Lake View Township Valuation Reports 2021

Reassessment notices for properties in Lake View Township were mailed to property owners on November 22, 2021. Appeals may be filed until December 23, 2021.

For details on Lake View's reassessments, real estate market data, and assessment methodology, read the full reports below.

The Cook County Assessor’s Office released initial assessments of residential and commercial properties in the township of Lake View. This is the seventh of eight townships in the City of Chicago to be reassessed in 2021 under the leadership of Assessor Fritz Kaegi, who took office after Chicago’s last reassessment in 2018.

Increases in assessments reflect a robust market. Assessments, under Illinois law, should reflect overall market values. The first step to ensuring property owners pay only their fair share of property taxes—without needing to file appeals to correct inaccurate assessments—is to make sure assessments of all property types accurately reflect the real estate market.

Changes in assessed value in Lake View Township

The following chart represents the increase in total assessed value in residential and commercial properties in Lake View Township. The numbers below are prior to adjustments that may come after appeals.

Property Group 2018 (Board of Review Final) 2021 (pre-CCAO appeals, pre-Board of Review) Increase in total Assessed Value
Residential (Class 2) $3,573,510,401 $4,070,806,569 14%
All other classes $1,127,371,664 $1,681,415,191 49%
Total $4,700,882,065 $5,752,221,760 22%


Note: percentage increases are total increases for that category, not average property increases.

How assessments relate to property taxes

It is important to understand that an increase in a property's assessment does not lead to the same increase in an individual property’s tax bill. A property’s share of taxes depends on reassessments throughout all of Chicago, from homes in Chatham and Jefferson Park to commercial properties in Little Village and the Loop.

If the growth in assessed values elsewhere in Chicago outpaces the growth of an individual property’s assessment, that individual property’s share of property taxes could shrink despite its increase in property value. In 2018, properties in Lake View Township made up 9% of Chicago’s total assessed value.

Lake View Share Of AV

Property assessments in Chicago are used to apportion taxing district levies which pay for services such as schools, parks, libraries, and pensions. The Assessor does not set levies or tax rates. Also, increases in assessments do not necessarily increase the revenue received by taxing districts.

The graph to the left shows that in Lake View Township, there were increases in both residential and non-residential total assessed value. These increases also shifted Lake View's balance of residential and non-residential assessed value.

At the end of the 2018 reassessment cycle, 76% of Lake View Township’s total assessed value was residential, with the other 24% comprised non-residential and commercial multi-family properties.

The 2021 initial reassessed values have shifted this to 71% residential, and 29% non-residential and commercial multi-family properties.

These percentages may change at the final stage of assessment after appeals are processed by the Assessor's Office and by the Board of Review.

2021 assessments will affect the second installment property tax bill issued in late 2022.

Residential modeling reports

Property type 2021 Model Report Property count (approx.) 2020 Sales: # 2020 Sales: Range (bottom third, top third) 2021 Model: Estimated Market Range (bottom third to top third) 2021 Mailed Values: Estimated Market Range (bottom third to top third)
Single-family homes
 
Assessment Report 12,100 599 $720k to $1.1M $670k to $1.0M 700k to 1.1M
Multi-family (six units or less) 
 
Assessment Report 10,800 304 $630k to $820k $650k to $910k 700k to 940k
Condos (class 2-99)
 
Assessment Report 59,700 3,272 $240k to $410k $200k to 340k 150k to 300k

Residential assessments are based on several factors, including location, age, neighborhood school boundaries, square footage, construction material, and the number of bedrooms and bathrooms.

The Estimated Market Values produced by the model are reviewed by our analysts, neighborhood by neighborhood. If warranted, our analysts refine the Estimated Market Values predicted by the model before the value is mailed to the homeowner. 

Commercial reports

Lake View Township's commercial properties contain about:

  • 1,967 commercial apartment buildings
  • 12 hotels
  • 218 large office buildings
  • 144 industrial buildings
  • 358 retail shopping centers and other special commercial properties (mixed-use retail, storage, car washes, warehouses, etc.)

 

View reports for each commercial property's valuation methodology by clicking the button below.

Commercial Valuations

In the three years since 2018's reassessment, commercial real estate sale prices and rents—therefore, estimated market values and assessed values—have grown overall from 2018 to 2021 for most property types.

In the last year, COVID-19 and associated shutdowns have had varying effects throughout Chicago. Hotels and retail properties are among the sectors with the largest declines since the onset of COVID, whereas large multifamily apartments, grocery stores, industrial buildings, and data centers have been stable or even met positive growth since the onset of COVID.

  • Market rents for apartments in Lake range from $875 to $4,300 a month. Market vacancy is between 5 and 6.7%.
    • Market values are estimated from $33k to $469k per unit.
    • Affordable housing figures are calculated separately and will be listed in the complete report.
  • Office buildings in Lake Township range in size from 1,620 to 435k in square footage and are assessed at $9 - $41 in rent per square foot with $5-15% market vacancy.
    • Estimated market values are $69-$420 per square foot.

The office's commercial assessment report will contain information about rents, expenses, and capitalization rates used by the Assessor's Office to determine assessments, including offices, hotels, industrial. and large multi-family apartments. For more on the Assessor's Office's commercial assessment methodology, read How Commercial Properties Are Valued.

Commercial Assessment Report

How residential assessments are calculated

Residential assessments are based on several factors, including location, age, neighborhood school boundaries, square footage, construction material, and the number of bedrooms or bathrooms.

In order to detect the many different ways that homes’ physical characteristics and locations impact sale prices over time, we design a range of statistical, algorithmic models, which are then tested to see how well they compare to actual databases of sale prices. analysts examine estimated market values for different property classes, neighborhood by neighborhood, to verify that the model has performed effectively and that values fall in a reasonable range.

Improvements to data and modeling used by the Assessor’s Office since 2018 have improved assessment accuracy, uniformity, and equity—for neighborhoods, and for individual homes.

How commercial assessments are calculated

Our office first determines a property’s use (office, retail, apartments, industrial, etc.) and group the property with similar or like-kind property types. Then we examine the income generated by the property such as rent or incidental income streams like parking or advertising signage. Next, we examine market-level vacancy based on location and property type. In addition, new construction that has not yet been leased is also considered. Finally, we look at expenses such as property taxes, insurance, repair and maintenance costs, property management fees, and service expenditures for professional services. Once we’ve been able to recreate a snapshot of a property’s income statement based on market data, we use a standard valuation metric called a “capitalization rate” to convert income to value. 

More information on how assessments are calculated can be found at the How Properties Are Valued page.

Events for Lake View Township homeowners

The Assessor's Office staff host virtual events to provide information and answer your questions about reassessments and appeals. See the full list.

Appeals

If the property characteristics listed on your assessment notice are incorrect, or if the estimated market value of your home is significantly more than what you believe your home could sell for in the current real estate market, you should file an appeal. The last date to file an appeal is printed on your notice. A good rule of thumb is this: If the property characteristics on this notice are correct and the estimated market value is within 10 percent of what you think your home is worth then it is unlikely that an appeal would change your property’s assessed value enough to significantly affect its property tax bill.

If you would like to file an appeal of your property's assessment, we encourage you to file online. The appeal deadline for Lake View Township is December 23, 2021.

For assistance with appeals, contact the CCAO's main office via phone, email, or social media. In-person visits are currently available by appointment.