Short-Term Rentals and Alternative Accommodations in Chicago
Chicago's short-term rental market operates under a distinct regulatory framework that separates it from both traditional hotels and standard residential leasing. This page covers the major accommodation types that fall outside conventional hotel classification — including platform-listed rentals, vacation rentals, and shared-space models — along with the municipal licensing requirements, operational mechanics, and jurisdictional boundaries that define legal operation in Chicago. Understanding this segment is essential for property owners, platform operators, guests, and anyone analyzing the broader Chicago hospitality industry.
Definition and scope
Short-term rentals (STRs) in Chicago are defined under the Chicago Shared Housing Ordinance, first enacted in 2016, as the rental of a residential dwelling unit — or portion thereof — for a period of fewer than 30 consecutive days. This definition distinguishes STRs from standard residential leases governed by the Chicago Residential Landlord and Tenant Ordinance, and from hotels regulated under separate licensing tiers.
The ordinance classifies Chicago STR operations into two primary categories:
- Shared Housing Units — Individual dwelling units listed through a licensed Shared Housing Intermediary (platform), such as Airbnb or Vrbo.
- Vacation Rentals — Residential buildings with 2 to 4 units where the owner lists one or more units without residing on-site during the guest stay.
Properties with 5 or more units that operate as STRs may face additional classification review and are subject to hotel and motel licensing requirements under the City of Chicago Municipal Code, Chapter 4-6.
Scope of this page: Coverage applies to STR activity within the city limits of Chicago, Illinois. Properties in suburban Cook County, DuPage County, or other collar counties fall outside Chicago's shared housing ordinance and are instead governed by county zoning codes and, where applicable, Illinois state law. Statewide preemption questions — such as whether Illinois law limits Chicago's authority to regulate platforms — are not resolved on this page and require independent legal analysis.
How it works
Operators seeking to list a Chicago property as an STR must obtain a license through the Chicago Department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection (BACP). The licensing process requires:
- Submission of a license application identifying the unit address and owner contact.
- Payment of an annual license fee (set at $125 per unit as of the ordinance schedule, per BACP published fee tables).
- Compliance with building safety standards, including smoke detector and carbon monoxide detector installation.
- Registration through a City-approved Shared Housing Intermediary, which must itself hold a municipal license and remit a 4% surcharge on gross rental receipts to the City, in addition to the standard Chicago hotel accommodation tax of 17.4% (Illinois Department of Revenue, Chicago Composite Accommodations Tax).
Platforms operating as Shared Housing Intermediaries bear responsibility for collecting and remitting taxes on behalf of hosts in most cases, shifting the compliance burden from individual operators to the platform level.
Operators in designated Restricted Residential Hotel Buildings — buildings where the City has determined STR activity creates nuisance or housing stock pressure — are prohibited from listing regardless of platform status.
Common scenarios
STR activity in Chicago clusters around three identifiable operational models:
- Owner-occupied shared housing: A Chicago resident rents one bedroom in a primary residence while present on-site. This is the most straightforward licensed scenario and carries the lowest regulatory burden.
- Absentee whole-unit rentals: An owner lists an entire apartment or condo while not residing there. This model triggers stricter city review in some neighborhoods and is subject to aldermanic restriction in specific wards.
- Multi-unit vacation rental buildings: A 2–4 unit building owner converts one or more units to full-time STR use. This operates under the vacation rental license category and requires separate unit-level registration.
The distinction between owner-occupied and absentee operation is central to Chicago's regulatory logic — a contrast that parallels how the Chicago hotel sector is differentiated from boutique and independent lodging. For a broader view of how STRs fit within Chicago's accommodation ecosystem, the conceptual overview of how Chicago's hospitality industry works provides structural context.
Property type also intersects with zoning. Chicago's zoning code restricts STR use in buildings designated as single-room occupancy (SRO) housing and in units subject to affordable housing deed restrictions.
Decision boundaries
Determining whether a property qualifies as an STR — rather than a hotel, bed-and-breakfast, or standard rental — depends on three primary variables:
- Duration: Rentals of 30 days or more are residential leases, not STRs, under Chicago law.
- Unit count: Buildings with 5 or more units that are predominantly used for STR purposes trigger hotel licensing thresholds.
- Owner presence: On-site owner presence affects license category and, in practice, the applicability of platform intermediary requirements.
An STR in a condo building may also be subject to condominium association rules that prohibit or restrict rentals shorter than a specified duration — rules that exist independently of the municipal ordinance and are enforceable by the association regardless of city licensing status. Chicago's STR regulations do not override private condominium declarations.
Platform intermediaries face their own decision boundary: a platform listing more than a threshold number of units in Chicago must hold an active Shared Housing Intermediary license or face operating penalties under the municipal code.
References
- Chicago Shared Housing Ordinance — City of Chicago BACP
- Chicago Municipal Code, Chapter 4-6 — American Legal Publishing
- Chicago Department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection (BACP)
- Illinois Department of Revenue — Chicago Composite Accommodations Tax
- Chicago Residential Landlord and Tenant Ordinance — City of Chicago