Loop's declining value fuels record 16.7% jump in median property tax bill for Chicago homeowners
11/17/2025
Homeowners in Black communities hit with biggest percentage increases
The Cook County Treasurer's analysis shows a dramatic decline in the value of commercial property in Chicago’s Loop — office buildings, retail, hotels and restaurants — which helped fuel a record property tax increase on homes across the city.
The amount of taxes imposed on Loop commercial properties for tax year 2024 decreased by more than $129 million because of a significant drop in their values.
Property taxes are a zero-sum game. When one group of property owners pays a smaller share of an ever-increasing overall tax bill, others whose property values remain level or rise pay more. For tax year 2024, Chicago homeowners will pay $469.4 million more than they did the year before, because of the tax shift from commercial to other properties and Chicago Public Schools and other local governments asking for half-a-billion dollars more than they did a year earlier.
The median residential tax bill in the city rose 16.7%, to $4,457 — the largest percentage city increase in at least 30 years. It also marks the third year in a row when a reassessed area of Cook County saw record median tax bill increases for homeowners, largely due to commercial values falling while residential values rose.
Homeowner Median Increases
| Region |
Tax Year (Billing Year) |
Median Increase |
| City of Chicago |
2024 (billed 2025) |
+16.7% — $4,454 |
| South & Southwest Suburbs |
2023 (billed 2024) |
+19.9% — $6,117 |
| North & Northwest Suburbs |
2022 (billed 2023) |
+15.7% — $7,008 |
Particularly hard hit were homeowners in poorer, predominantly Black areas on the city’s South and West sides, where home values have soared since the COVID-19 pandemic. Median residential bills in nine community areas went up by more than 50%, with three topping 80%:
- West Garfield Park — median homeowner tax bill increased by nearly $2,000 (133%).
- North Lawndale — increased by nearly $1,900 (99%).
- Englewood — increase of $609 (82.5%).
“When the Loop gets a cold, the rest of the city gets pneumonia,” Pappas said. “Homeowners across the city are paying the price. I’m particularly concerned how lower-income homeowners in struggling communities are going to be able to pay their bills.”
That sticker shock, and how it came about, is documented by Pappas’ research team in its Tax Year 2024 Bill Analysis, an examination of nearly 1.8 million bills that were mailed to property owners Nov. 14 and are due Dec. 15.
Owners of large apartment buildings and complexes, as well as owners of industrial facilities, were not spared from this year’s tax shift. Multifamily properties (six or more units) must pay an extra $100.5 million, while industrial property owners must pay $73.5 million more. That’s compared to commercial property owners across the city paying $134.4 million less in taxes.
Chicago was reassessed in 2024 for this year’s bills, which triggered the shift in tax burden from commercial properties onto others, as overall taxes in the city grew by $528.6 million, or 6.3%.
In the suburbs north of North Avenue, taxes rose by a total of $209.4 million, or 3.7%. The increase in taxes on both businesses and homeowners rose by less than 4%.
After being hit with a record 19.9% increase in their median residential tax bill last year, homeowners south of North Avenue will get something of a break, with a median increase of 2.2%. Businesses face a median increase of 3.1%.
Across Cook County, taxes rose by almost $871.8 million to nearly $19.2 billion, or 4.8% — well above the 3.5% inflation rate for 2024. This is at least the 30th consecutive year that property taxes rose across the county — the result of schools and local governments asking for more money from property owners.
Also adding to property owners’ financial burdens were increases in Tax Increment Financing district taxes and those imposed under the state’s recapture law. The law allows school districts and some local governments to increase their levies by the amount refunded to taxpayers in the previous year as the result of bill adjustments.
The yearly tax bill analysis is the latest addition to the Pappas Studies, a series of examinations of the complex property tax system available at cookcountytreasurer.com.
Property owners who don’t want to wait for their bills to arrive in the mail can pay their taxes online now at cookcountytreasurer.com. Partial payments are accepted.