A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Cook County, Illinois
Cook County is one of the most consequential landlord-tenant jurisdictions in the United States, and not simply because of its size. The county’s 5.1 million residents occupy a geography that spans the second-largest city in the Midwest, dozens of mature inner-ring suburbs, and a wide band of outer suburbs ranging from working-class industrial communities to some of the wealthiest ZIP codes in Illinois. More than any other characteristic, what defines Cook County for landlords is legal complexity. The rules that govern a rental property in Rogers Park on Chicago’s far north side are fundamentally different from those governing an identical property in Niles, a suburb literally across the street. Understanding which legal framework applies to your specific property is not optional — it is the first and most important question a Cook County landlord must answer.
Chicago: The RLTO as the Operating Framework
The Chicago Residential Landlord and Tenant Ordinance, originally enacted in 1986 and substantially amended many times since, is the legal universe within which Chicago landlords operate. The RLTO does not supplement state law in Chicago — it largely replaces it as the operative framework for nearly every aspect of the landlord-tenant relationship. Landlords who approach Chicago rentals as though they are simply subject to Illinois state law with a few local additions will make expensive mistakes.
The RLTO’s requirements touch every stage of the tenancy. At lease signing, landlords must provide tenants with a copy of the city’s official RLTO summary — failure to do so is itself an RLTO violation. Security deposits must be placed in a federally insured interest-bearing account within five business days of receipt, and the landlord must provide the tenant with written notice of the bank name and account number. Interest must be calculated and paid annually, either as a separate payment or as a credit against the following month’s rent. The interest rate is set annually by the city. Landlords who commingle security deposits with operating funds, fail to pay interest, or fail to provide the required disclosures face significant statutory penalties: tenants may sue for the full deposit plus twice the deposit amount in damages, plus attorney’s fees. In a city where studio apartments regularly rent for $1,200 and above, the exposure from a single security deposit violation can reach $3,600 or more before attorney’s fees.
Entry notice requirements under the RLTO are also more stringent than state law. Landlords must provide at least 48 hours written notice before entering a unit for non-emergency purposes. The notice must specify the date, approximate time, and purpose of entry. Verbal notice is insufficient. Emergency entry is permitted without notice when there is an immediate threat to life or property, but landlords should document the nature of every emergency entry carefully.
Chicago Just Cause Eviction: The 2024 Shift
The most significant change to Chicago landlord-tenant law in a generation took effect in September 2024 with the implementation of the city’s just cause eviction ordinance. Before this ordinance, Chicago landlords — like Illinois landlords generally — could decline to renew a month-to-month tenancy or a lease without stating a reason, provided they gave proper notice. The just cause ordinance eliminated that flexibility for all RLTO-covered units.
Under the just cause framework, a landlord who wishes to terminate a tenancy or decline to renew a lease must have one of the enumerated reasons, which include nonpayment of rent, material lease violations, the tenant’s use of the unit for illegal purposes, the landlord’s intent to substantially renovate (subject to strict conditions), and owner move-in (also subject to conditions). Landlords who terminate without a qualifying just cause reason are required to pay relocation assistance to the displaced tenant: one month’s rent for units renting below 100% of the area median income rent threshold, two months for units above that threshold, and three months for tenants who have resided in the unit for three or more years. The practical effect is that Chicago landlords must now treat every tenancy as though it has ongoing renewal rights unless a specific condition for termination exists.
Landlords considering substantial renovation as a basis for termination face additional procedural requirements: written notice at least 120 days before the required vacancy date, documentation of the scope of renovation, and in some cases permit verification. Owner move-in terminations similarly require extended notice and good-faith compliance. The ordinance is enforced through private litigation, with tenants empowered to sue for relocation assistance, actual damages, and attorney’s fees.
The Suburban Cook County Market
Beyond Chicago’s city limits, Cook County’s suburban rental market operates under a fundamentally different legal environment. Suburban landlords are not subject to the RLTO, the just cause eviction ordinance, or Chicago’s specific notice requirements. Illinois state law governs — the five-day notice for nonpayment, the ten-day notice to cure or quit for lease violations, and the standard Circuit Court eviction process. The suburban market is meaningfully more landlord-friendly from a regulatory standpoint, though individual municipalities add their own layers.
Oak Park, a dense and progressive inner-ring suburb immediately west of Chicago, has enacted its own landlord-tenant ordinance that shares some characteristics with the RLTO, including security deposit interest requirements and entry notice provisions. Landlords in Oak Park should treat it as a separate research project from Chicago proper — the ordinances overlap substantially in spirit but differ in specifics. Berwyn and Cicero, working-class industrial communities adjacent to Chicago’s western boundary, have enacted rental registration requirements that include inspections as a condition of licensing. Properties that fail inspection cannot legally be rented, and the citation process can move quickly once a complaint is filed.
The north suburban corridor — Evanston, Skokie, and the communities along the North Shore — presents a more affluent market with correspondingly higher rents and a tenant population that is generally more financially stable. Evanston’s own RLTO adds a local compliance layer. The demand base in these communities includes Northwestern University-affiliated faculty and staff, healthcare professionals from the major medical centers along the Edens corridor, and professional households that have chosen suburban living with urban accessibility.
The Eviction Process in Cook County
All eviction actions in Cook County, whether for properties in Chicago or the suburbs, are filed in the Cook County Circuit Court’s Landlord-Tenant Division, which handles one of the highest volumes of eviction filings in the country. Chicago cases are heard at the Daley Center in the Loop. Suburban cases may be heard at the Daley Center or at one of the circuit court’s suburban district courthouses, depending on the property’s location.
The process begins with proper notice — five days for nonpayment, ten days to cure a lease violation. For Chicago properties, notice forms must comply with RLTO requirements in addition to state law; generic state-law forms that omit RLTO-specific language have been challenged as insufficient. After the notice period expires without cure or payment, the landlord files a complaint and summons in the Circuit Court. Service must be accomplished properly — personal service on the tenant is preferred, but substitute service and posting are permitted under specific conditions. The court will schedule a return date, typically two to three weeks after filing.
If the tenant fails to appear, the landlord may seek a default judgment for possession. If the tenant appears, the case will either be resolved by agreement or set for trial. Cook County’s Landlord-Tenant Division maintains a mediation program that diverts many cases from trial, and landlords should be prepared for the possibility that a settlement requiring a payment plan or extended move-out time will be proposed at the initial court date. After a judgment for possession is entered, the landlord must obtain an order of eviction and schedule enforcement through the Cook County Sheriff’s Office. Sheriff’s evictions in Chicago can take several additional weeks to schedule, meaning the total timeline from initial notice to physical vacancy routinely runs eight to twelve weeks in Chicago and somewhat less in the suburbs.
Screening and Documentation in a High-Stakes Market
The combination of RLTO compliance requirements, just cause eviction protections, and the volume and cost of the Chicago eviction process makes thorough upfront tenant screening the most important risk management tool available to Cook County landlords. In a jurisdiction where removing a problematic tenant can take three months and cost thousands of dollars in legal fees, lost rent, and relocation assistance, the screening stage is where the outcome of the tenancy is largely determined.
Chicago landlords must apply screening criteria consistently across all applicants. The Chicago Fair Housing Ordinance prohibits discrimination on the basis of source of income, which means landlords may not categorically refuse Section 8 voucher holders. Criminal background screening in Chicago is subject to the city’s restrictions on the use of criminal history — blanket policies excluding all applicants with any criminal record are prohibited; landlords must conduct an individualized assessment. Consistent written documentation of the screening criteria applied and the basis for any adverse decision is essential protection against fair housing complaints.
Income verification at three times the monthly rent remains the standard benchmark, but in Chicago’s competitive market, landlords should supplement income verification with eviction history searches through the Circuit Court’s public records, prior landlord reference checks, and credit review. The combination of these elements, applied consistently and documented carefully, is the foundation of a defensible screening process.
Cook County is not the easiest place in Illinois to be a landlord. The regulatory environment in Chicago is among the most complex and tenant-protective in the country, and the 2024 just cause ordinance has fundamentally changed the calculus around lease non-renewal decisions. But the county’s rental demand is deep, its tenant pool is large and diverse, and the market rents in Chicago and the north suburbs support strong economics for well-managed properties. Landlords who invest the time to understand the legal framework governing their specific properties — and who screen carefully, document thoroughly, and comply consistently — can build durable rental portfolios in one of the Midwest’s most active markets.
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