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🏠 Short-Term Rentals/Extended Home Share

Extended Home Share: Chicago vs Tinley Park

How do extended home share rules compare between Chicago, IL and Tinley Park, IL?

Tinley Park has fewer restrictions than Chicago.

Chicago, IL

Cook County

Some Restrictions

Unlike Los Angeles, Chicago does not offer an Extended Home-Share permit that lifts annual nightly caps; hosts choose between the standard Shared Housing registration or the higher-tier Vacation Rental license under MCC 4-6-300 with stricter rules.

View full Chicago rules β†’

Tinley Park, IL

Cook County

Few Restrictions

Cook County does not offer an extended home-share permit equivalent to Chicago's tiered Shared Housing categories or LA's Home-Sharing extended permit. Unincorporated Cook STRs operate under a single registration tier with no annual night cap to extend.

View full Tinley Park rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactChicagoTinley Park
Tiers availableShared Housing or Vacation Rental-
Extended permit optionNot offered in Chicago-
Code chaptersMCC 4-13, 4-14, 4-6-300-
RegulatorBACP Department-
Nightly cap escapeVacation Rental license required-
Permit tiers-Single registration only
Annual night cap-None imposed
Extended permit-Does not exist
Tenancy threshold-About 30 consecutive days
Authority-Cook Ord. 19-5236

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Chicago FAQ

Can I exceed the Shared Housing nightly cap by paying more?

No. Chicago has no Extended Home-Share fee tier. To rent beyond the cap, you must qualify for and obtain a Vacation Rental license under MCC 4-6-300 with stricter rules.

Why does Chicago lack an Extended Home-Share program?

City policy steers high-volume hosts into the Vacation Rental category for inspection and tax oversight, rather than granting an unconditional cap waiver to primary-residence Shared Housing operators.

Tinley Park FAQ

Is there a way to upgrade my Cook County STR for unlimited nights?

No upgrade is needed. Cook County's STR program does not cap annual nights in unincorporated areas, so there is no equivalent to Chicago's tier system or LA's Extended Home-Sharing permit.

What happens if a guest stays more than 30 days?

Under Illinois landlord-tenant law, a continuous stay near 30 days can convert the guest into a tenant with eviction-court protections. Hosts should structure long stays carefully and consult counsel before exceeding that window.

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