Adult entertainment businesses in unincorporated Cook County need a Ch. 54 license and must comply with Ch. 102 zoning, including sensitive-use buffers from schools, churches, parks, and residential districts. Suburban municipalities adopt parallel ordinances; Chicago runs separate adult-use zoning.
Cook County regulates adult entertainment under Code of Ordinances Ch. 54 (Licenses and Business Regulations) and Ch. 102 (Zoning). Adult bookstores, cabarets, motion picture theaters, and similar uses require a county adult use license and may operate only in zoning districts that permit them, typically C-4 or M industrial. Buffer rules generally require 1,000-foot separation from schools, places of worship, public parks, day care centers, and residential zoning districts, and prohibit clustering of multiple adult uses. Operators must obtain background-checked employee permits, post visible licenses, and meet interior layout rules limiting closed booths. Suburbs like Stone Park, Rosemont, and Lyons have parallel ordinances; Chicago regulates adult uses through its own zoning and licensing code.
Operating an unlicensed adult use, locating within prohibited buffers, or violating booth and signage rules in unincorporated Cook County triggers daily fines, license revocation, and court-ordered abatement under Ch. 54 and Ch. 102 enforcement provisions.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Orland Park, IL
Orland Park Village Code Chapter 5 (Health and Sanitation) and the general nuisance provisions prohibit unreasonably loud noise that disturbs the peace, with...
Orland Park, IL
Orland Park restricts overnight on-street parking from 2:00 AM to 6:00 AM in most residential areas. Temporary overnight permits are available for guests and...
Orland Park, IL
Orland Park prohibits parking of commercial vehicles over 8,000 pounds GVW on residential streets and driveways overnight. Box trucks, semi-tractors, and tra...
Orland Park, IL
Orland Park allows daytime on-street parking in most residential neighborhoods but enforces overnight parking restrictions, signed time limits, and snow rout...
Orland Park, IL
Orland Park limits residential fences to 6 feet in side and rear yards and 4 feet in front yards. Corner lots have additional sight-triangle restrictions. Fe...
Orland Park, IL
Orland Park prohibits feeding deer, geese, raccoons, and other wildlife that creates nuisance, attracts pests, or poses safety risks. Bird feeding is general...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Cook County.
See how Orland Park's adult entertainment rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.