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Champaign County
Champaign County · Illinois

Champaign County Landlord-Tenant Law

Illinois landlord guide — Urbana RLTO, county ordinances, courthouse info & local rules

🏛️ County Seat: Urbana
👥 Population: ~210,000
⚖️ State: IL

Landlord-Tenant Law in Champaign County, Illinois

Residential landlord-tenant matters in Champaign County operate on two distinct legal tracks depending on the property’s location. Throughout most of the county, the Illinois Landlord Tenant Act (735 ILCS 5/9-201 et seq.) and the Illinois Security Deposit Return Act (765 ILCS 710) govern. However, within the City of Urbana, landlords must comply with the Urbana Landlord-Tenant Ordinance (Urbana City Code Chapter 12), one of a small number of local RLTO-style ordinances outside of Chicago in Illinois. The City of Champaign also maintains its own landlord-tenant ordinance. Eviction actions for all properties in the county are filed in the Champaign County Circuit Court in Urbana. Landlords operating anywhere in Champaign County must identify their property’s municipality before applying any rule or procedure.

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Jefferson Wabash Edwards Monroe St. Clair Calhoun
Pike Brown Schuyler Mason Menard Cass
Scott Greene Hancock Warren Henderson Mercer
Putnam Marshall Stark Peoria Jo Daviess Boone

📊 Champaign County Quick Stats

County Seat Urbana
Population ~210,000
Median Rent ~$950
Vacancy Rate ~6%
Landlord Rating 5/10 — Mixed; local ordinances add complexity

⚖️ Eviction At-a-Glance

Nonpayment Notice 5-Day Notice to Pay or Quit
Lease Violation Notice 10-Day Notice to Cure or Quit
Urbana RLTO Applies? Yes — within Urbana city limits
Champaign Ord. Applies? Yes — within Champaign city limits
Court Champaign County Circuit Court, Urbana
Avg Timeline 4–8 weeks
Governing Law 735 ILCS 5/9-201; Urbana City Code Ch. 12; Champaign Ord.

Champaign County Local Ordinances

Both Urbana and Champaign maintain local landlord-tenant ordinances that go beyond state law. Landlords must identify which jurisdiction applies to their specific property.

Category Details
Urbana RLTO
Urbana City Code Ch. 12
The Urbana Landlord-Tenant Ordinance is one of the most comprehensive local ordinances in Illinois outside Chicago. Key requirements include: landlords must provide tenants with a written summary of the ordinance at lease signing; security deposits must be held in a federally insured interest-bearing account and interest paid annually; landlords must provide at least 24 hours written notice before entry (except emergencies); tenants have the right to withhold rent or make repairs and deduct costs if landlords fail to maintain habitable conditions within required timeframes; and retaliatory eviction is prohibited with tenant damages remedies. Urbana’s ordinance is particularly strong on the tenant’s right to a habitable unit and landlord repair obligations.
Champaign Landlord-Tenant Ordinance The City of Champaign also maintains a landlord-tenant ordinance that supplements state law within city limits. Champaign’s ordinance includes security deposit interest requirements, habitability standards, and entry notice provisions similar in spirit to Urbana’s, though the specifics differ. Landlords with properties in Champaign should verify current ordinance requirements directly with the city, as the ordinance has been amended periodically. Champaign also operates a rental licensing program requiring landlords to register rental properties.
Rental Registration / Licensing Both Champaign and Urbana require rental property registration. Champaign’s licensing program includes periodic inspections. Properties outside both city limits but within the county are subject only to state law with no registration requirement. Savoy and Rantoul do not maintain comparable local ordinances.
Rent Control None. Illinois state law (50 ILCS 825) prohibits local rent control. Neither Champaign nor Urbana may enact rent stabilization.
Security Deposit (Urbana) Under the Urbana RLTO, security deposits must be held in a federally insured interest-bearing account. The bank name and account must be disclosed to the tenant in writing. Annual interest must be paid to the tenant. Deposits must be returned within 30 days of move-out with an itemized statement. Failure to comply carries significant statutory penalties including the return of the full deposit plus damages.

Last verified: 2026-04-01

🏛️ Champaign County Courthouse

Where landlords file eviction actions

🏛️ Courthouse Information and Locations for Illinois

💰 Eviction Cost Snapshot

Typical fees for a Champaign County eviction

💰 Eviction Costs: Illinois
Filing Fee 60-250
Total Est. Range $200-$700
Service: — Writ: —

Illinois Eviction Laws

State statutes that apply throughout Champaign County (supplemented by local ordinances in Champaign and Urbana)

⚡ Quick Overview

5
Days Notice (Nonpayment)
10
Days Notice (Violation)
30-60
Avg Total Days
$60-250
Filing Fee (Approx)

💰 Nonpayment of Rent

Notice Type 5-Day Notice to Pay or Quit
Notice Period 5 days
Tenant Can Cure? Yes - tenant can pay full rent demanded within 5 days to stop eviction
Days to Hearing 7-21 days
Days to Writ 7-14 days
Total Estimated Timeline 30-60 days
Total Estimated Cost $200-$700
⚠️ Watch Out

Only FULL payment of rent demanded within 5 days cures - partial payment does NOT waive landlord right to evict (except in Chicago/Cook County where accepting any rent waives right). Chicago RLTO and Cook County RTLO add significant additional protections. Chicago Fair Notice Ordinance requires 60-120 day notice for non-renewals depending on tenancy length. Court may stay eviction 60-180 days if landlord previously gave extensions.

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📝 Illinois Eviction Process (Overview)

  1. Serve the required notice based on the eviction reason (nonpayment or lease violation).
  2. Wait for the notice period to expire. If tenant cures the issue (where allowed), the process stops.
  3. File an eviction case with the Circuit Court - Forcible Entry and Detainer. Pay the filing fee (~$60-250).
  4. Tenant is served with a summons and has the opportunity to respond.
  5. Attend the court hearing and present your case.
  6. If you prevail, obtain a writ of possession from the court.
  7. Law enforcement executes the writ and removes the tenant if necessary.
⚠️ Disclaimer: This page provides general information about Illinois eviction laws and does not constitute legal advice. Eviction procedures can vary by county and may change over time. Local jurisdictions may have additional requirements or tenant protections. For specific legal guidance, consult a qualified Illinois attorney or local legal aid organization.
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🔍 Reduce Your Risk Before Signing a Lease: Illinois landlords who screen tenants carefully before signing a lease significantly reduce their risk of ending up in eviction court. Understanding tenant screening in Illinois — including background checks, credit history, income verification, and rental references — is one of the most cost-effective steps you can take to protect your rental property. Before you ever need Illinois's eviction process, proper tenant screening can help you identify red flags early and avoid problem tenancies altogether.
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⏱ Notice Period Calculator

Calculate your required notice period

📋 Notice Period Calculator

Select your state, eviction reason, and the date you plan to serve notice. We'll calculate your earliest filing date and key milestones.

⚠️ Disclaimer: These calculations are estimates based on state statutes and typical court timelines. Actual results vary by county, court backlog, and case specifics. Always verify current requirements with your local courthouse. This is not legal advice.
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🏙️ Communities in Champaign County

Notable cities, villages, and townships

Champaign
Urbana
Savoy
Rantoul
Mahomet
Tolono
Bondville
St. Joseph
Champaign County

Screen Before You Sign

In a university market, consistent criteria matter most. Verify income or guarantor support at 3x rent, check Circuit Court records, and apply the same written standards to every applicant — student or otherwise.

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A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Champaign County, Illinois

Champaign County is Illinois’s premier university rental market, defined almost entirely by the presence of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, one of the largest and most academically distinguished public universities in the country. With an enrollment that regularly exceeds 55,000 students and a faculty, staff, and research workforce that adds tens of thousands more, the university generates rental demand that is deep, consistent, and remarkably predictable in its cycles. For landlords who understand the university market and navigate its regulatory complexity — both Urbana and Champaign maintain local landlord-tenant ordinances that go significantly beyond state law — Champaign County can be a reliable and rewarding investment environment. For landlords who do not, it is one of the more legally hazardous jurisdictions in Illinois outside of Chicago.

The University Market: Demand, Cycles, and Tenant Profile

The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign creates the most distinctive rental market dynamic in central Illinois. Student rental demand follows the academic calendar with precision: leases turn over in large volume each August, the market for the following year begins filling as early as October and November, and properties that are not leased by March or April face real vacancy risk for the coming academic year. Landlords who understand and work with this cycle — marketing aggressively in the fall and early spring, pricing competitively against comparable properties, and turning units efficiently between August tenancies — achieve strong occupancy. Those who approach the university market with the rhythms of a general rental market often find themselves chasing occupancy in a market that has largely committed months earlier.

The student tenant profile carries specific considerations. Most undergraduate students lack independent income sufficient to meet standard 3x monthly rent income thresholds, which makes guarantor (co-signer) arrangements standard in the market. Landlords operating near campus typically require a creditworthy parent or guardian to co-sign the lease, creating a payment backstop that partially offsets the income limitation of the primary tenant. Graduate students and postdoctoral researchers are a meaningfully different segment — often with stipends or research funding that provides independent income, older, and generally more experienced renters who tend toward longer tenancies and more stable occupancy patterns. Properties near the graduate school buildings, the research park, and the hospital complex serve this segment effectively.

The Urbana RLTO: A Compliance Priority

The Urbana Landlord-Tenant Ordinance is the single most important legal compliance consideration for landlords with properties within Urbana city limits. The ordinance functions similarly to the Chicago RLTO in several key respects: it requires written disclosure of the ordinance to tenants at lease signing, mandates interest-bearing security deposit accounts with annual interest payments, establishes 24-hour written entry notice requirements, and gives tenants repair-and-deduct remedies when landlords fail to maintain habitable conditions.

The practical consequences of non-compliance with the Urbana RLTO can be significant. A landlord who fails to provide the required ordinance summary, fails to hold the deposit in a properly disclosed interest-bearing account, or fails to pay annual interest faces statutory penalties that include loss of the right to retain the deposit plus damages. Landlords who attempt to operate in Urbana using state-law-only forms and procedures — without addressing the ordinance’s specific requirements — routinely encounter disputes that could have been avoided with proper initial compliance.

The remedy structure under the Urbana ordinance is also worth understanding. Tenants who successfully establish that a landlord has violated the ordinance can seek not just the deposit return but additional damages, and attorney’s fees provisions encourage tenant attorneys to take cases where ordinance violations are clear. The practical implication is that sloppy compliance creates litigation exposure that careful compliance eliminates.

Champaign’s Ordinance and the City Market

The City of Champaign, which contains most of the commercial and retail infrastructure that serves the university community as well as large portions of the residential market, maintains its own landlord-tenant ordinance and a rental licensing program. Champaign’s ordinance overlaps substantially with Urbana’s in its basic structure — security deposit handling, habitability standards, entry notice — but differs in specifics that landlords with properties in both cities should track separately. The rental licensing program requires registration before renting and subjects properties to periodic inspection. Landlords who maintain their properties to code encounter the program as routine administration; those with deferred maintenance encounter it as an enforcement mechanism.

The Champaign-Urbana market, viewed together, is one where the regulatory framework is genuinely important to understand before acquiring or managing properties. The ordinances are not obstacles to successful landlording — they are the operating environment, and landlords who internalize their requirements and build compliance into their systems from the beginning operate effectively within them.

Beyond the University: Rantoul and the County’s Other Markets

Champaign County extends well beyond the twin cities, and the communities outside the university orbit operate under a fundamentally different dynamic. Rantoul, in the county’s north, is the largest of these — a community built around Chanute Air Force Base, which closed in 1993. The post-closure transition was difficult, and Rantoul today is a working-class community with affordable housing prices and rents well below the Champaign-Urbana market. Rantoul landlords operate under state law only, with no local ordinance comparable to the Urbana RLTO, and the market serves a workforce tenant base employed in manufacturing, logistics, and services. Savoy and Mahomet, the affluent bedroom communities south and west of Champaign, have benefited from their proximity to the university and attract professional and faculty households who prefer lower-density suburban settings to the near-campus rental market.

The Eviction Process

All eviction actions in Champaign County are filed in the Champaign County Circuit Court in Urbana. The court processes a significant volume of cases given the university market’s tenant turnover, and landlords with clean documentation move through the system efficiently. Five-day notice for nonpayment, ten-day notice to cure for lease violations, then complaint and summons. For properties in Urbana or Champaign, notices must comply with the applicable local ordinance requirements as well as state law — state-only notice forms may be insufficient for city properties. The court’s familiarity with university-related landlord-tenant disputes means judges have seen virtually every scenario and expect professional documentation and procedure from landlords who file regularly.

Champaign County is, ultimately, a market that rewards knowledge and penalizes ignorance. The university creates demand that is as reliable as any in Illinois. The local ordinances create legal obligations that are clear and manageable once understood. Landlords who invest the time to understand both dimensions of this market — the demand dynamics and the legal framework — find it to be one of the more predictable and defensible rental markets in the state.

Neighboring Illinois Counties

← View All Illinois Landlord-Tenant Law

Disclaimer: This page provides general information about landlord-tenant law in Champaign County, Illinois and is not legal advice. Laws change frequently — particularly in Champaign and Urbana, where local ordinances are amended periodically. Always verify current requirements with the Champaign County Circuit Court, the City of Urbana, the City of Champaign, or a licensed Illinois attorney before taking legal action. Last updated: April 2026.

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