6715 North Laporte Avenue

Property details·Lincolnwood, Cook County, Illinois·10-33-434-017

4Beds
2Baths
2,159Sq ft
0.24Acres
1942Built
$610KLast sale

Location

Address

6715 North Laporte Avenue

Lincolnwood, IL 60712

Cook County

Parcel ID

10-33-434-017

Coordinates

42.003038, -87.751465

Building details

Bedrooms
4
Bathrooms
2
Square feet
2,159
Year built
1942
Fireplace
Yes
Garage
2-car A

Land & lot

Lot size
0.24 acres
Land area
10,560 sq ft
Subdivision
Lincolnwood Towers First
Neighborhood
102
Land use code
1001

Tax & assessment

CategoryAmount
Tax value$13,285.44
Market value$530,000
Assessed value$53,000
Building value$355,760
Land value$174,240

Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.

County context

Cook County 2026 Insights

Cook County, Illinois: A Tale of Two Markets Inside America's Second-Largest County

Cook County is not a place you summarize easily. Home to Chicago and 130-plus municipalities stretching from Evanston to the southern suburbs, it contains more people than 28 individual U.S. states — and its housing market is a study in controlled contradiction. Prices are rising fast, inequality runs deep, and yet by coastal standards, this is one of the most affordable major metropolitan counties in the country.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Price$335,000Slightly above national median of $320,000
YoY Price Change+7.8%Well above inflation, accelerating fast
Rent Burden Rate45.1%Far above the 30% healthy threshold
Gini Index0.503Among the highest inequality scores in the Midwest

The Price Gap That Tells the Real Story

The spread between Cook County's 10th and 90th percentile home prices — $146,600 to $818,700 — spans more economic worlds than most counties in America. A bungalow in Harvey and a greystone in Lincoln Park are technically in the same county, but they operate in entirely different real estate universes. That $672,000 gap is the fingerprint of a place that has never finished sorting itself out geographically or economically.

The average sale price of $454,049 running nearly $120,000 above the median is a classic signal of high-end transactions pulling the mean upward — Chicago's Gold Coast, Winnetka, and Wilmette luxury sales doing what luxury sales always do to aggregate figures.

Renters in Crisis, Owners in Luck

For Cook County's 42.5% renter population, the situation is quietly alarming. A rent burden rate of 45.1% — meaning nearly half of renters spend more than 30% of their income on housing — sits well above the national threshold that economists flag as distressed. Nearly a quarter of renters (23.4%) face severe rent burden, paying over half their income to keep a roof over their families. With a child poverty rate of 17.7%, these pressures cascade across generations.

Meanwhile, homeowners are watching equity grow at 7.8% annually — a gain that, in absolute dollar terms, flows overwhelmingly to the wealthier, more stable northern suburbs and lakefront neighborhoods.

An Inequality Reading That Stands Out

A Gini coefficient of 0.503 places Cook County in rare company nationally. For context, most developed nations consider anything above 0.4 to signal serious inequality. The county's income distribution reflects Chicago's persistent geographic sorting: world-class professional salaries in the Loop and tech-adjacent corridors sit alongside neighborhoods where SNAP enrollment runs above the county's already-elevated 15.2% rate.

The 6.9% unemployment rate — noticeably above the national average — is another indicator that the post-pandemic labor recovery has been uneven here, particularly in communities south and west of the city center.

What the Transit Numbers Reveal

Only 13% of workers use public transit — surprisingly modest for a county with one of the nation's most extensive 'L' train and Metra systems. It reflects the suburban reality: most of Cook County's land area is car-dependent, and that 56.2% drive-alone rate tells the story of Schaumburg and Oak Lawn as much as Chicago does.


FAQs

What makes Cook County unique in the U.S. real estate market? Cook County offers a rare combination of true urban density, massive suburban diversity, and price points that remain accessible compared to peer metros like Los Angeles or New York — while simultaneously hosting some of the Midwest's most expensive zip codes. The result is one of the widest intra-county price ranges in the nation, making it a market that functions differently depending entirely on which municipality you're standing in.

Is Cook County affordable for renters? Not comfortably. Despite home prices that look modest by coastal standards, Cook County's renters face serious affordability pressure — nearly one in four spends more than half their income on rent. The median rent of $1,381 may sound manageable, but against the county's income distribution, it creates real strain for lower-income households, particularly in the city of Chicago itself where rental demand remains intense.

Is now a good time to buy in Cook County? The 7.8% year-over-year price appreciation suggests the market has momentum, and with homeownership at 57.5% — still a majority — there's a broad base of stable ownership. But the price-to-income math is tightening, and buyers who waited through the pandemic are facing a market that has moved meaningfully against them. The lower end of the market, below $200,000, remains competitive precisely because it represents the last affordable entry point in a county that is quietly becoming less so.

Local market context

Our database includes 5,947 properties in Lincolnwood.

Properties in Lincolnwood average $605,598, reflecting a competitive market.

The price per square foot of $281 reflects strong property valuations in this area.

Home prices in Lincolnwood are 33% higher than the Cook County average.

MetricLincolnwoodCook Countyvs County
Average Price$605,598$453,882+33%
Avg Sq Ft2,1581,744+24%
Price/Sq Ft$281$260+8%
Properties5,9471,952,887-100%

Nearby properties

Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.

Frequently Asked Questions About Lincolnwood, IL Real Estate

What is the average home price in Lincolnwood, IL?

The average home price in Lincolnwood, IL is $605,598, based on analysis of 5,947 properties in our database.

How many properties are tracked in Lincolnwood, IL?

Our database includes 5,947 properties in Lincolnwood, IL, providing comprehensive market coverage.

What is the price per square foot in Lincolnwood, IL?

The average price per square foot in Lincolnwood, IL is $281. This is calculated from an average home price of $605,598 and average size of 2,158 square feet.

What is the average home size in Lincolnwood, IL?

Homes in Lincolnwood, IL average 2,158 square feet, with an average price of $605,598.

How does Lincolnwood, IL compare to other cities in Cook County?

Lincolnwood, IL is one of many cities in Cook County, IL with property data available. Browse other cities in the county to compare market conditions and pricing.

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