Key Takeaways
- 5-day notice for non-payment, 10-day for lease violations — Illinois requires proper written notice before filing; serving it wrong or skipping it gets your case dismissed.
- Self-help eviction is illegal — changing locks, removing belongings, or shutting off utilities exposes you to statutory damages; you must go through the court via FED (735 ILCS 5/9-101).
- Proof of service is mandatory — without a certified mail receipt, affidavit, or signed acknowledgment, the court may dismiss your case entirely.
- Cases must proceed to trial within strict timeframes — FED actions follow accelerated procedural rules; missing a deadline resets your timeline by months.
- One paperwork mistake restarts the process — improper notice content, wrong service method, or missed cure period means dismissal and starting over from scratch.
Illinois Forcible Entry and Detainer Lawsuit: Complete Timeline and Compliance Requirements
You have a tenant who stopped paying rent three months ago. You’ve issued notices. Now you need to file an eviction in court. But one mistake in your paperwork—one missed deadline, one improper notice—and your case gets dismissed. You start over. You lose months.
Illinois’s forcible entry and detainer (FED) statute (735 ILCS 5/9-101 et seq.) is precise. It demands compliance at every step. Miss a deadline and the court will reject your case. Serve notice incorrectly and your entire eviction fails. Self-managing landlords can file FED cases themselves, but only if you understand the exact requirements.
This guide walks you through every deadline, every notice requirement, and every compliance checkpoint from pre-lawsuit to judgment in Illinois forcible entry and detainer actions.
What Is Forcible Entry and Detainer?
Forcible entry and detainer is Illinois’s statutory eviction mechanism. It is a civil action—not criminal—used to remove a tenant and recover possession of real property. FED cases are faster than traditional civil suits. They must proceed to trial within specific timeframes (discussed below). They follow specialized procedural rules under Article 9, Title 5 of the Illinois Code of Civil Procedure.
You may file an FED action when a tenant:
- Fails to pay rent when due and remains in possession after proper notice
- Holds over after lease termination or notice to vacate
- Breaches lease terms (other than rent) and fails to cure after proper notice
- Is a trespasser or occupies the property without legal right
FED is the exclusive remedy for removing a residential tenant in Illinois. You cannot use self-help eviction (changing locks, removing belongings, shutting off utilities). You must go through the court.
Pre-Lawsuit: Notice Requirements Under 735 ILCS 5/9-209
Before filing an FED suit, you must provide written notice to the tenant. This notice is a legal prerequisite to filing. Courts will dismiss an FED action if proper notice was not given.
Notice for Non-Payment of Rent
Statutory Requirement: 735 ILCS 5/9-209 requires you to give the tenant written notice that rent is due and demand payment or possession. The notice period is 5 days.
The notice must state:
- The amount of rent due
- The period for which rent is due
- A demand that rent be paid within 5 days or the tenant vacate the premises
- Your name and address (or your attorney’s)
- The date of the notice
Timing Rule: The 5-day period begins the day after the notice is served. If you serve notice on July 1, the 5-day period runs July 2–6. The tenant has until the end of business on July 6 to pay or vacate.
Service Method: Notice must be served personally or, if personal service is not practical, by leaving a copy at the tenant’s usual place of residence with a person of the household aged 13 or older, or by certified mail. If the tenant is not found after reasonable diligence, notice may be posted on the property.
Compliance Checkpoint: Keep proof of service. Certified mail receipt, affidavit of personal service, or a signed receipt from household member. Without proof of service, the court may dismiss your case or allow the tenant to contest the notice’s validity.
Notice for Lease Violations (Non-Rent Breaches)
Statutory Requirement: 735 ILCS 5/9-210 requires written notice demanding cure or quit. The tenant has 10 days to cure the breach (unless the lease specifies a longer period).
The notice must:
- Describe the specific lease violation
- State the tenant must cure the breach within 10 days or vacate
- Include your name and address
- Be dated
If the breach is not curable (e.g., unauthorized occupant, illegal use of the property), the notice should state the tenant must vacate within 10 days with no opportunity to cure.
Notice for Holdover (End of Lease)
Statutory Requirement: If the lease has ended and the tenant remains in possession, you must provide notice to vacate. Illinois law does not prescribe a specific notice period for holdover (unlike some states that require 30 or 60 days). However, best practice is to provide 30 days’ written notice.
The notice should state:
- The lease term has ended
- The tenant must vacate by a specific date
- Your name and address
After the notice period expires and the tenant remains, you may file an FED action.
Filing the Forcible Entry and Detainer Complaint: 735 ILCS 5/9-101
Once the notice period has expired and the tenant has not paid, cured, or vacated, you may file the FED complaint in the trial court of the county where the property is located. In Cook County, this is the Circuit Court. In other counties, it is the Circuit Court.
Complaint Requirements: 735 ILCS 5/9-101 through 9-103
The complaint must include:
- Plaintiff identification: Your name and address
- Defendant identification: Tenant’s name and any known occupants
- Property description: Street address and legal description of the property
- Basis for the action: Whether for non-payment, holdover, or breach
- Statement of facts: Dates of notice, expiration of notice period, non-compliance
- Prayer for relief: Request for possession, rent owed, court costs, and attorney’s fees (if lease permits)
- Notice statement: A notice that the defendant has the right to file an appearance and answer within 5 days of service (see below)
Verification Requirement: You must verify (swear under oath) that the allegations in the complaint are true. This is typically done by signing the complaint before a notary public or by affidavit. An unverified complaint may be dismissed.
Filing Fee: Filing fees vary by county. Cook County charges approximately $135–200 for an FED filing. Other Illinois counties vary. Contact your circuit court clerk for exact fees.
Summons and Service: 735 ILCS 5/9-106
After filing, the court issues a summons. The summons must be served on the tenant and any occupants. Service rules are critical and strictly enforced.
Service Methods (in order of preference):
- Personal service: Hand delivery to the defendant
- Substituted service: Delivery to a person of suitable age at the defendant’s residence or workplace, plus mailing a copy
- Certified mail: Certified mail with return receipt requested to the defendant’s last known address
- Publication: Publication in a newspaper (only if personal and mail service cannot be completed after diligent effort; requires court order)
Timeline: The summons must be served at least 5 days before the trial date (discussed below). Some courts require 7 days’ notice to ensure compliance.
Proof of Service: The person serving the summons (often a sheriff or process server) must file an affidavit of service with the court. This is your proof that service was proper. If service is defective, the court will dismiss the case.
Cost: Sheriff service costs approximately $50–100 per defendant in Illinois. Private process servers may charge $50–150.
The Complete FED Timeline: From Filing to Judgment
Illinois FED law imposes strict timelines at each stage. Courts manage FED dockets as priority cases, so cases move quickly. Below is the statutory timeline you must follow.
Days 1–5: Filing and Initial Notice
| Action | Statutory Requirement | Who Acts |
|---|---|---|
| File FED complaint in circuit court | After notice period expires; no specific timeline imposed by statute | Landlord/Attorney |
| Court issues summons | Within 1 business day of filing (practice varies; contact your clerk) | Court Clerk |
| Serve summons and complaint on tenant | At least 5 days before trial date (best practice: 7 days) | Sheriff or Process Server |
Days 6–10: Tenant’s Response Window
Statutory Requirement: 735 ILCS 5/9-106(d) gives the defendant (tenant) 5 days from service of the summons to file an appearance and written answer.
The tenant’s answer may include:
- Admissions or denials of the allegations
- Affirmative defenses (retaliatory eviction, breach of habitability, discrimination)
- Counterclaims for damages
If the tenant does not file an answer within 5 days, they are in default. The court may enter a default judgment in your favor.
Compliance Note: Even if the tenant defaults, most Illinois courts will set a trial date. Courts prefer to resolve FED cases on the merits, not by default, to reduce reversal on appeal.
Days 11–30: Trial Setting and Pre-Trial Procedures
Statutory Requirement: 735 ILCS 5/9-106(b) requires that the trial be held within 30 days from the date the summons is issued. This is a mandatory deadline. Courts take this seriously.
Trial Date Assignment: The court will assign a trial date at the time of filing or shortly thereafter. You will receive notice of the trial date. Failure to appear at trial defaults your case (the tenant wins).
Pre-Trial Discovery: FED cases are summary proceedings. Discovery (document exchange, depositions) is limited. You may request inspection of the property and production of documents (e.g., lease, proof of service of notice, rent payment records). Discovery does not extend the trial deadline.
Demand for Jury Trial: Either party may demand a jury trial. You must request this in writing within 5 days of service of the summons. Jury trials extend the timeline by 2–4 weeks and are rare in non-payment cases because juries typically favor eviction for non-payment.
Days 31+: Trial and Judgment
Trial Structure: FED trials are civil proceedings. The burden of proof is preponderance of the evidence (more likely than not). You must prove:
- You are the owner or authorized agent of the property
- The tenant is in possession without right
- You provided proper notice
- The notice period expired
- The tenant failed to comply (pay, cure, or vacate)
Evidence to Bring:
- Original lease or rental agreement
- Proof of service of pre-lawsuit notice (certified mail receipt, affidavit of service, or signed notice)
- Rent ledger or payment records showing non-payment or dates of payments
- Photographs of property condition (for breach cases)
- Written notices to cure or quit
- Proof of service of summons and complaint (affidavit of service from sheriff or process server)
Judgment: If you prevail, the court will enter a judgment for possession. The court may also award:
- Rent owed through the date of judgment (at the daily rental rate)
- Court costs and filing fees
- Attorney’s fees (if the lease includes an attorney’s fees clause and it is enforceable)
- Storage or removal costs (if applicable)
Judgment Amount Calculation: The court calculates rent owed as follows: [Monthly Rent ÷ 30 days] × [Number of Days Rent Was Owed]. This includes the period from the date rent was first due through the date judgment is entered.
Attorney’s Fees: Illinois permits recovery of attorney’s fees only if the lease or rental agreement explicitly authorizes it and the fee provision is enforceable. A boilerplate clause may not be enforceable. Work with an attorney to draft an enforceable fees clause.
Post-Judgment: Execution and Eviction
Judgment for possession does not automatically remove the tenant. You must obtain a writ of execution (or writ of restitution in some counties) from the court.
Writ of Restitution: 735 ILCS 5/9-123
What It Is: A writ of restitution is the court’s order directing the sheriff to remove the tenant and place you in possession of the property.
Obtaining It: After judgment is entered, you file a request for writ of restitution with the court. The clerk issues the writ within 1–2 business days. The writ sets a date for removal (typically 7–10 days after the writ is issued).
Tenant’s Appeal Rights: A tenant may appeal the FED judgment. During the appeal period, the tenant may request a stay (delay) of execution. If the stay is granted, removal is paused pending the appeal. This can extend the timeline by 30–60 days.
Sheriff Execution Cost: The Cook County Sheriff charges approximately $100–200 to execute a writ of restitution. Other counties vary.
Notice of Removal and Lockout
The sheriff’s office will post notice on the property at least 24 hours before the scheduled removal date. On the removal date, the sheriff will:
- Change the locks or remove obstacles preventing your re-entry
- Remove the tenant and any occupants from the property
- Place the property keys in your possession
- Move the tenant’s personal property to the curb or arrange storage (landlord pays storage)
You have a right to be present during execution. The sheriff will not allow the tenant to re-enter once removed.
Compliance Pitfalls and Penalties
Illinois courts strictly enforce FED procedural requirements. Common mistakes result in case dismissal and delay.
Improper Notice: Dismissal and Re-Filing
If notice does not comply with 735 ILCS 5/9-209 or 5/9-210—for example, if notice does not state the amount of rent due, or if the 5-day period calculation is wrong—the court will dismiss the complaint. You must then serve notice again and re-file, adding 5–10 days to your timeline.
Penalty: Delay of 20–30 days; court filing fees (second filing).
Defective Service: Case Dismissal
If the summons is not served properly or within the 5-day pre-trial window, the court may dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction. The tenant can move to dismiss, and courts grant the motion. You must re-serve and re-file.
Penalty: Delay of 30–45 days; process server fees (re-service).
Failure to Appear at Trial: Judgment Against You
If you fail to appear at trial, the court will enter a judgment in favor of the tenant, and your FED case is dismissed. You lose the right to possession and must start over.
Penalty: Total loss; cost of re-filing and new notice period (60–90 days additional delay).
Violations of the Illinois Residential Tenants’ Rights Act: Damages
The Illinois Residential Tenants’ Rights Act (765 ILCS 715/) prohibits retaliatory conduct by landlords. If a tenant files an affirmative defense claiming retaliatory eviction, the court may:
- Dismiss the FED action
- Award the tenant damages of up to 2 months’ rent plus attorney’s fees
Retaliatory conduct includes evicting a tenant within 6 months after the tenant reports a code violation, files a complaint with a housing authority, or exercises a statutory right (e.g., requesting repairs, joining a tenant organization).
Compliance Requirement: Ensure the non-payment or breach predates any tenant complaint by at least 6 months, or the retaliation clock has reset. Document the timeline clearly.
Violation of Chicago’s Fair Notice Ordinance (if applicable)
If the property is in Chicago, the Chicago Fair Notice Ordinance (Mun. Code § 2-92-790 et seq.) imposes additional notice requirements. The ordinance requires 45 days’ notice before filing an FED action for non-payment. See LeaseBase’s guide on Chicago Fair Notice for full details.
Penalty for Violation: Dismissal of FED complaint; mandatory 45-day cure period; potential damages to tenant.
Complete FED Timeline Summary Table
| Phase | Action | Timeline | Statutory Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-Lawsuit | Serve notice (5-day notice for non-payment; 10-day for breach) | 5–10 days | 735 ILCS 5/9-209, 5/9-210 |
| Pre-Lawsuit | Wait for notice period to expire; tenant fails to pay/cure/vacate | After 5–10 days | N/A |
| Filing | File FED complaint in circuit court | Immediately after notice expires | 735 ILCS 5/9-101 |
| Summons | Court issues summons | 1 business day of filing | 735 ILCS 5/9-106 |
| Service | Serve summons and complaint on tenant | At least 5 days before trial | 735 ILCS 5/9-106 |
| Response | Tenant may file answer and affirmative defenses | 5 days from service | 735 ILCS 5/9-106(d) |
| Trial | Trial held | Within 30 days from summons issuance | 735 ILCS 5/9-106(b) |
| Judgment | Court enters judgment for possession (if prevailing) | Same day as trial or within 5 business days | 735 ILCS 5/9-119 |
| Post-Judgment | Request writ of restitution | Immediately after judgment | 735 ILCS 5/9-123 |
| Post-Judgment | Sheriff executes writ (removal) | 7–10 days after writ issued (or later if appeal pending) | 735 ILCS 5/9-123 |
Total Time from Notice to Removal (Uncontested): 40–60 days
Total Time from Notice to Removal (Contested or Appealed): 90–150 days
Special Considerations: Affirmative Defenses Tenants May Raise
Understanding these defenses helps you anticipate tenant arguments and prepare your case.
Breach of Habitability Defense
Under the Illinois Residential Tenants’ Rights Act (765 ILCS 715/1 et seq.), a landlord must maintain the property in habitable condition. A tenant may assert a habitability defense if:
- The property has a substantial defect affecting health or safety (e.g., no heat, no working plumbing, mold, infestations)
- The defect existed before or developed during tenancy
- The tenant notified the landlord and the landlord failed to repair within a reasonable time
If a habitability defense is successful, the court may:
- Reduce the rent owed proportionally to the severity of the defect
- Dismiss the FED action
- Award the tenant damages
Compliance Requirement: Maintain the property in safe, habitable condition. Respond to repair requests within 14 days under Illinois law. Document all repairs and communications with the tenant.
Retaliatory Eviction Defense
As discussed above, 765 ILCS 715/504 prohibits eviction within 6 months of a protected tenant action (complaint to housing authority, request for repairs, joining a tenant organization).
Compliance Requirement: Document that the non-payment or breach occurred more than 6 months before any tenant complaint, or was not retaliatory in motive.
Failure to Provide Proper Notice
The tenant may argue that notice was improper—incorrect amount stated, wrong address, inadequate time to cure, or improper service. If the court agrees, the FED is dismissed.
Compliance Requirement: Follow notice requirements precisely. Use certified mail with return receipt for proof. Serve in person if possible and feasible.
Discrimination Defense
If a tenant is a member of a protected class (race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status, disability), they may assert that the eviction is discriminatory. This requires evidence that similarly situated tenants of other races/statuses were not evicted for the same conduct. Discrimination claims can bar the eviction and result in damages to the tenant.
Compliance Requirement: Apply lease and eviction policies uniformly to all tenants regardless of protected status. Document your enforcement decisions consistently.
Compliance Checklist for Illinois FED Cases
Use this checklist before filing to ensure compliance at every step.
Pre-Lawsuit Phase
- ☐ Is the property subject to the Chicago Fair Notice Ordinance (if in Chicago)? If yes, have you waited 45 days after serving the first notice?
- ☐ Have you issued written notice complying with 735 ILCS 5/9-209 (for non-payment) or 5/9-210 (for breach)?
- ☐ Does the notice state the exact amount of rent due (for non-payment cases)?
- ☐ Have you properly served notice (personal service, mail, or posting)?
- ☐ Do you have proof of service (certified mail receipt, affidavit, or signed acknowledgment)?
- ☐ Has the full notice period (5 or 10 days) expired?
- ☐ Has the tenant failed to pay, cure, or vacate after the notice period?
- ☐ Is the eviction not retaliatory under 765 ILCS 715/504 (more than 6 months since any tenant protected action)?
Filing and Summons Phase
- ☐ Is the complaint verified (signed under oath)?
- ☐ Does the complaint include all required information (property address, basis for action, factual allegations, prayer for relief)?
- ☐ Have you obtained the correct filing fee amount from the circuit court clerk?
- ☐ Have you arranged for proper service of the summons and complaint (sheriff or process server)?
- ☐ Does the summons include notice of the tenant’s right to file an answer within 5 days?
- ☐ Is the trial date at least 5 days (preferably 7 days) after service of the summons?
Trial Phase
- ☐ Have you prepared all evidence (lease, proof of notice and service, rent records, photographs)?
- ☐ Do you have copies of all notices issued to the tenant?
- ☐ Have you identified any witnesses (e.g., neighbors, property manager) who can testify about occupancy or tenant conduct?
- ☐ Have you marked your appearance on the trial docket (contact court clerk or check online docket)?
- ☐ Do you plan to attend the trial in person?
Post-Judgment Phase
- ☐ If you prevail, have you calculated the rent owed through the judgment date using the daily rental rate?
- ☐ Have you filed a request for writ of restitution immediately after judgment?
- ☐ Has the sheriff confirmed the execution date and time?
- ☐ Have you arranged to be present for the execution?
- ☐ Have you planned for disposal or storage of the tenant’s personal property (at your cost)?
Frequently Asked Questions About Illinois FED Cases
Q1: Can I evict a tenant for non-payment of rent without going to court?
A: No. Illinois law prohibits self-help eviction. You must file a forcible entry and detainer action in court. Self-help actions (changing locks, removing belongings, shutting off utilities) expose you to tenant lawsuits for damages, attorney’s fees, and penalties under 765 ILCS 715/. FED court cases are the only legal path to removal.
Q2: What if the tenant files for bankruptcy during my FED case?
A: Filing bankruptcy triggers an “automatic stay” under federal bankruptcy law that pauses most collection and eviction actions. However, landlords can seek relief from the stay to proceed with FED cases. This requires filing a motion in the bankruptcy court. Bankruptcy delays the eviction significantly. Consult a bankruptcy attorney if a tenant files.
Q3: How much will a self-managed FED case cost?
A: Typical costs for a self-managed FED case in Illinois are:
- Court filing fee: $135–200 (varies by county)
- Service of process (sheriff or process server): $50–150
- Writ of restitution execution (sheriff): $100–200
- Storage of tenant’s personal property: $200–500+ (if needed)
- Total: $500–1,000
Attorney fees for an uncontested FED are typically $1,000–2,000. Self-managing saves money but requires careful compliance with procedural requirements.
Q4: Can I recover court costs and attorney’s fees from the tenant?
A: Court costs (filing fees, service fees, writ fees) are recoverable as part of the judgment. Attorney’s fees are recoverable only if the lease or rental agreement explicitly allows recovery and the clause is enforceable. Many boilerplate attorney’s fee clauses are not enforceable in Illinois. Courts construe these clauses narrowly. To maximize your chances, work with an attorney to draft a specific, enforceable fees clause.
Q5: What happens if the tenant appeals the FED judgment?
A: A tenant may appeal to the appellate court within 30 days of judgment. During the appeal period, the tenant may request a stay (halt) of execution. If the court grants the stay, removal is paused. The appeal can delay removal by 60–120 days or longer. The appellate court will review whether proper notice was given, the complaint complied with procedural rules, and the evidence supported the judgment. If the appellate court reverses, you lose and must re-file or pursue a different remedy.
Tools to Stay Compliant: Use Automated Tracking
Self-managing multiple FED cases without a system invites mistakes. Missing a deadline by one day can result in dismissal or default judgment against you.
LeaseBase’s compliance engine automatically tracks notice periods, trial deadlines, and filing deadlines across your portfolio. The system alerts you before deadlines expire, ensuring you don’t miss the 30-day trial window or the 5-day response period.
For detailed lease and operations management, LeaseBase’s lease operations module centralizes all tenant documents, lease terms, and compliance notes in one searchable location. When preparing for trial, you can pull proof of service, rent records, and notice copies in seconds instead of hunting through files.
If you manage multiple properties across Illinois, LeaseBase’s
