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🏠 Short-Term Rentals/Occupancy Limits

Arlington Heights vs Orland Park

How do occupancy limits rules compare between Arlington Heights, IL and Orland Park, IL?

Arlington Heights has fewer restrictions than Orland Park.

Arlington Heights, IL

Cook County

Some Restrictions

Arlington Heights does not have occupancy limits specific to short-term rentals. General building code occupancy standards and the village's property maintenance code apply. The International Property Maintenance Code as adopted by the village establishes minimum room sizes and habitable space requirements that effectively cap the number of occupants in any dwelling unit.

View full Arlington Heights rules →

Orland Park, IL

Cook County

Heavy Restrictions

Orland Park applies the International Property Maintenance Code occupancy standards: 70 sq ft minimum for the first occupant in a sleeping room and 50 sq ft per additional person. Combined with the Village's effective ban on STRs in residential zones, party-house operations are heavily restricted.

View full Orland Park rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactArlington HeightsOrland Park
STR-Specific LimitsNone defined-
Sleeping Room Min70 sq ft per occupant-
Living Space120 sq ft + 50 per additional-
Fire SafetyAdequate egress required-
Contact(847) 368-5200 Code Enforcement-
First Occupant-70 sq ft minimum
Each Additional-50 sq ft minimum
Code Reference-International Property Maintenance Code
Fine Range-$100–$500/day
Building Division-(708) 403-6100

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Arlington Heights FAQ

How many guests can stay at a short-term rental in Arlington Heights?

There is no specific guest limit for short-term rentals. Occupancy is governed by building code standards requiring minimum habitable space per occupant (70 sq ft per person in sleeping rooms). Overcrowding may also trigger fire code issues.

Can Arlington Heights inspect a rental for overcrowding?

Yes. Code Enforcement and the Fire Department can inspect properties for compliance with occupancy, egress, and fire safety standards. Complaints from neighbors often prompt inspections.

Are there fire safety requirements for rental properties?

Yes. All residential properties must have working smoke detectors and carbon monoxide detectors. Properties used for short-term rentals must comply with the same fire code requirements as any dwelling unit.

Orland Park FAQ

How many people can stay at an Orland Park rental?

Under the IPMC, sleeping rooms require 70 sq ft for the first occupant plus 50 sq ft per additional occupant. A typical 4-bedroom home tops out around 8–10 occupants.

Does Orland Park allow large parties at rental homes?

No. Orland Park prohibits short-term rentals in residential zones and applies IPMC occupancy limits. Party-house operations face stacked zoning and occupancy fines.

What are the occupancy fines in Orland Park?

IPMC occupancy violations are fined $100 to $500 per day, on top of any zoning enforcement penalties for unpermitted STR use.

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