How much notice is required to raise the rent in Illinois?
Illinois has no statute setting a notice period for rent increases; the effective floor for a month-to-month tenancy is the termination rule in 735 ILCS 5/9-207 — 30 days' written notice — because a tenant who rejects the new rent is on notice the tenancy can end on that same timeline.
Illinois has no statewide rent control, and the Rent Control Preemption Act of 1997 (50 ILCS 825) bars every Illinois city and county from enacting residential rent control or rent stabilization. Repeal bills are introduced regularly in Springfield but none has passed.
Illinois rent increase notice at a glance
| Notice — month-to-month | No rent-increase statute — notice derives from tenancy-termination rules (see summary) |
|---|---|
| Varies by increase size | Not addressed by statute |
| Fixed-term leases | Rent cannot be changed during a fixed term unless the lease provides for it; increases take effect at renewal or via termination-and-reoffer on the 9-207 timeline. |
| Statewide rent control / stabilization | No |
| Rent control details | Not addressed by statute |
| Local rent control preempted | Yes |
| Frequency limits | Not addressed by statute |
Notes and caveats
Statute citations
- 735 ILCS 5/9-207 Official source
- 50 ILCS 825 (Rent Control Preemption Act) Official source
How this record was verified: Web verification against ilga.gov (official Illinois General Assembly ILCS database) for the Security Deposit Return Act (765 ILCS 710), Security Deposit Interest Act (765 ILCS 715), Landlord and Tenant Act (765 ILCS 705), Rent Control Preemption Act (50 ILCS 825), and 735 ILCS 5/9-207, with statute text confirmed via current-year compiled-statute mirrors of the ilga.gov database and IDFPR official guidance on deposit interest rates.