A Landlord’s Guide to Renting in Tazewell County, Illinois
Tazewell County is the quieter half of the greater Peoria metropolitan area — quieter in the sense that it lacks Peoria County’s urban intensity, its code enforcement challenges, and its eviction rate profile, while sharing most of the same employment base and economic drivers. For landlords, Tazewell County represents a meaningful upgrade in operating environment relative to Peoria County: a cleaner housing stock, lower eviction volume, a more stable working and middle-class tenant base, and a Circuit Court in Pekin that processes cases efficiently for its size. The county rewards patient, professional landlord practice in ways that feel appropriate for its character — steady, reliable, and without the drama of more challenging markets.
East Peoria and the Commercial Corridor
East Peoria is Tazewell County’s largest community and its economic center. Separated from Peoria by the Illinois River and connected by the Murray Baker Bridge, East Peoria has developed a substantial commercial corridor along Route 8 that serves as the primary retail and entertainment destination for a significant portion of the Peoria metropolitan area. Bass Pro Shops, Levee District entertainment, and the broader retail concentration along the corridor draw consumer activity from across the region. Caterpillar’s Global Finance and Innovation Center is located in East Peoria, contributing a white-collar professional workforce that generates demand for the higher-quality end of the county’s rental market. Illinois Central College, a two-year community college, adds a modest student and staff segment to the local demand base.
The rental market in East Peoria is more professional-oriented than Pekin’s — properties in well-maintained neighborhoods near the commercial corridor or with easy Illinois River access attract Caterpillar employees and professionals who work in Peoria but prefer the relative affordability and character of the Tazewell County side. Proximity to the Murray Baker and Bob Michel bridges is a meaningful amenity for tenants who commute to Peoria County employment.
Pekin: The County Seat Market
Pekin, the county seat, is a mature working-class community of approximately 33,000 whose economic identity was built around manufacturing and industrial employment along the Illinois River. The Pekin riverfront has seen modest revitalization investment, and the community’s affordable housing stock — single-family homes with yards at prices that are essentially unavailable in the Chicago metro — attracts households priced out of or unwilling to pay for the urban Peoria market. The rental market in Pekin serves primarily working-class and lower-middle-income households, with demand anchored by manufacturing, healthcare, and local government employment.
Morton and Washington: The Suburban Premium
Morton and Washington, in the county’s eastern portion, represent Tazewell County’s most affluent and fastest-growing communities. Morton, known informally as the pumpkin capital of the world due to the Libby’s processing facility that processes the majority of the nation’s canned pumpkin, is a tight-knit community with strong schools and a civic character that attracts families. Washington was one of central Illinois’s fastest-growing communities before the 2013 tornado that devastated significant portions of the community — its subsequent rebuilding has resulted in a substantial stock of newer construction that competes effectively with East Peoria and Pekin for professional-tier tenants. Single-family home rentals in Washington attract Caterpillar employees and other Peoria metro professionals who value the combination of newer construction, school quality, and relative affordability.
The Legal Landscape
Tazewell County is a clean state-law jurisdiction — no RLTO, no just cause ordinance, no local notice enhancements. The Tazewell County Circuit Court in Pekin handles eviction cases efficiently, and the court’s lower volume relative to neighboring Peoria County means properly documented cases typically resolve within four to seven weeks from filing. The five-day notice for nonpayment, ten-day notice to cure for lease violations, and 30-day notice for month-to-month terminations are the operative procedural steps. Security deposit handling follows the Illinois Security Deposit Return Act’s standard requirements throughout the county.
Tazewell County is not the most dynamic or rapidly growing market in central Illinois, but it is one of the most consistently dependable. Its employment base is tied to the same Caterpillar-anchored economy as Peoria County, but its residential character is meaningfully more stable. Landlords who want exposure to the Peoria metro’s fundamentals without the higher-risk portions of the Peoria County market frequently find Tazewell County — and East Peoria and Morton in particular — to be exactly the balance they are looking for.
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