Illinois has no statewide statute requiring advance notice before a landlord enters a rental unit. Entry is governed by the lease and the common-law covenant of quiet enjoyment, under which courts expect reasonable notice. Chicago and Cook County are separate, stricter regimes that require at least 2 days' notice.
No provision of 765 ILCS or any other Illinois statute sets a statewide landlord-entry notice period. A landlord's right to enter therefore depends on the lease terms and the implied covenant of quiet enjoyment, which Illinois courts read to require reasonable notice (commonly treated as 24 to 48 hours) and entry at reasonable times, with exceptions for genuine emergencies. The Chicago Residential Landlord and Tenant Ordinance is a separate, stricter regime: it requires at least 2 days' notice before entry for inspections, repairs, or showings, with limited emergency exceptions. Cook County's Residential Tenant and Landlord Ordinance imposes a comparable 2-day notice rule in covered suburban areas. Tenants outside those jurisdictions rely on lease language and common law.
No specific statutory penalty statewide. A tenant subjected to repeated unreasonable or harassing entry may claim breach of the covenant of quiet enjoyment and seek damages or lease termination; under the Chicago RLTO, unlawful entry can trigger ordinance remedies including damages and attorney's fees.
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Peoria, IL
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Peoria, IL
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Peoria, IL
Illinois has no statewide 'good neighbor' fence cost-sharing statute, and Peoria does not require neighbor consent before installing a boundary fence. The Il...
Peoria, IL
Peoria requires a Fence Permit from the Building Safety Division (419 Fulton Street, Room 203, 309-494-8600) before installing most residential fences. Appli...
Peoria, IL
Peoria regulates residential fence heights through Appendix B (Zoning Ordinance) of the Code of Ordinances. Typical residential standards limit fences in fro...
Peoria, IL
Peoria's Code of Ordinances Chapter 5 (Animals) does not impose a specific numerical cap on dogs or cats per household, but excessive numbers that result in ...
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