Every Chicago-area senior community must hold an active IDPH license — and Illinois publishes the record. Here's how to pull it at idph.illinois.gov, read inspection findings, and spot red flags before you sign.
By Patricia Nowak, CDP · May 22, 2026
A senior care license is the legal floor: it confirms the community is authorized to operate and is subject to state inspection. In Illinois, assisted living and shared housing establishments are licensed by the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) under the Assisted Living and Shared Housing Act (210 ILCS 9) and 77 Ill. Adm. Code 295. Nursing homes are licensed separately under the Nursing Home Care Act (210 ILCS 45). Both are inspected by IDPH, and the findings are public.
A community operating without a current, active license is a serious problem, and residents there are at risk. Every Chicagoland facility — whether in Cook, DuPage, Kane, Lake, Will, or McHenry County — is inspected by the same state regulator, which makes verification straightforward: there's one agency to check with, not several. Reading the record before you sign is the single most protective step a family can take.
Start at the IDPH website, idph.illinois.gov, and use the Health Care Facilities and Programs directory to search for the community by name or location and confirm its license type and current status. For nursing homes specifically, Illinois also publishes a Nursing Home Report Card, which compiles inspection results, staffing levels, and violation history in a more consumer-friendly format. Between the licensure directory and the report card, families can confirm a facility is licensed and review its inspection history.
When you read an inspection record, look for the date of the last survey and any repeat citations in areas like medication management, resident rights, staffing, elopement or wandering prevention, and abuse or neglect. Repeat citations in the same category across successive inspection cycles signal a systemic problem, not a one-time slip. Weigh the most serious findings — those involving resident harm, safety, or abuse — most heavily. A single minor paperwork citation is very different from a repeated pattern of care failures.
A license that is conditional, provisional, or subject to enforcement action means IDPH identified compliance problems serious enough to act on — a significant warning sign that deserves a direct explanation before you place a loved one there. A community that won't show you its current license, or becomes defensive when you ask about inspection findings, is telling you something.
Illinois gives families direct channels to report concerns. The IDPH nursing home complaint hotline is 1-800-252-4343. If you suspect abuse, neglect, or financial exploitation of an older adult living in the community, Illinois Adult Protective Services can be reached at 1-866-800-1409. As a dementia care practitioner, I always pull the IDPH record before recommending any community — and I read the actual citations, not just a summary. A free local advisor who works Chicago-area facilities regularly can check the IDPH directory and report card, interpret the findings in plain language, and flag anything that should give a family pause before signing.
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