Illinois · Investing
Is residential assisted living a good investment in the Chicago area?
Residential assisted living can be a strong investment in the Chicago metro because the market is structurally short: national assisted-living occupancy is near 88 percent against record-low construction, the Illinois population aged 75 to 84 grows about 80 percent by 2030, and Chicago private-pay rates run $6,000 to $6,500 per resident per month. A full six-bed home grosses roughly $36,000 to $39,000 a month, and Illinois licenses the small model directly as a Shared Housing Establishment. The main risks are vacancy, which is unforgiving in a small home, and conversion cost, so underwrite both conservatively.
Reviewed by Erika Crossley, senior living AI specialist · Information last verified June 2026
The demand case
- —National assisted-living occupancy is near 88 percent and senior housing is past 89 percent, the highest in roughly two decades, while new construction sits at record lows.
- —The Illinois population aged 75 to 84, the on-ramp to assisted living, grows about 80 percent by 2030, and the Chicago metro senior population roughly doubles by 2040.
- —Chicago is one of the most expensive private-pay markets in Illinois, which lifts revenue per bed.
The math, honestly
At $6,000 to $6,500 per resident per month, a full six-bed home grosses about $36,000 to $39,000 a month and a ten-bed about $60,000 to $65,000. Net margins typically run 10 to 20 percent of gross, with labor as the dominant cost.
The honest caveat: these figures assume near-full occupancy. A single empty bed in a six-bed home erases most of a month of profit, so the model rewards disciplined lease-up and is backstopped by the near-record-occupancy demand environment, not by hope.
What it costs to get in
- —Acquisition: a workable single-story ranch in the DuPage and suburban Cook belt runs roughly $400,000 to $650,000; Naperville is the premium end.
- —Conversion: sprinklers, accessibility, egress, alarms, and permits are a real cost with no reliable single published total, so price the scope with an Illinois contractor before underwriting.
- —Financing: SBA 7(a) is the primary tool (often around 10 percent down) and funds purchase plus conversion; SBA 504 covers the real estate at roughly 20 percent down for special-use property.
The legal lane if you are the marketing or tech partner
If your role is technology, marketing, or lead generation rather than holding a license, stay in that lane. Under the Illinois Real Estate License Act (225 ILCS 454) you cannot take a referral fee or a per-deal cut of a property transaction as an unlicensed person, and RESPA Section 8 bans kickbacks for mortgage-related referrals.
The clean structure is a flat marketing or platform fee at fair market value, decoupled from transaction or loan volume, with a licensed Illinois broker handling every transaction. Have an Illinois real estate attorney review it before you collect.
The official Illinois sources
Straight to the regulator and the statute, verified June 2026. You do not have to hunt for them.
- NIC — senior housing occupancy and supply →
The occupancy and construction data behind the demand case.
- SBA 7(a) for assisted living →
How the primary financing tool works for care homes.
Common questions
How many beds do I need to make money?
Six beds is the common entry point but is margin-thin and vacancy-sensitive; ten beds spreads fixed costs better. Both depend on near-full occupancy at Chicago rates.
Can I get paid a referral fee for sending deals to a realtor?
Not as an unlicensed person. Illinois law bars referral fees and per-deal cuts on property transactions for unlicensed parties. Get paid a flat marketing or platform fee instead, and have an attorney review it.
What license does the small home need?
A home for 16 or fewer residents licenses with IDPH as a Shared Housing Establishment under the Assisted Living and Shared Housing Act.