Retail & Restaurant Space Chicago

From the Magnificent Mile to thriving neighborhood corridors, find the perfect location for your retail concept or restaurant. Expert site selection and lease negotiation to help you launch successfully in Chicago’s dynamic market.

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4.7%Chicago Citywide Retail Vacancy
29.3%Magnificent Mile Vacancy (Improving)
0%Southport Corridor Vacancy
76.9%Retail Construction Down Since Pandemic

Chicago Retail & Restaurant Space: Quick Facts for 2025

Market Overview: Chicago’s retail market shows stark contrasts. Citywide retail vacancy is only 4.7%, with neighborhood corridors like Southport at 0% and Armitage at 4.3%. Downtown is recovering—the Magnificent Mile improved from 34% to 29.3% vacancy, with experts projecting 25% by year-end.

Rental Rates by Corridor: Magnificent Mile runs $150-400/SF, Loop/State Street $40-150/SF, Fulton Market $80-200/SF, Southport $45-80/SF, Armitage $40-70/SF, and Damen $35-60/SF. Neighborhood locations offer strong foot traffic at a fraction of downtown costs.

Restaurant Considerations: Chicago lost 496 restaurants in H1 2025, but this is an improvement from 689 closures in H1 2024. Expect buildout costs of $200-400K for quick service, $400-800K for casual dining, and $800K-2M+ for fine dining. Successful operators are finding prime locations at favorable terms.

Chicago Restaurant Interior

2025 Chicago Retail & Restaurant Market

Chicago’s retail landscape presents a tale of two markets. Downtown corridors like the Loop (29.78% vacancy) and Magnificent Mile (29.3%) continue recovering from pandemic impacts. However, neighborhood retail strips are thriving—Southport boasts 0% vacancy while Armitage dropped to 4.3%.

For restaurants, the environment is challenging but opportunity-rich. Chicago lost 496 restaurants in H1 2025, creating available spaces for new concepts. Food and labor costs remain elevated, but strong locations with proper capitalization are succeeding.

#1
Chicago Net Retail Absorption (Q1 2025)
2.85M SF
Magnificent Mile Inventory
25%
Mag Mile Target Vacancy by 2025 End
12%
Projected 2030 Mag Mile Vacancy

Market Reality Check: Restaurant Closures Continue

Chicago lost 496 restaurants in H1 2025 (improving from 689 in H1 2024). River North has been hit especially hard with notable closures including Hard Rock Cafe after 40 years. However, these closures create opportunities—well-capitalized operators with strong concepts are finding prime locations at favorable terms. We help you navigate this market wisely.

Chicago Retail Corridors

Current vacancy rates and market dynamics across Chicago’s prime retail districts.

Magnificent Mile

Vacancy: 29.3% (down from 34%)

Recovering with new tenants like Harry Potter Shop Chicago, Mango, and Uniqlo returning. South end near river thriving; north end around Water Tower Place still challenged.

Rent: $150-400/SF (ground floor)

Loop / State Street

Vacancy: 26.06%

Gap Factory lease signals value-retail positioning. Google Thompson Center opening (2026) expected to catalyze recovery. 449 empty storefronts downtown.

Rent: $40-150/SF

Fulton Market / West Loop

Vacancy: Tight Market

Chicago’s hottest restaurant district. Alinea Group, major chef concepts. High rents but proven foot traffic. Premium for ground-floor with outdoor seating.

Rent: $80-200/SF

Southport Corridor

Vacancy: 0%

Lakeview’s premier retail strip. High-income demographics, excellent transit, strong food & beverage scene. Virtually impossible to find space—premium market.

Rent: $45-80/SF

Armitage (Lincoln Park)

Vacancy: 4.3% (down from 6.4%)

Boutique retail heaven between Sheffield and Halsted. Strong foot traffic, affluent demographics, mix of local and national retailers.

Rent: $40-70/SF

Damen (Bucktown/Wicker Park)

Vacancy: 12.9% (down from 23.9%)

Dramatic improvement. Creative retail, independent restaurants, art galleries. Strong millennial draw. Good availability for right concepts.

Rent: $35-60/SF

Restaurant Space by Concept Type

Typical space requirements and considerations for different restaurant formats.

Quick Service / Fast Casual

1,200-2,500
Square Feet
  • ✓ High foot traffic essential
  • ✓ Drive-thru if suburban
  • ✓ Limited hood requirements
  • ✓ Lower buildout costs
  • ✓ $200-400K typical buildout

Casual Dining

3,000-5,000
Square Feet
  • ✓ Bar component often key
  • ✓ Patio/outdoor a plus
  • ✓ Full kitchen infrastructure
  • ✓ Parking or transit access
  • ✓ $400-800K typical buildout

Fine Dining

4,000-8,000
Square Feet
  • ✓ Premium location critical
  • ✓ High-end finishes required
  • ✓ Full commercial kitchen
  • ✓ Private dining capability
  • ✓ $800K-2M+ buildout

Bar / Lounge

2,000-4,000
Square Feet
  • ✓ Liquor license availability
  • ✓ Entertainment district
  • ✓ Soundproofing needs
  • ✓ Late-night zoning
  • ✓ $300-600K typical buildout

Key Considerations for Retail & Restaurant Leases

Critical factors we evaluate to protect your investment.

Use Restrictions & Exclusives

  • Ensure your concept isn’t restricted by existing tenant exclusives
  • Negotiate your own exclusive use clause
  • Review co-tenancy requirements carefully
  • Understand radius restrictions for additional locations

Buildout & Permits

  • Verify grease trap / hood exhaust feasibility
  • Confirm electrical capacity (restaurants need 400A+)
  • Check liquor license availability and moratoriums
  • Understand permit timeline (3-6 months Chicago)

Financial Structure

  • Negotiate percentage rent thresholds carefully
  • Understand CAM charges and caps
  • Request tenant improvement allowance ($50-150/SF)
  • Consider rent abatement during buildout

Location Factors

  • Foot traffic counts and patterns
  • Parking availability (critical for suburban)
  • Visibility and signage rights
  • Delivery access and logistics

Downtown vs. Neighborhood: A Comparison

Strategic considerations for location selection.

FactorDowntown / Mag MileNeighborhood Corridors
Rent Range$100-400/SF$35-80/SF
Vacancy26-30% (higher availability)0-13% (tight markets)
Customer BaseTourists, office workers, visitorsLocal residents, neighborhood regulars
Traffic PatternWeekday lunch heavy, weekend touristsMore consistent daily traffic
Buildout CostsHigher (code, complexity)Generally lower
Lease TermsMore negotiable currentlyLess negotiable in hot corridors
ParkingLimited, expensiveStreet parking, more accessible
Best ForHigh-volume, tourist-driven conceptsCommunity-focused, repeat customer models

Frequently Asked Questions

Is now a good time to open a restaurant in Chicago?+
It depends on your concept and capitalization. Yes, there are favorable lease terms available due to closures, and prime locations that wouldn’t have been available pre-pandemic are now accessible. However, operating costs (food, labor) remain elevated. Successful openings require strong concepts, adequate capital reserves (12-18 months operating costs), and experienced operators. We can help you evaluate specific opportunities realistically.
What’s happening with the Magnificent Mile?+
The Mile is in active recovery. Vacancy dropped from 34% to 29.3% in 2024—the first year-over-year improvement in a decade. New tenants include Harry Potter Shop Chicago and Mango. The southern section near the river is strongest; the north end around Water Tower Place remains challenged. Experts project 25% vacancy by year-end 2025 and 12% by 2030. It’s becoming a more value-focused corridor with experiential retail.
What are typical buildout costs for restaurants?+
Restaurant buildouts in Chicago typically run: Quick Service: $200-400K, Casual Dining: $400-800K, Fine Dining: $800K-2M+. Key variables include existing infrastructure (hood, grease trap, HVAC), permit requirements, and finish level. “Second generation” restaurant spaces with existing infrastructure can save $100-300K. We help identify these opportunities and negotiate TI allowances ($50-150/SF is achievable) to offset costs.
How do neighborhood corridors compare to downtown?+
Neighborhood corridors like Southport (0% vacancy), Armitage (4.3%), and Damen (12.9%) are outperforming downtown locations. Rents are 50-80% lower, customer bases are more consistent (less dependent on office workers), and buildout complexity is typically lower. The tradeoff: much less availability in hot corridors. Downtown offers more space options but requires more capital and tolerance for current market uncertainty.
What should I know about percentage rent?+
Retail landlords often want percentage rent (typically 5-8% of gross sales above a “breakpoint”). For restaurants, this can significantly impact profitability if set wrong. Key negotiations: set breakpoints at realistic sales levels (not optimistic projections), exclude catering and delivery from calculations, cap total rent at a reasonable ceiling. In today’s market, many landlords are flexible on percentage rent terms to secure tenants.

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