
JFK is about 13 miles away. Budget route: AirTrain ($8.50) to Jamaica, then LIRR to Penn Station (a short walk/subway hop to Chelsea) or the subway. A taxi or rideshare runs $70-90. With design materials, many new students take a taxi or shared van on arrival.
When to book flights
Book 6-10 weeks ahead of intake; compare carriers from your nearest metro above.
Visiting your child at FIT means flying into JFK (about 13 miles from the Chelsea campus), New York's main international gateway. New York City is served by three airports - JFK (where most international flights from India arrive), plus LaGuardia (LGA) and Newark (EWR). From JFK, the AirTrain ($8.50) connects to the subway and the Long Island Rail Road. The subway/bus flat fare is $2.90, paid by tapping a contactless card via OMNY. Plan the US visitor visa well ahead.
Getting from JFK to campus
Visitor visa for parents
Indian parents need a B1/B2 visitor visa. First-time interview waits are long and vary sharply by consulate, so city choice matters - you may book at ANY US consulate in India, not just your home city.
- Plan 8-12 months ahead, especially for graduation - graduations do NOT qualify for emergency/expedited appointments.
- You can book at any consulate in India; many families fly to Chennai to save months versus Mumbai or Delhi.
- The dropbox (interview waiver) window shrank from 48 to 12 months in 2025 - most parents with older expired visas now need a full interview.
- Visitor stays are up to 6 months per visit, set by the officer at entry on the I-94.
Just admitted to FIT? Most Indian students enter on an F-1 academic visa (DS-160 fee $185 + SEVIS I-901 fee $350). J-1 is for exchange programs (SEVIS $220), M-1 for vocational study. Spouses/children come on F-2/J-2/M-2 dependent visas. You can enter the US up to 30 days before your program start date. For Fall 2026, Indian F-1 applicants must interview at one of five US consulates in India.
Arrival checklist
- Book your flight into JFK - New York's main international gateway.
- From JFK, AirTrain + LIRR to Penn Station puts you near Chelsea; taxi/rideshare is $70-90.
- Set up OMNY to ride the subway at $2.90 a trip around the Chelsea campus.
- Confirm student baggage allowance - design students often carry bulky materials.
- Carry your I-20, SEVIS receipt and financial documents in hand luggage for US immigration.
New York rewards students who get out of Manhattan. Budget around $2,000-2,800 a month all-in for a shared room and home cooking. The single biggest lever is borough choice - the same money that buys a cramped Manhattan share gets a far better room in Queens (Jackson Heights, Astoria) or the Bronx, still on the subway. A monthly MTA pass and cooking keep the rest in check.
Monthly cost of living in New York (a student estimate)
That's roughly $24,000-34,000 a year for living costs, on top of tuition.
Finding accommodation
Manhattan rent is very high, so most international students share an apartment in Brooklyn, Queens or the Bronx and commute by subway, or take university housing for the first year.
- Landlords often want proof of income (~40x monthly rent annually) and US credit - international students usually need a guarantor or several months upfront.
- Queens and the Bronx cut rent sharply while staying on the subway; factor commute time into your choice.
- Never wire a deposit before seeing a verified listing - apartment scams are common in NYC.
Working part-time
On an F-1 visa you can work on-campus up to 20 hours/week during term (full-time in breaks). Off-campus work needs authorization - CPT during study, OPT after (up to 12 months, +24 for STEM degrees). You cannot freelance or work off-campus without approval.
Safety & student support
New York is a large, busy city that is generally safe in the well-populated areas where students live, but use normal big-city awareness, especially late at night.
- University campuses have their own security/public-safety teams, blue-light phones and late-night escort or shuttle services - save the number.
- The subway is heavily used and fine for normal hours; at night, stay in busier cars and well-lit stations, or use a rideshare.
- Research by neighbourhood - safety varies block to block. Student-heavy areas near campuses are generally well-populated.
Indian community & food
New York has one of the largest Indian and South Asian communities in the US, so familiar food, groceries and cultural events are everywhere - Jackson Heights in Queens is the historic desi hub.
Indian grocery stores
- Patel Brothers, Apna Bazar, Subzi Mandi and Taj Grocery - all clustered on 74th St, Jackson Heights (Queens), the city's desi heart.
- Kalustyan's (123 Lexington Ave) and Little India Market (385 3rd Ave) in Manhattan's Curry Hill for spices near campus.
- Desi grocers and sweet shops in Flushing and along Floral Park for students further out in Queens.
Student community
- Most NYC universities have active Indian/South Asian student associations running Diwali, Holi and welcome events.
- Jackson Heights (the '74th St' area) is the cultural centre - restaurants, sweet shops, clothing and gold stores.
- Endless Indian restaurants in Jackson Heights, Curry Hill (Lexington Ave, Manhattan) and across the boroughs.
Cost & living figures for New York last verified Jun 2026. Figures are estimates and change over time.
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