Illinois sets no statewide cap on residential security deposits. Under the Security Deposit Return Act, 765 ILCS 710, a landlord of a building with 5 or more units who keeps any of a deposit for damage must furnish an itemized statement within 30 days of move-out, or return the deposit in full within 45 days, or owe double the deposit plus attorney's fees.
The Security Deposit Return Act, 765 ILCS 710/1, applies to "a lessor of residential real property, containing 5 or more units." There is no statutory dollar limit on the deposit. To withhold any part for damage, the lessor must, within 30 days after the lessee vacates, furnish an itemized statement of the damage and the estimated or actual repair cost, attaching paid receipts. If only an estimate is given, paid receipts are due within 30 days of that statement. If no statement and receipts are furnished as required, "the lessor shall return the security deposit in full within 45 days of the date that the lessee vacated the premises." Chicago's Residential Landlord and Tenant Ordinance (RLTO) imposes separate, stricter deposit, interest, and disclosure rules. The Security Deposit Interest Act, 765 ILCS 715, requires interest on deposits in buildings of 25 or more units.
Under 765 ILCS 710/1, a court finding that a lessor refused to supply the itemized statement, or supplied it in bad faith, and failed to return the deposit due makes the lessor "liable for an amount equal to twice the amount of the security deposit due, together with court costs and reasonable attorney's fees."
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Aurora, IL
Aurora requires vehicles on residential property to be registered, operable, and have current plates. Inoperable or unregistered vehicles must be stored in e...
Aurora, IL
Aurora prohibits commercial vehicles above B-plate classification from parking or storage in residential areas. This includes tow trucks, panel trucks, dump ...
Aurora, IL
Aurora limits residential fences to a maximum height of 6 feet (including posts and end caps), restricts fences within 15 feet of intersecting property lines...
Aurora, IL
Aurora prohibits feeding wildlife that creates nuisance conditions. Trash must be secured to prevent wildlife encounters. The Fox River corridor attracts coy...
Aurora, IL
Aurora requires working smoke detectors and carbon monoxide detectors in all residences per Illinois law (425 ILCS 60 and 430 ILCS 135). Rental properties ar...
Aurora, IL
Aurora is not in a designated wildfire hazard zone. Illinois does not have wildland-urban interface zones like western states. Standard fire prevention codes...
See how Aurora's security deposit rules rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.