Property Tax Relief for Seniors in Illinois
Last updated: 22 March 2026
Bottom line: In Illinois, senior property tax relief usually comes in layers, not one big grant. Most older homeowners should first check the General Homestead Exemption and Senior Citizens Homestead Exemption, then see whether they also qualify for the Low-income Senior Citizens Assessment Freeze Homestead Exemption, the Senior Citizens Real Estate Tax Deferral Program, and the Illinois Property Tax Credit. County rules matter a lot, and the Senior Freeze does not freeze the whole bill.
If you may lose your home or fall behind this month
- Call your county treasurer or collector today to ask whether your taxes are delinquent, whether a tax sale date is set, and whether any correction or payment options still exist. If you do not know the right office, start with the Illinois Department of Revenue county contact list.
- Check for missing exemptions right away with your county assessor. In Cook County, the assessor says homeowners may still recover missed exemptions for tax years 2021 through 2024 through a Certificate of Error.
- Get free senior help fast from the Illinois Department on Aging Senior HelpLine at 1-800-252-8966, or from a legal aid group such as the Center for Disability & Elder Law if you live in Chicago or suburban Cook County.
Fastest ways to lower an Illinois senior tax bill
- Check your latest bill first: see which exemptions already appear before filing anything new.
- Apply for the basic senior exemption even if your income is too high for the freeze: the Senior Citizens Homestead Exemption has no statewide income cap.
- Do not confuse the two low-income rules: the Senior Tax Deferral Program used a $75,000 household income limit for tax year 2025, but the Senior Freeze is still at $65,000 for assessment year 2025, payable in 2026, and rises to $75,000 for assessment year 2026, payable in 2027.
- If cash flow is the real problem, not the assessment: look at the Senior Citizens Real Estate Tax Deferral Program, but remember it is a loan with a lien.
- Do not leave state tax money on the table: the Illinois Property Tax Credit is generally 5% of the Illinois property tax you paid on your principal residence.
Start here: what Illinois senior property tax relief really looks like
In Illinois, a homestead means your main home. Relief usually lowers the home’s equalized assessed value (EAV), which is the taxable value used on the bill. That means the real dollar savings depend on where you live, because county, city, school, and special district tax rates are different.
Most seniors should think in this order: basic homeowner exemption first, senior exemption second, freeze if income qualifies, deferral only if cash is tight, and the state income tax credit later. That is the practical path most current Illinois tax pages support.
Important honesty check: as of March 2026, we could not verify an active statewide Illinois senior circuit-breaker rebate on current Illinois Department of Revenue property tax relief pages. Older articles may still mention past programs or the one-time 2022 Illinois property tax rebate, but that was not set up as an annual senior benefit.
Quick facts Illinois seniors should know
- Best takeaway: Start with your county assessor contact, not just a tax preparer.
- Major rule: The Senior Freeze only freezes EAV, so your bill can still rise if local tax rates rise.
- Real-world obstacle: Household income rules are often broader than people expect, and some counties count other household members too, as shown in the McHenry County Senior Freeze guidance.
- Useful statistic: In Illinois, homeowners without a mortgage still had median selected monthly owner costs of $792 in 2020-2024, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
- Best next step: Pull your latest bill or assessment notice, find the parcel or PIN number, and ask your county which exemptions are already on file.
Who qualifies for senior property tax relief in Illinois
The basic statewide pattern is simple. To get most senior property tax relief, you usually must own the home or have a qualifying legal interest, live there as your main home, and be responsible for the property tax. For the senior-only programs, you also must usually be age 65 or older.
Income does not control everything. The Senior Citizens Homestead Exemption is not limited by a statewide income ceiling, but the Senior Freeze and the Senior Tax Deferral Program are income-tested. The deferral program also has extra rules about three years of ownership or occupancy, insurance, and no delinquent property taxes.
Counties can ask for very different proof. If your home is in a trust, was recently transferred, got a new parcel number, or is part of an estate, expect extra paperwork. For example, Lake County asks trust applicants to submit pages proving the applicant is a current beneficiary.
Best Illinois relief programs older homeowners should review
General Homestead Exemption
- What it is: The baseline homeowner exemption for owner-occupied principal residences.
- Who can get it: Owner-occupants who use the property as their main home and meet the General Homestead Exemption rules.
- How it helps: It reduces EAV by up to $10,000 in Cook County, $8,000 in counties contiguous to Cook, and $6,000 elsewhere.
- How to apply: Apply through your county assessor or township assessor using the official county contact list.
- What to gather: Photo ID, deed or trust papers, latest tax bill or PIN, and proof that the home is your main residence.
Senior Citizens Homestead Exemption
- What it is: An extra homestead exemption for older homeowners.
- Who can get it: Homeowners age 65 or older who own and occupy the home as a residence and are liable for the tax under the state senior exemption rules.
- How it helps: It reduces EAV by $8,000 in Cook and contiguous counties, or $5,000 in all other counties. It usually works with the General Homestead Exemption.
- How to apply: Filing rules change by county. Cook County auto-renews the Senior Exemption after it is granted, while Lake County says there is no annual renewal.
- What to gather: Proof of age, proof of ownership, tax bill or PIN, and trust papers if the home is held in trust.
Low-income Senior Citizens Assessment Freeze Homestead Exemption
- What it is: The program most people call the Senior Freeze.
- Who can get it: Seniors age 65 or older who meet ownership, occupancy, and income rules. The income limit is $65,000 for assessment year 2025, payable in 2026, then rises to $75,000 for assessment year 2026, payable in 2027, $77,000 for 2027, payable in 2028, and $79,000 for 2028, payable in 2029.
- How it helps: It freezes the home’s EAV at a base-year amount, but it does not freeze the tax rate or the whole bill.
- How to apply: This is an annual filing. In Cook County, tax year 2025 exemption filing opened March 9, 2026. In Peoria County, the county says you must file by September each year.
- What to gather: Prior-year income proof, tax return or accepted benefit proof if your county allows it, deed or trust papers, and a list of people in the household.
Senior Citizens Real Estate Tax Deferral Program
- What it is: A state-run deferral, which works like a loan against your home’s value.
- Who can get it: Seniors who are age 65 by June 1, meet the household income limits of $75,000 in tax year 2025, $77,000 in tax year 2026, and $79,000 in tax year 2027 and later, have owned and occupied qualifying property for at least the last three years, have no delinquent taxes, and carry insurance.
- How it helps: The state can defer up to $7,500 per year. Interest is 3% simple interest, and the total deferred amount, interest, and lien fees cannot exceed 80% of your equity.
- How to apply: File Forms IL-1017 and IL-1018 with your county collector or treasurer. The annual filing period is January 1 through March 1. In Lake County, the tax year 2025 filing window ran January 1 through March 1, 2026.
- What to gather: Income records, deed or land trust papers, proof of insurance, spouse or trustee signatures if needed, and mortgage or reverse mortgage paperwork.
Illinois Property Tax Credit on your state income tax return
- What it is: A state income tax credit, not a county exemption.
- Who can get it: Illinois homeowners who paid Illinois property tax on a principal residence and stay under the AGI limits of $500,000 for married filing jointly or $250,000 for all other filers.
- How it helps: The credit is 5% of Illinois property tax paid on your principal residence.
- How to apply: Claim it on Form IL-1040 with Schedule ICR, and include your parcel or PIN number.
- What to gather: Proof of property tax paid, the parcel or PIN, and a lender copy of the bill if your taxes were escrowed.
Cook County Longtime Homeowner Exemption
- What it is: A Cook County-only extra exemption for a small number of longtime owners hit by large assessment increases.
- Who can get it: Cook County homeowners who meet the occupancy rule from January 1, 2015, to January 1, 2025, the 2024 household income cap of $100,000, and the strict assessment increase tests.
- How it helps: It can provide additional savings beyond the regular homeowner exemption. The Cook County assessor says fewer than 2% of homeowners qualify.
- How to apply: The Cook County Assessor identifies likely properties and mails applications. If you think you qualify, call 312-443-7550.
- What to gather: Income proof, ownership history, and any documents requested in the mailed application.
County examples: the same program can work very differently
Apply smarter so you do not waste time
- Start with the bill you already have. Check the exemption line before filing a duplicate application.
- Find the right office first. Use the state county contact list for assessors. For deferral, contact your county treasurer or collector.
- Ask one key question up front: “Which tax year am I applying for, and which income year do you use?” This prevents many denials.
- Build one folder. Keep ID, deed, trust pages, tax bill, parcel or PIN, tax return, and benefit letters together.
- Do the permanent relief first. File for the general and senior exemptions before looking at deferral.
- Use deferral only when you need cash-flow relief now. Read the lien and repayment rules before signing.
- If you need help, call a real person. The Senior HelpLine is 1-800-252-8966, and the Illinois Department of Revenue lists 1-800-732-8866 and 217-782-3336 for tax questions.
Application checklist
- ☐ Photo ID or other proof of age
- ☐ Latest property tax bill and parcel or PIN number
- ☐ Deed, land trust, or other ownership proof
- ☐ Prior-year tax return or benefit income proof
- ☐ Proof the home is your main residence
- ☐ Insurance declarations page if applying for tax deferral
- ☐ Mortgage or reverse mortgage papers if a lender is involved
- ☐ Death certificate or estate papers if applying after a spouse or parent died
Reality checks before you file
- The Senior Freeze is often misunderstood. It freezes the taxable value, not the whole bill. If your city, school district, or other local tax rates rise, your bill can still go up.
- Income mistakes are common. The county may use a broader household-income test than you expect. Some counties count a spouse who lives elsewhere and other people living in the home on January 1, as shown in the McHenry County Senior Freeze guidance.
- Ownership changes can break the process. A new deed, trust transfer, life estate, or new parcel number may stop an auto-renewal and force a new filing.
- Deferral solves cash flow, not debt. It helps now, but it also places a lien on the home and must be repaid when the property is sold, transferred, or no longer qualifies.
Common mistakes that cause delays or denials
- Using the wrong income year for the freeze or deferral.
- Assuming every county auto-renews. Cook auto-renews the Senior Exemption, but not the Senior Freeze.
- Missing the March 1 deferral deadline, which the state lists as the yearly filing deadline.
- Leaving out trust pages that prove who the beneficiary is.
- Forgetting the parcel or PIN on Schedule ICR for the state property tax credit.
- Appealing to the wrong place. The Property Tax Appeal Board can review assessments after a county Board of Review decision, but it cannot grant exemptions.
Best options by need
| If your problem is… | Best first move | Main warning |
|---|---|---|
| High bill every year | Check General Homestead and Senior Homestead | Savings vary by local tax rate |
| Assessment keeps rising | Apply for the Senior Freeze | It does not freeze the full bill |
| Need cash right now | Review the Senior Tax Deferral Program | It is a loan with a lien |
| Missed an exemption last year | Ask the county assessor about a correction or, in Cook, a Certificate of Error | Late fix rules are local |
| Need state tax relief too | Claim the Illinois Property Tax Credit | It helps your income tax return, not the county bill |
| Longtime owner in Cook County | Check the Longtime Homeowner Exemption | Very few households qualify |
If your application gets denied
- Ask for the exact reason in writing. Find out whether the problem was age, income, ownership, occupancy, a missing document, or a missed deadline.
- Ask which tax year the office used. Many denials come from filing for the wrong year or using the wrong income year.
- If the problem is the assessed value, not the exemption, ask about the county Board of Review process and then the Illinois Property Tax Appeal Board. PTAB only reviews assessments after the county Board of Review acts.
- If the problem is title, trust, or estate paperwork, call a legal aid office. In Cook County, the Center for Disability & Elder Law Housing Preservation Program works on real estate tax and title issues.
- If a tax sale is close, do not wait for a callback. Call the Senior HelpLine and your county treasurer the same day.
Backup moves if the main program fails or is delayed
- Appeal the assessed value if the home seems over-assessed. That is separate from exemptions.
- Check for other overlapping relief such as the Homestead Exemption for Persons with Disabilities or veterans exemptions if they fit your household.
- Get ready for next year now. If you missed this year’s freeze or deferral deadline, build the file now and ask the county when the next cycle opens.
Local resources
- Illinois Department on Aging: The Senior HelpLine and Area Agencies on Aging locator can connect seniors and caregivers to local help. Senior HelpLine: 1-800-252-8966. Relay: 711 TRS.
- Illinois Department of Revenue: For property tax credit questions, the current Publication 108 page lists 1-800-732-8866, 217-782-3336, and TTY 1-800-544-5304.
- Cook County help: The Cook County Assessor exemptions page lists phone help at 312-443-7550 and includes Spanish video help.
- Free legal help in Cook County: The Center for Disability & Elder Law serves low-income seniors and people with disabilities in Chicago and suburban Cook County. Phone: 312-376-1880.
- Northern and central Illinois legal help: Prairie State Legal Services lists its Low Income Tax Clinic at 1-855-829-7757.
- Central and southern Illinois legal help: Land of Lincoln Legal Aid serves eligible low-income and senior residents, and it also operates a mobile justice clinic.
Other options if benefits are not enough
- Paid property tax appeal help: Some seniors hire appeal firms or attorneys. Ask in writing how fees are charged and who keeps any refund.
- Private borrowing: Home equity loans, refinance products, and reverse mortgages can be costly. Compare them against the 3% Senior Tax Deferral Program first.
- Estate and title clean-up: If the real problem is bad title, a missing deed, or a deceased owner, legal help may matter more than another exemption form.
Frequently asked questions
Does the Illinois Senior Freeze stop my whole property tax bill from going up?
No. The Senior Freeze protects the equalized assessed value, not the full bill. If your local tax rate rises, or if you add improvements to the home, the bill can still increase.
Can I get the Senior Citizens Homestead Exemption and the Senior Freeze at the same time?
Often, yes. In practice, many eligible seniors receive the basic homeowner exemption, the senior exemption, and the Senior Freeze together. Counties process them differently, though, so always confirm with your local office using the state county contact list.
Is there an Illinois senior property tax rebate or circuit-breaker in 2026?
We could not verify an active statewide senior circuit-breaker rebate on the current Illinois Department of Revenue property tax relief page. Be careful with older articles. Illinois did issue a one-time 2022 property tax rebate, but that was not set up as an ongoing annual senior program.
What if my property taxes are paid through my mortgage escrow?
You can still receive county exemptions, and you may still qualify for the Illinois Property Tax Credit. If you need the parcel or PIN or a copy of the bill, the Illinois county contact page says you may also get it from your lender or county assessor.
What if I bought or sold the home recently?
County exemption rules often turn on who owned and occupied the home on January 1, while the state property tax credit has its own tax-return rules. For example, Publication 108 says you generally cannot use the property tax on a home you bought during the current tax year to figure that year’s credit.
Do I have to reapply every year?
Some programs do, and some do not. The Senior Freeze must be filed each year, and the Senior Tax Deferral Program is annual too. But counties vary on the basic senior exemption. Cook auto-renews the Senior Exemption, while Peoria says the senior homestead application is required in the first year only.
Where do I appeal if I think the assessment is wrong?
Start with your county appeal process, usually through the Board of Review. After that, you may be able to appeal to the Illinois Property Tax Appeal Board. But the Board only reviews assessments and has no authority to grant exemptions.
Resumen en español
En Illinois, la ayuda para impuestos de propiedad para personas mayores normalmente no llega como un solo cheque. La mayoría de los dueños de casa mayores deben revisar primero la General Homestead Exemption, la Senior Citizens Homestead Exemption y, si tienen ingresos bajos, la Senior Freeze. También existe el Senior Tax Deferral Program, pero ese programa es un préstamo con gravamen sobre la vivienda.
Las reglas cambian mucho por condado. Use la lista oficial de contactos del condado para encontrar la oficina del assessor. Si necesita ayuda en español o ayuda local para una persona mayor, llame a la Senior HelpLine del Illinois Department on Aging al 1-800-252-8966. En Cook County, la página de exenciones del assessor también ofrece materiales en español.
No confunda la Senior Freeze con el Senior Tax Deferral. La Freeze puede proteger el valor tasable, pero no congela toda la factura. El Deferral puede dar alivio inmediato de efectivo, pero después hay que pagar. Además, muchos dueños de casa todavía pueden reclamar el Illinois Property Tax Credit en su declaración estatal.
About This Guide
This guide uses official federal and state sources, along with other high-trust nonprofit and community resources mentioned in the article.
Editorial note: This guide is produced based on our Editorial Standards using official and other high-trust sources, regularly updated and monitored, but not affiliated with any government agency and not a substitute for official agency guidance. Individual eligibility outcomes cannot be guaranteed.
Verification: Last verified 22 March 2026, next review 22 July 2026.
Corrections: Please note that despite our careful verification process, errors may still occur. Email info@grantsforseniors.org with corrections and we respond within 72 hours.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. It is not legal, financial, disability-rights, immigration, veterans-benefit, tax-preparation, or government-agency advice. Program rules, deadlines, and availability can change, and county practices can differ sharply. Confirm current details directly with the official agency or county office before you act.
