

Listings courtesy of Midwest Real Estate Data LLC. Information deemed reliable but not guaranteed.
All real estate listings displayed are provided through the IDX program of MRED LLC. Pricing, availability, taxes, and HOA fees are subject to change. Buyers should verify independently with the listing brokerage. Dibze fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act.
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Based on the most-saved listings on Dibze this month, renters in Chicago are gravitating toward full-service buildings in River North and Streeterville, mid-rise rentals in Fulton Market with in-unit laundry, and pet-friendly condos along the lakefront. Our editorial picks combine resident reviews, amenities, walk score, and price-per-square-foot to surface buildings worth a tour.
For a tailored list, save a few favorites and we'll suggest similar buildings in your shortlist neighborhoods within 24 hours.
Chicago's 77 community areas each have their own personality. River North offers a dense restaurant scene and high-rise rentals; Fulton Market trades on tech offices, rooftops, and warehouse-loft conversions; South Loop balances museum-campus access with newer condo towers; and Lincoln Park brings tree-lined streets and brownstone charm. Use the map filters to narrow by neighborhood and compare median rents side-by-side.
Within a 10-minute walk of most downtown listings you'll find Millennium Park and Cloud Gate, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Riverwalk, Navy Pier, Maggie Daley Park, and the Magnificent Mile. Lakefront trail access stretches 18 miles from Edgewater down through the South Loop.
The Chicago rental market spans every style: vintage walk-ups in Lakeview from $1,400/mo, mid-rise rentals in West Loop averaging $2,400/mo, and luxury high-rises in Streeterville commonly $3,500–$8,000/mo. Condos for rent (sourced from MRED participating brokerages) typically include parking, doormen, and in-unit laundry — and lease directly with the unit owner.
Most Dibze-listed buildings sit within a 6-minute walk of a CTA Blue, Red, Brown, or Green Line station. Divvy bike-share stations are densely placed across the Loop and North Side. Driving is common but parking is at a premium — filter for "Parking" to see only buildings that include or offer it on-site.
Dibze surfaces both purpose-built apartment buildings and individually-listed condos in one search — so you can compare a high-rise with concierge against a brownstone with a backyard without bouncing between three sites. Every listing shows real-time pricing, virtual tours where available, and direct contact with the leasing team or listing broker.
What's the average rent in Chicago? As of Q2 2026, the median 1-bedroom rents for $2,180/mo, with downtown neighborhoods averaging $2,700–$3,200/mo.
Are utilities included? Most apartments include water and trash; electric, gas, and internet are usually tenant-paid. Condo rentals vary by owner.
What about pets? 68% of listings on Dibze are pet-friendly. Use the Pets toggle in the filter bar to narrow.
Save your favorite listings, schedule tours directly, and get notified when new units match your criteria. Most renters on Dibze tour 3–5 buildings before signing — and our concierge can shortlist buildings that fit your budget, commute, and must-haves for free.
Editorial guides covering moving to Chicago, best neighborhoods for young professionals, navigating the lakefront, what to ask on a tour, and renter rights under the Chicago RLTO.
Beyond downtown, Dibze covers Logan Square, Andersonville, Uptown, Bridgeport, Pilsen, Hyde Park, Edgewater, Bucktown, Wicker Park, Ravenswood, Avondale, and more. Every neighborhood page includes median rent, walk score, school ratings, and a curated map.