Illinois lacks statewide rent control, giving landlords flexibility to raise rents based on market conditions as of 2026. Tenants gain protections through notice requirements and lease terms, with local rules like Chicago’s adding specifics.
No Statewide Caps
Landlords can increase rent by any amount outside fixed lease terms, unless the lease specifies otherwise. Mid-lease hikes are prohibited without tenant consent or escalation clauses.
The Rent Control Preemption Act bars cities from imposing caps, preserving free-market pricing. However, anti-discrimination laws prevent targeting protected classes with hikes.
Notice Requirements
For month-to-month tenancies, landlords must provide 30 days’ written notice before increases. Fixed-term leases allow raises only at renewal, with similar notice.
Chicago mandates 30 days for hikes of 5% or more in buildings with five-plus units. Smaller increases or smaller properties follow general state guidelines.
Chicago-Specific Rules
In Chicago, no percentage cap exists, but the Low-Income Housing Trust Fund caps increases at 5% annually for participants. Landlords must detail hikes in writing, including new amounts and effective dates.
Just Cause Eviction Ordinance ties some protections to rent, requiring good cause for non-renewal after hikes. Tenants can challenge excessive or retaliatory increases via the Residential Landlord and Tenant Ordinance.
2026 Law Updates
New rules effective July 1, 2026 (House Bill 3564) limit application fees to $60 max (actual costs only), ban certain junk fees, and mandate lease disclosures. These indirectly curb total housing costs but don’t cap rent.
Additional 2026 changes require a “Summary of Rights for Safer Homes” in leases and expand habitability standards, potentially influencing renewal negotiations.
| Lease Type | Notice Needed | Increase Allowed? [steadily]​ |
|---|---|---|
| Fixed-term | At renewal (30 days) | Yes, any amount |
| Month-to-month | 30 days | Yes, any amount |
| Chicago (5+ units, 5%+) | 30 days min. | Yes, no cap |
| Low-Income Fund | N/A | 5% annual max |
Tenant Rights
Review leases for escalation clauses; negotiate caps if renewing. Document communications and report violations to local housing authorities or the Attorney General’s office.
Justify disputes with evidence of bad faith, like recent repairs ignored. Resources like Illinois Legal Aid provide free guidance.
Landlord Considerations
Align hikes with market data to retain tenants; abrupt jumps risk vacancies. Comply with 2026 transparency rules to avoid fines up to $500 per violation.
Tenants should budget ahead, explore rent assistance via 211.org, and know relocation aid triggers in some cities for steep hikes. Stay updated at ilga.gov for bills.
SOURCES :
- https://www.steadily.com/blog/rent-increase-laws-regulations-illinois
- https://philskowronre.com/blog/how-illinois-rental-law-is-changing-in-2026-and-what-chicago-landlords-need-to-know-now












