Section 8 Voucher Acceptance: Chicago vs Tinley Park
How do section 8 voucher acceptance rules compare between Chicago, IL and Tinley Park, IL?
Chicago and Tinley Park have similar restriction levels.
Chicago, IL
Cook County
The Chicago Housing Authority administers the Housing Choice (Section 8) Voucher program. Combined with MCC 6-10 source-of-income protection and 775 ILCS 5/3-102.1, landlords cannot refuse voucher tenants in Chicago.
View full Chicago rules βTinley Park, IL
Cook County
The Housing Authority of Cook County administers Housing Choice Vouchers in suburban Cook. Source-of-income protections in county and state law require landlords to consider voucher holders on equal terms with other applicants.
View full Tinley Park rules βKey Facts Comparison
| Fact | Chicago | Tinley Park |
|---|---|---|
| Administered by | Chicago Housing Authority | - |
| Tenant share | About 30% of income | - |
| Payment standard | 90-110% of FMR | - |
| Source-of-income code | MCC 6-10-040 | - |
| Inspection | Within 15 days of RFTA | - |
| Administrator | - | Housing Authority of Cook County |
| Coverage | - | Suburban Cook |
| Protected class | - | Source of income |
| Screening basis | - | Tenant share only |
| Penalty cap | - | Up to $1000 per violation |
Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.
Chicago FAQ
Can a landlord ask for extra rent on top of my voucher?
No. Side payments above the tenant share approved by CHA violate HUD HCV rules and can result in landlord debarment from the program plus civil liability.
What is the exception payment standard?
CHA grants higher payment standards in lower-poverty, high-opportunity ZIP codes to expand mobility. Tenants apply through CHA's Mobility Counseling Program.
Tinley Park FAQ
Can a landlord opt out of Section 8?
No. The choice to participate disappeared once source of income became a protected class. Landlords must complete the HAP contract and HQS inspection if a qualified voucher holder applies.
What if the unit fails the HQS inspection?
The landlord receives a list of repairs and a re-inspection date. Refusing to make repairs in good faith and using inspection failure as pretext can still be challenged as source-of-income discrimination.
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