Chicago's Best-Kept
Secret in Real Estate
There is a category of Chicago apartment that most buyers have never seriously considered — and in many cases, have never even heard of. It is not new construction. It is not a condo conversion. It is something older, rarer, and, for the right buyer, significantly more interesting. It is a cooperative apartment. And if you have ever wondered how some people end up in 3,500-square-foot, pre-war residences with ten-foot ceilings and wood-burning fireplaces for a fraction of what comparable square footage would cost in a condo tower, the answer is almost always the same: they bought a co-op.
Chicago is the second-largest co-op market in the country, trailing only New York. There are roughly 200 cooperative buildings across the metro area, concentrated along the lakefront in the Gold Coast, Lincoln Park, Lakeview, and Hyde Park — many of them designed by architects whose names you would recognize, built during a period of construction that the city has never quite replicated. They are among the most architecturally significant residential buildings in Chicago. And yet they remain, for most buyers, a mystery.
We think that is a shame — because for the right buyer, a co-op can be one of the smartest moves in Chicago real estate. Here is everything we wish more people knew about cooperative apartments in this city — the history, the structure, the advantages, the obstacles, and the buildings worth knowing about.
A Brief History of the Chicago Co-Op
The cooperative apartment concept arrived in Chicago in the early 1900s, rooted in a European idea of economic democracy — the notion that residents could pool resources, form a corporation, and collectively own and operate a residential building. The model appealed to wealthy Chicagoans who wanted the convenience of apartment living without the constraints of renting, and who valued the ability to choose their neighbors and invest directly in the long-term maintenance of their building.
The golden age of Chicago co-op construction ran from roughly 1911 to 1929. During this period, prominent architects designed grand residential towers along the lakefront and in the city's most desirable neighborhoods. Buildings like 1500 North Lake Shore Drive (designed by Rosario Candela, the same architect behind many of New York's finest Park Avenue addresses), 999 North Lake Shore Drive (Benjamin Marshall, 1912), and the Powhatan Apartments in Hyde Park (Robert DeGolyer and Charles Morgan, 1929) were built with a level of craftsmanship, scale, and material quality that is virtually impossible to replicate today. These were fully staffed buildings — uniformed doormen, elevator operators, live-in superintendents — designed for a style of residential life that prioritized permanence and community.
The Great Depression effectively ended the co-op building boom — financing dried up, and many planned cooperatives were converted to rentals or canceled outright. Co-ops experienced a modest post-war resurgence, most notably with mid-century projects like the Mies van der Rohe–designed towers along Lake Shore Drive. But by the early 1960s, the condominium had arrived. The 1963 Illinois Condominium Property Act made condos simpler to finance and easier for buyers to understand, and within two decades, condos had overtaken co-ops as the dominant form of apartment ownership in Chicago. Many existing co-op buildings converted to condominiums during this period.
The ones that remained — roughly 200 buildings — are the co-ops that exist today. They are, almost without exception, architecturally significant, extraordinarily well-maintained, and located in neighborhoods that have only appreciated in desirability over the past century.
How a Co-Op Actually Works
This is where most buyers get confused — and understandably so. A cooperative apartment does not work like a condo. The ownership structure is fundamentally different, and understanding it is essential before you start shopping.
When you buy a condominium, you receive a deed. You own your specific unit — the walls, the floors, the fixtures — as real property. You also share ownership of the building's common areas with the other unit owners. Your name goes on a title. You can get a conventional mortgage. It works, legally and financially, the way most people expect buying a home to work.
A co-op is different. When you buy a cooperative apartment, you are not purchasing real property. You are purchasing shares of stock in a corporation — an Illinois corporation, typically — that owns the entire building. The number of shares you buy corresponds to the size, location, and value of a specific unit. Along with those shares, you receive a proprietary lease that gives you the exclusive right to occupy that unit for as long as you own the shares. So you are, simultaneously, a shareholder in a corporation and a tenant under a lease — a lease you effectively grant to yourself through the corporation you co-own with your neighbors.
Think of it this way: in a condo, you own an apartment. In a co-op, you own a piece of the whole building — and that piece comes with the right to live in a specific unit. Instead of a deed, you have shares. Instead of a mortgage, you have a share loan. Instead of an HOA, you have a board of directors. The day-to-day experience of living there is essentially the same. The legal and financial paperwork is what makes it different.
The building itself is governed by a board of directors, elected by the shareholders — the residents. The board sets policies, approves budgets, hires building staff, manages capital improvements, and, critically, approves or rejects prospective buyers. This governance model gives co-op residents a level of control over their building community that condo owners typically do not have.
The Benefits — and They Are Real
There are several reasons a savvy buyer should take co-ops seriously, and the most compelling one is this: you get dramatically more space for your money. We have shown clients co-op apartments that stopped them in their tracks — 4,000 square feet, original fireplaces, sunrooms overlooking the park — at prices that made them say, "How is this possible?"
Chicago's vintage co-op apartments were built during an era when residential architecture prioritized scale and proportion over unit count. Floor plans routinely feature formal living rooms, separate dining rooms, libraries, butler's pantries, sunrooms, maid's quarters (now perfectly sized for a home office), and multiple bedrooms — often four or five in a single unit. Units of 3,000 to 5,000 square feet are common. Some exceed 6,000. The price per square foot in a co-op is typically well below what you would pay for comparable space in a modern condo building, or even in a renovated vintage condo. For a buyer who wants room to live — real room, with the kind of gracious proportions that simply do not exist in new construction — a co-op is often the only option.
Beyond sheer space, co-ops offer architectural character that is irreplaceable. High ceilings (ten feet and above are standard), original crown moldings, wood-burning fireplaces, herringbone hardwood floors, leaded glass, barrel-vaulted entry halls — these are not upgrades. They are original to the building. The lobbies in many of Chicago's co-ops rival those of fine hotels, with marble floors, ornamental plaster, and handcrafted metalwork that reflect the building's original design intent.
There are also meaningful financial advantages. Because co-ops are assessed as a single property — like a rental building — rather than as individual units, the tax assessment is often lower than what comparable condo units face. Property taxes in a co-op are included in your monthly assessment (more on that in a moment), and for many buildings, the per-unit tax burden has remained favorable relative to condos in the same price range. Shareholders can still deduct their pro-rata share of the building's property taxes and any underlying mortgage interest on their personal tax returns, just like any other homeowner.
Co-ops also tend to be extraordinarily stable communities. The board approval process filters for financially qualified, long-term residents. Turnover is low. Neighbors know each other. During the 2008 housing crisis, co-ops in Chicago saw far fewer distressed sales than comparable condo buildings, in large part because their ownership base was more financially secure. For buyers who value stability, community, and long-term investment in a building's infrastructure, a co-op can be an exceptional fit.
The Obstacles — and How to Navigate Them
Co-ops are not for every buyer, and the reasons are worth understanding clearly. The two biggest hurdles are financing and board approval.
Financing a Co-Op Purchase
Because you are not buying real property — you are buying shares in a corporation — you cannot get a traditional mortgage. Instead, you need what is called a share loan. A share loan works similarly to a mortgage in practice, but it is secured by your shares in the cooperative corporation and your proprietary lease, not by a deed to real property.
The challenge is that not all lenders offer share loans. In Chicago, only a handful of banks actively finance co-op purchases, and the terms are typically more restrictive than a conventional mortgage. Expect a minimum down payment of 20 to 25 percent. Some buildings require even more — and a few of the most exclusive co-ops in the Gold Coast require all-cash purchases. Co-ops also do not qualify for FHA or VA loans, which eliminates two popular financing options for first-time and veteran buyers.
This is not an insurmountable obstacle, but it does require planning. A buyer considering a co-op should connect with a lender who specializes in share loans early in the process — ideally before they begin touring units. We work with lenders experienced in co-op financing and can make introductions.
Board Approval
Every co-op buyer must be approved by the building's board of directors. This is not a formality. The process typically includes a detailed financial application (often called a Thomas Report in Chicago), a credit and background check, personal and financial references, and an in-person interview with the board. The board has broad discretion to approve or reject applicants, and they are not required to provide a reason for rejection.
This process exists because co-op shareholders are collectively responsible for the building's financial health. If a shareholder defaults on their obligations, the remaining shareholders bear the cost. The board's role is to ensure that every incoming buyer is financially stable and committed to the community — and for most well-qualified buyers, the process is straightforward, if somewhat more involved than a typical closing. We have walked clients through dozens of board applications, and the key is preparation: come organized, come transparent, and come ready to show that you are the kind of neighbor this building deserves.
Co-op monthly assessments look higher than condo HOA fees — sometimes significantly so. But this comparison is misleading. Co-op assessments typically include property taxes, building insurance, heat, water, gas, cable, door staff, maintenance, lawn care, snow removal, and scavenger service. Condo HOA fees cover only common-area expenses; owners pay property taxes, utilities, and insurance separately. When you compare the true total cost of ownership — assessment plus taxes plus utilities — co-ops and condos in the same price range are often much closer than the sticker shock suggests.
There are a few additional considerations worth noting. Co-ops typically restrict subletting, and many do not allow rentals at all. This limits flexibility for owners who may need to relocate temporarily. Resale timelines also tend to be longer for co-ops, partly because the buyer pool is smaller and partly because the higher monthly assessments can deter buyers who do not understand what those fees actually cover. And renovations in a co-op generally require board approval, which can add time and process to any improvement project.
None of these obstacles are dealbreakers for the right buyer. But they do mean that purchasing a co-op requires a broker who understands the landscape — the financing, the board process, the buildings, and the market dynamics. This is exactly the kind of specialized guidance we provide.
Notable Co-Op Buildings in Chicago
Chicago's cooperative buildings span the lakefront from the Gold Coast through Lincoln Park, Lakeview, and into Hyde Park on the South Side. Here is a selection of the city's most notable co-op addresses — buildings with architectural significance, strong communities, and the kind of residences that make this housing type so compelling.
This list is not exhaustive — there are co-op buildings throughout Rogers Park, Edgewater, the North Shore suburbs, and emerging cooperatives in neighborhoods like Bronzeville, Pilsen, and Little Village. Co-ops also come in a wide range of price points, from luxury lakefront towers to smaller, community-oriented buildings with more accessible entry costs. The common thread is ownership with a sense of genuine investment in the building and in each other.
Considering a Co-Op?
Whether you are exploring the idea for the first time or ready to tour specific buildings, we would love to walk you through it. Co-op purchases require specialized knowledge — the financing, the board process, the true cost of ownership — and it is exactly the kind of conversation we love having. Over coffee, over lunch, or yes, standing in a ten-foot-ceiling living room with original moldings and a view of the park.
Let's Talk