April 17, 2026 – A bidding war is underway this spring for rental apartments in sought-after lakefront neighborhoods, Realtors report.
“If you are looking for an upscale rental apartment in Old Town, Lincoln Park, or Lakeview this season, you are not just competing – you are bidding,” disclosed a Lincoln Park rental broker with Jameson Sotheby’s International Realty.
Realtors say apartment listings that once sat on the MLS for weeks are now getting multiple offers within hours or days, and some applicants are throwing hundreds – or thousands – of dollars on top of the advertised monthly rent to lock a unit down.
Landlords and property managers are asking for “highest and best” offers, and for long-time veteran brokers, the shift feels like it arrived almost overnight.
Renters in Old Town, Lincoln Park, and Lakeview are running into situations where several applicants are told to submit their best possible offer, not just the listed rent.
In some cases, winning bids ended up hundreds of dollars above asking – sometimes thousands of dollars over asking.
A Jameson Realty broker listed a two-bedroom-plus-den, two-bath penthouse unit with a fireplace and private deck in a Victorian walk-up building for $4,000 a month.
“The winning bid went to an engaged young couple with solid joint income and high credit scores who enclosed a personal letter to the landlord in their bid, hoping they would be considered because of their planned summer wedding at nearby St. Michael’s Church,” noted the broker. They signed a two-year lease at $4,600 a month. Over two years, that bid amounted to $14,400 over asking.
According to Rent Café, Lincoln Park’s average rent currently is $2,351, while Lakeview’s average is pegged at roughly $2,209 as of late March 2026. Rent in both neighborhoods is up substantially compared with a year earlier.
Listing platforms are showing tighter conditions, too. April snapshots from Zumper report median rents edging higher and units cycling off the market more quickly. Brokers point to a basic imbalance: strong demand on Chicago’s North Side and not enough available units.
How to win the war
With the 2026 spring rental market in exceptionally high gear – and North Side listings frequently attracting multiple offers – veteran Realtors offer apartment hunters the following advice:
• Move fast. Agents urge hopeful tenants to move fast and show up with paperwork ready if they want a shot in high-demand neighborhoods.
• Video walk-through. Leasing advisors say moving quickly can help. However, if you are applying for a place sight unseen, they recommend insisting on a live video walk-through, saving time-stamped footage, and double-checking details before you sign.
• Stand out from the crowd. Applicants should line up strong references, proof of income, and evidence of a top 750-to-800-plus credit score before they even start touring.
• Online agent guide. Rental experts and local brokers laid out detailed checklists for that kind of prepared approach in an online guide, “Tour With Agent,” which walks through what to verify when you cannot get to a showing in person.
The guide advises applicants to hire a trusted realty agent, demand a live video walkthrough, show real-time views from windows, open cabinets and appliances on camera, check water pressure, step out onto balconies, and test building noise levels.
• Widen your search. To avoid bidding far over the asking rental price, some renters are widening their search radius, looking at more buildings, or agreeing to longer leases.
This spring and summer, the leverage in the busiest parts of the North Side still sits mostly with landlords. Renters who can stay flexible on timing or neighborhood have the best chance at negotiating, consumer advocates say.
Deals offered at new rental developments and condominium conversions may eventually add or shift options, but in the short term, the scramble for Old Town, Lincoln Park, and Lakeview rentals shows no sign of slowing down. Some landlords are testing out condo conversions, which can pull apartments out of the rental pool and tighten supply even more.
Landlords battle soaring taxes
This spring, even with a reported 10 to 28 percent average rent hike on new move-in leases caused by tenant over-bidding and unit shortages, landlords will still rely on other creative revenue-generating concepts to ward off astronomical property tax increases and soaring insurance premiums.
Concepts such as non-refundable move-in fees, pet rent, utility pass-throughs for water, sewer, garbage, Wi-Fi, and monthly charges for landscaping and snow removal now are common in the Chicago marketplace.
Most contemporary urban landlords prefer a flat, non-refundable move-in fee to a security deposit. Sequestering a security deposit in a separate bank account is another administrative headache.
Chicago landlords also are struggling to maintain properties because of rising costs. One call to a plumber for a minor problem likely will generate a bill of $300 to $500. It doesn’t matter if it was the renter’s fault because his or her hair and body wash stopped up the tub and sink drains.
Chicago’s icy winter recently put a heavy monetary toll on roofs, gutters, porches, and decks. Sometimes that led to tens of thousands of dollars in tuck pointing, roof work, and other maintenance chores to plug weather leaks.
That’s why dozens of long-term apartment investors in North Side apartment neighborhoods are selling buildings to East Coast investors and retiring to the beach or mountains.
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