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How Much Does Nursing Home Care Cost in Chicago, IL?

If you're trying to figure out what a nursing home actually costs in Chicago, you've probably already noticed the problem: every page gives you a different number, and most quote a range so wide ("$5,800 to $9,800") that it doesn't help you plan anything.

The honest answer is about $7,500 a month for a semi-private room at the median Chicago-area facility in 2026, and about $8,800 a month for a private room. Chicago is roughly at the U.S. national median for nursing home care — Illinois is a moderate-cost state, and the Chicagoland metro tracks slightly above the Illinois state median because of North Shore and downtown premium facilities.

Below, we show you exactly where that number comes from — three independent sources, side-by-side — and we break it down by sub-area so the number actually means something for the part of Chicagoland you're considering.

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What three independent sources say about Chicago nursing home cost

SourceReported median (semi-private, monthly)YearNotes
A Place for Mom $7,540 2026
Caring.com $7,300 2026 state median; Chicago runs ~3% above
Genworth $7,217 2023 most recent available; survey discontinued in 2024

Three independent sources, surfaced inline so you can see the spread for yourself. Convergence: 4%.

The three sources agree within about 4%. $7,500/month is the honest median for a Chicago nursing home semi-private room in 2026, and $8,800/month for a private room.

What the spread means in practice: if a facility in Chicagoland quotes you $7,200–$7,800/month for a standard semi-private nursing home stay, that's normal. If you're being quoted under $6,200 or over $9,200, ask why — there's usually a specific reason (Medicaid-heavy census mix, premium North Shore facility, or specialty unit baked in).

Chicago nursing home cost by sub-area

Sub-areaSemi-private median (monthly)Why
North Shore (Evanston, Wilmette, Skokie, Highland Park) $8,800 Premium real estate, hospital-system-affiliated facilities
Central / Lincoln Park / Lakeview / Streeterville $8,200 Urban premium, hospital-system facilities
West suburbs (Naperville, Aurora, Wheaton) $7,500 Metro median; newer inventory but suburban premiums
Northwest suburbs (Schaumburg, Arlington Heights) $7,400 Mid-tier mix, broad inventory
Southwest suburbs (Orland Park, Tinley Park) $7,000 Mid-tier mix, more value-tier options
South suburbs (Chicago Heights, Harvey, Markham) $6,500 Lower real estate base, more value-tier and Medicaid-heavy facilities

That's a $2,300/month swing inside the metro. If your parent is mobile and the family is geographically flexible, the location decision can move your monthly bill by 25–30%. Worth knowing before you tour anything.

What makes your bill go higher

Add-onRangeNote
Private room upgrade $1,300/month over semi-private The single biggest predictable add-on.
Specialty care unit (ventilator, bariatric, dementia-secure) $1,200–$2,800/month over baseline skilled nursing Driven by staffing ratio and equipment, not optional.
Medication management beyond baseline $200–$450/month If the resident is on more than the standard pharmacy formulary.
Incontinence supplies and assistance $100–$300/month Often billed beyond the baseline allotment.
Private-duty companion or sitter $22–$36/hour Billed separately. Common request that families don't see coming.
Beauty / barber, cable, personal phone, transportation outside scheduled medical trips $200–$500/month combined For most residents.

A realistic "median + likely add-ons" total for a semi-private Chicago nursing home stay with moderate add-on needs lands around $8,200–$9,200/month. We'd rather you see that number now than be surprised by it after you've signed.

Illinois Medical Assistance (AABD) + Aging Waiver: the program that changes the math

Most Chicago families discover the Illinois Medicaid pathway late. Worth understanding it before you tour anything.

Illinois Medical Assistance is the state's Medicaid program; for long-term nursing home care, the relevant programs are Aid to the Aged, Blind and Disabled (AABD) for facility-based care and the Persons Who Are Elderly (Aging) Waiver for home-and-community-based services. Once a resident transitions to nursing-home-level care, eligibility flips to the institutional Medicaid track.

Eligibility basics (2026):

What Illinois Medicaid doesn't fix: Illinois has a 5-year lookback on asset transfers for nursing home Medicaid applications. Not every Chicagoland nursing home accepts Medicaid for new long-stay admissions, and the ones that do may have an admissions preference for short-term private-pay residents who later convert. Illinois has had well-documented Medicaid backlog issues — application processing can stretch beyond 90 days in busy periods.

What we recommend (and we are not Medicaid planners — speak with one): if a long nursing home stay is a likely 1–3 year commitment, get an elder-law attorney to map your spend-down and lookback timeline before any asset moves. The math changes 6–18 months in. The Illinois $17,500 single-applicant asset threshold is worth knowing — it's higher than most states.

We're not a Medicaid-planning service. But not mentioning the Illinois Medicaid pathway on a Chicago nursing home pricing page would be dishonest, because for many families it's the single biggest lever on what you actually pay.

All-in monthly worksheet — a real Chicago family

Base nursing home room + care (median Chicago semi-private)        $7,500
Specialty unit upgrade (dementia-secure)                           $1,500
Medication management beyond baseline                                $300
Incontinence supplies (beyond baseline allotment)                    $200
Personal incidentals (phone, cable, beauty/barber)                   $250
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Realistic monthly total                                            $9,750

That's the number most Chicago families end up at for a semi-private dementia-secure stay. Lower if no specialty unit; higher for a private room or North Shore premium facility.

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How to use this number when touring

  1. What's the all-in monthly cost for a resident with my parent's actual care needs, including specialty unit if applicable?

    Why it matters: Don't accept the base rate as the answer. Make them itemize. The all-in number — base care + specialty unit + medication management + incontinence supplies + private-duty if needed — is the number you'll actually pay each month. A facility that won't itemize is signaling it doesn't want you to compare line-for-line.

  2. Do you currently accept Illinois Medicaid for new long-stay admissions, and what's your typical timeline for processing a Medicaid-pending resident?

    Why it matters: The Illinois backlog matters here — facilities with strong Medicaid administrative teams will give you a confident answer. The ones that hedge are signaling weak admin or low Medicaid participation, both of which affect your real-world out-of-pocket exposure as the months go on.

  3. What's your CMS star rating, and what was your most recent Illinois Department of Public Health inspection result?

    Why it matters: Public records — both should be on hand. CMS Care Compare publishes 1-to-5 star ratings on quality, staffing, and inspections. IDPH publishes the inspection reports themselves. A facility that hesitates on either is signaling something.

If a facility won't itemize, won't answer the Medicaid question clearly, or hesitates on inspection records, that's a signal worth weighing.

[AFFILIATE SLOT — pending positioning brief]
Comparison module for senior care partner network. Coming soon.

Sources cited

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Last updated: 2026-05-05 • Chicago pricing varies by zip code, level of care, and provider.

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