Standalone smoke shops in unincorporated Cook County need a Ch. 54 business license, a Department of Revenue tobacco registration, and Ch. 102 zoning approval. Many suburbs add tobacco-shop overlays restricting density, hours, and proximity to schools; Chicago caps tobacco licenses by ward.
Smoke shops in Cook County operate under three layers of regulation. In unincorporated areas they need a Cook County Code Ch. 54 general business license, a tobacco retailer registration with the Cook County Department of Revenue under Ch. 74, and zoning compliance with Ch. 102 commercial districts. Many suburban municipalities classify smoke shops or tobacco stores as a special use requiring zoning board approval, and impose 500- to 1,000-foot buffers from schools, parks, and other tobacco retailers. Chicago caps tobacco licenses with ward-based limits and bans flavored vapor sales. Operators must verify Tobacco 21 ID, follow Ch. 74 stamp rules, and stop sales of synthetic cannabinoids banned under 720 ILCS 690.
Operating a smoke shop without Ch. 54 licensing, violating local buffer or special-use rules, selling banned synthetic cannabinoids, or failing Tobacco 21 ID checks subjects the operator to citations, license suspension, and product seizure under county and municipal enforcement powers.
See how Oak Park's smoke shop rules rules stack up against other locations.
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