Illinois Tax Incentives for Construction Projects

Illinois offers a layered set of tax incentive programs that can materially reduce the cost of construction projects across commercial, industrial, residential, and public-use categories. These programs operate through the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity (DCEO), the Illinois Department of Revenue, and local taxing bodies, each with distinct eligibility criteria, application procedures, and compliance obligations. Understanding which incentives apply to a specific project type — and how they interact with permitting, bonding, and financing structures — is a core component of pre-development planning.


Definition and scope

Tax incentives for Illinois construction projects are statutory or regulatory mechanisms that reduce, defer, or credit tax obligations in exchange for qualifying investment, job creation, geographic location, or project purpose. These mechanisms operate at three levels: state income tax, local property tax, and transactional taxes such as sales tax on construction materials.

Scope of this page: This page covers Illinois state-level and locally administered tax incentive programs that apply to construction and development activity within Illinois. Federal incentive programs — including the federal Historic Tax Credit and the federal New Markets Tax Credit — fall outside the geographic scope of this resource, though they frequently stack with Illinois programs. Programs exclusive to Cook County or the City of Chicago may have additional requirements layered on top of state frameworks; those local variations are addressed only where they interact with state-level rules. This page does not constitute legal or tax advice.

Primary program categories:

  1. Enterprise Zone construction sales tax exemptions — Exemptions on building materials purchased for qualifying projects within a designated Enterprise Zone
  2. Class 6b and Class 7 Cook County property tax incentives — Cook County–specific classifications reducing assessed values for industrial and commercial construction
  3. EDGE Tax Credit (Economic Development for a Growing Economy) — Income tax credits tied to job retention and creation during qualifying construction/expansion projects, administered by DCEO
  4. River Edge Redevelopment Zone credits — Tax credits for construction in designated riverfront redevelopment zones (Elgin, Rockford, Aurora, Peoria, East St. Louis)
  5. Historic Preservation Tax Credit — Illinois income tax credit equal to 25% of qualifying rehabilitation expenditures (Illinois SHPO / DCEO)
  6. Affordable housing construction credits — Credits tied to projects meeting Illinois Housing Development Authority (IHDA) certification criteria, discussed further at Illinois Affordable Housing Construction Programs

How it works

Each incentive program follows a discrete process. The Enterprise Zone program is illustrative of the general structure:

  1. Zone designation confirmation — The project site must fall within one of Illinois's approximately 97 designated Enterprise Zones. Zone boundaries are maintained by DCEO and local zone administrators.
  2. Project certification — The contractor or developer submits a project certification application to the local Enterprise Zone administrator prior to purchasing materials.
  3. Exemption certificate issuance — Once certified, the administrator issues an Illinois Department of Revenue Form EZ-1 or equivalent, which contractors present to suppliers to purchase qualifying building materials exempt from the 6.25% Illinois state sales tax (Illinois Department of Revenue, Enterprise Zone information).
  4. Recordkeeping — Contractors must retain invoices, certificates, and project documentation for a minimum period aligned with the zone's audit window, typically 4 years.
  5. Annual zone compliance — Zone administrators file annual reports with DCEO confirming that certified projects met investment and employment benchmarks.

For income-based credits such as EDGE, the sequence is different: the developer or employer negotiates a credit agreement with DCEO before project completion, with credits earned annually against Illinois income tax liability as job thresholds are met.

The Historic Preservation Tax Credit operates through the Illinois State Historic Preservation Office (SHPO), which certifies that rehabilitation work meets the Secretary of the Interior's Standards for Rehabilitation before credits are allocated. The 25% credit rate applies to certified expenditures (Illinois SHPO).

Construction projects with environmental components — including brownfield redevelopment — may also qualify for the Brownfields Redevelopment Grant and Tax Abatement programs administered through DCEO and the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (IEPA). These intersect with Illinois environmental regulations for construction.


Common scenarios

Scenario 1: Industrial build-out in a designated Enterprise Zone
A manufacturer constructing a 120,000-square-foot facility in a Rockford Enterprise Zone can apply for the sales tax exemption on building materials, reducing material costs by 6.25% of total qualifying purchases. If the project also creates 50 or more full-time jobs, the manufacturer may separately qualify for an EDGE credit agreement.

Scenario 2: Historic commercial rehabilitation in downtown Peoria
A developer rehabilitating a certified historic structure in a River Edge Redevelopment Zone may stack the Illinois Historic Preservation Tax Credit (25% of qualifying expenditures) with the River Edge credit, which provides an additional 12% state income tax credit on qualifying rehabilitation costs (DCEO River Edge Program). Stacking eligibility requires separate certification for each program.

Scenario 3: Affordable multifamily construction using IHDA tax credits
A developer constructing a 60-unit affordable housing complex in Chicago may utilize Low-Income Housing Tax Credits (LIHTC) allocated by IHDA in conjunction with local tax increment financing (TIF). Compliance with IHDA certification requirements is separate from and parallel to the Illinois construction permits and approvals process.

EDGE vs. Enterprise Zone — key contrast:
The Enterprise Zone exemption is transactional (applied at point of material purchase) and does not require a negotiated agreement, whereas the EDGE credit is prospective and agreement-based, with credits earned post-completion based on ongoing employment performance. A project may qualify for both if it meets each program's independent criteria.


Decision boundaries

Not every construction project qualifies for every incentive. The following boundaries determine eligibility:


References

📜 2 regulatory citations referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log

Explore This Site