Knowledge Base
Tutorials, guides, and videos to using Chicago Cityscape
Have a question you can't find the answer to? Request a guide
Have a question you can't find the answer to? Request a guide
Every quarter, Chicago Cityscape adds tens of thousands of property sale records for all property types in Cook County. It's easy to count and summarize the number of property transactions in any given municipality, Chicago community area, personally-drawn place, or near a specific address.
This Knowledge Base article will walk through how to
Our dataset starts in 2016 and is updated a few weeks after each quarter ends. The current period is shown beneath the "Property Sales" headings in both Address and Place Snapshots and at the top of the main Property Sales page.
Use the Property Sales Browser to find, review, and analyze property sales across Cook County. The map and data table show the 10 most recent sales (see screenshot 1). Use the dropdown menu below the table to show more transactions at once.
Screenshot 1
The five filters will narrow the results by municipality, sale date, sale price, property class, and street name or buyer or seller name. After changing any of the filters, click or tap the "Apply filters" button.
Screenshot 2
Next, browse the map and click on individual transactions or click the "next" button to see more sales.
Progressing, though, you can use the Property Sales filters (shown in the bottom of screenshot 2) to narrow your search for specific property types (based on the Cook County Assessor property classifications), a sale price range, specific sale dates, Chicago zoning district, and lot area.
To view details about a transaction, click on the "Property transaction details" link in the data table or a map marker's popup window. Scroll down to the "Read an individual property transaction" section to learn about the data points of each transaction.
When it comes to sale price, we recommend always searching for a minimum of $100 to ensure you're looking only at arms length transactions (sales between two unrelated parties). There are many $0 transactions which are transfers between family members and people placing a property in a trust.
The data can be exported by using one of the buttons next to "Download the data". The property sales data can be exported as CSV and used in spreadsheet applications, and it can be exported as GeoJSON and used in a GIS application.
Screenshot 3
On each individual property transaction page, you'll find the following summary and details (shown in screenshot 4):
Screenshot 4
The map showing similar transactions (see screenshot 5) finds sales with properties in the same property classification group, within 10 percent of the price, and up to one mile away. Review a list of all of the property classifications and their groups.
Screenshot 5
Did this guide answer your questions? Send us a question or comment on how we can improve this guide.