Second installment bills reveal 16.7% property tax hike for Chicago homeowners in wake of 2024 reassessment
Niles and Hanover Townships reassessed and OPEN for appeals... Respective appeal sign-up deadlines: Dec. 5th and Dec. 22nd. Sign-up is entirely digital and it takes less than 5 mins
 

Second installment bills reveal 16.7% property tax hike for Chicago homeowners in wake of 2024 reassessment

November 17, 2025 8

Chicago homeowners saw property tax bills jump an average of 16.7% thanks to the 2024 reassessment of city property, while commercial owners in the Loop went on a diet, stomaching a smaller portion of the overall property tax pie.

Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas was quick to release her analysis of the new bills on Monday, after the second installment 2024 property tax bills landed in mailboxes Friday. 

Cook County home and business owners pay property tax one year in arrears. On a given year, owners pay tax for use of their property over the year prior. Many believe the County originally granted the yearlong property tax break as a Great Depression palliative. It in fact occurred before the Depression, in the late 20s, because of popular unrest over unequal assessments of similar properties, a longstanding problem PTS sought to help address when it first opened for business in 2016.

These second installment 2024 bills must be paid by Dec. 15th. 

Under Cook County's Triennial Reassessment paradigm, the County's Northern Suburbs, South and Western Suburbs, and the city of Chicago undergo reassessment once every three years, with one of the three blocks under the gun per year. For the 2024 bills — the second installment of which was delivered Friday — the reassessment occurred in Chicago. The Northern Suburbs fell under the microscope in 2025.

The overall 2024 Cook County property tax levy of $19.2 billion carried an increase of 5%, as opposed to the 16.7% increase Chicago homeowners weathered. This is in part because downtown commercial property, with its high, if not historically high, level of vacancy saw property tax assessments fall after — if not the revaluation for taxes — then the ultimate values finalized by the 2024 appeal process. A rare occurence. 

Pappas's office wrote of the development, "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."

Homeowners in Lawndale on the West Side attended a symbolic "property tax bonfire" on Saturday, indicating a broader picture of residential property tax discontent. Some of Chicago's poorest neighborhoods saw bills jump by over 50%, including a chastening 132.74% in West Garfield Park. 

With City Hall facing a historic 2026 budget shortfall of $1.15 billion, it appears the public may feel more inclined to get sick than eat a new property tax rate hike. There's more closed avenues to solving the County's longstanding budgetary issues, without addressing Cook County's unfunded pension mandate crisis, than we see in our storied city on any given summer.