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πŸ”‘ Rental Property Rules/Source-of-Income Discrimination

Source-of-Income Discrimination: Chicago vs Orland Park

How do source-of-income discrimination rules compare between Chicago, IL and Orland Park, IL?

Chicago and Orland Park have similar restriction levels.

Chicago, IL

Cook County

Heavy Restrictions

The Chicago Human Rights Ordinance MCC 6-10 and the Cook County Human Rights Ordinance prohibit landlords from refusing applicants because their rent comes from a Housing Choice Voucher, SSI, or other lawful source.

View full Chicago rules β†’

Orland Park, IL

Cook County

Heavy Restrictions

Cook County Human Rights Ordinance Ch. 42 and the Illinois Human Rights Act prohibit landlords from refusing tenants based on lawful source of income, including Housing Choice Vouchers, SSI, child support, and other government assistance.

View full Orland Park rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactChicagoOrland Park
Local codeMCC 6-10-040-
State law775 ILCS 5/3-102.1-
Civil fineUp to $1,000 per violation-
Income testTenant share only-
Enforced byCCHR and Cook County-
County code-Cook County Code Ch. 42
State statute-775 ILCS 5
Penalty-Up to $1000 per violation
Filing deadline-180 days
Enforcer-Cook County Human Rights Commission

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Chicago FAQ

Can a landlord still require 3x income?

Yes, but only against the tenant's actual share of rent after voucher subsidy. Applying the multiplier to total contract rent is treated as a proxy for source-of-income discrimination.

Where do I file a complaint?

File with the Chicago Commission on Human Relations within 180 days, or with the Cook County Commission. The Illinois Department of Human Rights also accepts state-law complaints.

Orland Park FAQ

Can a landlord post no-Section-8 ads?

No. Advertising that excludes voucher holders or any lawful income source violates both the Cook County Human Rights Ordinance and the Illinois Human Rights Act and is independently actionable.

Can different income multiples apply to voucher holders?

No. Income screening must apply only to the tenant share of rent, not the total contract rent. Holding voucher holders to the same multiple as full-rent tenants is discriminatory.

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