Lincoln Park Chicago Real Estate & Luxury Homes for Sale

Lincoln Park Real Estate Chicago: Your Complete Guide

Lincoln Park real estate Chicago occupies a uniquely privileged position in the city's residential landscape — a neighborhood whose Walk Score of 97 (Walker's Paradise), Bike Score of 91 (Biker's Paradise), and Transit Score of 82 (Excellent Transit) quantify what anyone who has lived here already knows: Lincoln Park is one of the most genuinely livable urban neighborhoods in all of America. The 1,200-acre Lincoln Park itself — one of the largest urban parks in the United States, running the full length of the neighborhood along the Lake Michigan shoreline — gives this community its name, its character, its geography, and the particular quality of daily life that makes Lincoln Park real estate consistently one of Chicago's most sought-after markets. Current active listings on this page run from $699,000 to $9,995,000, with a concentration of extraordinary luxury properties on Burling Street, Kenmore Avenue, Orchard Street, and Dayton Street that represents some of the most significant urban residential real estate in the Midwest.

Millie Rosenbloom serves Lincoln Park buyers and sellers from her office at 2526 N. Lincoln Ave — on the neighborhood's own main commercial corridor, embedded in the community she represents. Her market leadership — higher sale-to-list prices and faster market times — reflects the genuine local expertise that Lincoln Park's competitive market rewards.

Welcome to Lincoln Park, Chicago, IL

Lincoln Park is the neighborhood that makes Chicago believers out of skeptics — a community where a 1,200-acre lakefront park, a world-class zoo, DePaul University's energy, and a residential grid of Victorian and Greystone homes create a quality of urban life that rivals any neighborhood in New York, Boston, or San Francisco at price points that consistently represent value by comparison.

Lincoln Park is one of Chicago's most celebrated neighborhoods — a community on the city's Near North Side bounded by the 1,200-acre Lincoln Park to the east, Diversey Parkway to the north, the Chicago River's North Branch to the west, and North Avenue to the south. The neighborhood encompasses one of the most complete and most livable urban environments in any American city: the lakefront park with its beaches, bike paths, and the Lincoln Park Zoo (one of the few remaining free admission zoos in the United States); the residential grid of Victorian, Greystone, and newer construction homes on the numbered streets east of Halsted; the Armitage Avenue and Fullerton Avenue commercial corridors with their concentration of independent restaurants, boutiques, and galleries; and the DePaul University campus that contributes a young, educated energy to the community.

With 67,831 residents, a median age of 33, an average individual income of $113,478, and a population density that reflects the neighborhood's genuine urban character, Lincoln Park's demographic profile is unmistakably that of Chicago's most accomplished and most educated young professional community — a neighborhood where the young finance professional, the established architect, the DePaul faculty member, and the families who have raised three generations on the same block all coexist in a social environment that is genuinely diverse across income levels, life stages, and backgrounds.

Walk Score 97 | Bike Score 91 | Transit Score 82

Lincoln Park real estate Chicago's most compelling practical differentiator from virtually every other luxury real estate market in the United States is its walkability — and the three scores that quantify it tell an extraordinary story. Walk Score 97 (Walker's Paradise) means that daily errands are achievable on foot without a car. Bike Score 91 (Biker's Paradise) means that cycling is viable as daily transportation for the enormous majority of trips a Lincoln Park resident might make. Transit Score 82 (Excellent Transit) means that the CTA's Red Line and Brown Line elevated stations, along with multiple bus routes, provide reliable public transit access throughout the day.

For buyers evaluating Lincoln Park real estate Chicago against comparable luxury markets — Winnetka, Kenilworth, and the North Shore suburbs; the Gold Coast and its peer Chicago luxury neighborhoods; and comparable urban neighborhoods in other major cities — the walkability differential is the most significant practical quality-of-life advantage Lincoln Park delivers. No car needed for groceries, restaurants, coffee, the gym, the park, or the beach. The Lincoln Park Zoo is a 15-minute walk from most neighborhood addresses. Lake Michigan's beaches are a 10-minute walk or bike ride. This is not merely convenient; for buyers who have spent careers and families in car-dependent suburbs, it represents a fundamental reorientation of daily life toward the pleasures of the city.

Lincoln Park Real Estate Chicago: Understanding the Neighborhood

The Gold Coast Border & Lakefront — East Lincoln Park

The eastern section of Lincoln Park — the blocks between Clark Street and the lakefront park — contains the neighborhood's most historically significant and most architecturally prestigious residential streets. Burling Street is Lincoln Park's most coveted residential address: a tree-canopied block of Victorian and contemporary estate homes where current active listings include 1853 N Burling St ($8,995,000, 7 bed/6 bath, 8,691 sq.ft.), 1838 N Burling St ($7,750,000, 5 bed/5 bath, 6,031 sq.ft.), and 1865 N Burling St ($6,950,000, 6 bed/7 bath, 6,000 sq.ft.) — three properties on the same street representing a combined value of over $23M. Orchard Street and Dayton Street provide comparable addresses with similarly significant properties: 1878 N Orchard ($7,500,000, 6 bed/8 bath, 9,512 sq.ft.) and 1703 N Dayton ($5,750,000 active under contract, 6 bed/8 bath, 8,200 sq.ft.).

Kenmore Avenue & The Institutional Edge

The blocks along Kenmore Avenue and the streets adjacent to DePaul's Lincoln Park campus represent a different character of Lincoln Park real estate Chicago — larger lot sizes, more institutional-scale properties, and the particular energy of a residential street adjacent to a major university. The current listing at 2026 N Kenmore Avenue — $9,995,000, 10 beds/10 baths, 13,400 sq.ft. — is the most significant single residential property in this guide, a compound of extraordinary scale and ambition on a street that captures the neighborhood's paradox: urban density and residential grandeur coexisting on the same block.

Armitage Corridor & Central Lincoln Park

The central section of Lincoln Park — the residential streets between Fullerton and Diversey, east of Racine and west of Clark — is where the neighborhood's Victorian and Greystone residential fabric is most intact and most celebrated. This is the Lincoln Park of narrow-fronted row houses with arched windows and decorative brickwork, of pocket gardens behind wrought iron fences, and of the community-scale social life organized around Armitage Avenue's restaurants, wine bars, and boutiques. The rental at 1936 N Hudson Avenue ($15,000/month, 5 bed/6 bath, 4,800 sq.ft.) reflects the premium that this character commands even in the temporary market.

The Park & Lakefront

The 1,200-acre Lincoln Park itself — running the full north-south length of the neighborhood along Lake Michigan — is more than a park; it is the defining geographic and lifestyle feature of Lincoln Park real estate Chicago. The Lincoln Park Zoo (free admission, among the oldest zoos in the country), North Avenue Beach, Fullerton Beach, the Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum, the Chicago History Museum, and the lakefront bike and running path that extends the full length of Chicago's shoreline all anchor a public amenity landscape that gives Lincoln Park residents access to institutions of national significance within walking distance of their front doors.

Lincoln Park Real Estate Chicago: What Buyers Need to Know

The Lincoln Park real estate Chicago market is one of the most consistently premium in the city — sustained by the neighborhood's Walk Score 97 walkability, the lakefront park access, the housing stock's architectural quality, the DePaul University community, and the sustained demand from Chicago's most accomplished residents who have evaluated the full city and identified Lincoln Park's specific combination of urban lifestyle and residential character as their destination.

Property Types

Luxury single-family estate homes — the most significant Lincoln Park real estate; Burling Street, Orchard Street, Dayton Street, and Kenmore Avenue; current listings from $5,750,000 to $9,995,000; properties of 6,000–13,400 sq.ft. on the neighborhood's most prestigious residential blocks

Townhomes — Lincoln Park's most active luxury product type for buyers who want single-family living at a more accessible price point; the $950,000 listing at 1843 N Hudson Ave (3 bed/3 bath) is a representative entry-level townhome

Condominiums — a significant and active segment; from entry-level units to full-floor luxury condominiums in the neighborhood's boutique buildings; the $699,000 listing at 623 W Drummond Place (2 bed/3 bath) represents an accessible condo entry point

Rental — the premium rental market; 1936 N Hudson Avenue at $15,000/month (5 bed/6 bath, 4,800 sq.ft.) reflects what top-tier Lincoln Park single-family rental commands

Millie's Market Performance

Millie Rosenbloom leads the Lincoln Park real estate Chicago market with higher sale-to-list prices and faster market times than the market average — a performance metric that reflects the advantage of deep neighborhood expertise, strong buyer and seller networks, and the marketing capabilities that Lincoln Park's most significant properties require. Her office at 2526 N. Lincoln Ave is physically within the neighborhood she represents, providing the daily market intelligence that remote or generalist agents cannot access.

Browse current Lincoln Park listings:Lincoln Park homes for sale

• Lincoln Park luxury homes

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What to Love About Lincoln Park Real Estate Chicago

  • Walk Score 97 (Walker's Paradise) — daily errands achievable on foot without a car; the most walkable neighborhood in Chicago outside of the Loop; a genuine car-optional lifestyle available from virtually every Lincoln Park address

  • Bike Score 91 (Biker's Paradise) — among the most bikeable urban neighborhoods in the United States; the Lakefront Trail, the neighborhood's flat terrain, and the bike lane infrastructure make cycling a genuinely viable daily transportation mode

  • The 1,200-acre Lincoln Park — one of the largest urban parks in the United States; the Lincoln Park Zoo (free admission), North Avenue Beach, Fullerton Beach, the Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum, and the Chicago History Museum all within the park's boundaries

  • Lake Michigan — the beach, the lakefront path, the view, and the summer culture of a neighborhood whose eastern edge is one of America's great urban waterfronts

  • Architectural legacy — Burling Street, Orchard Street, and the Victorian residential blocks of central Lincoln Park contain some of Chicago's most significant 19th-century residential architecture; properties of a character and irreplaceable quality that no new construction can replicate

  • DePaul University's energy — the intellectual and social vitality of one of Chicago's most prominent universities; events, programming, and the young professional community that DePaul contributes to the neighborhood's social fabric

  • Armitage Avenue and Fullerton Avenue dining and retail — the independent restaurant, wine bar, and boutique corridors that give Lincoln Park its neighborhood commercial identity

  • CTA Red Line and Brown Line access — multiple elevated train stations providing direct downtown access in 10-20 minutes; exceptional transit for a neighborhood of this residential quality

  • Millie Rosenbloom's neighborhood-embedded expertise — operating from 2526 N. Lincoln Ave within the neighborhood; higher sale-to-list prices and faster market times than the Chicago market average

Life in Lincoln Park, Chicago

Living in Lincoln Park real estate Chicago means organizing daily life around walking, cycling, and the lakefront in a way that is genuinely different from any other form of urban living in the American Midwest. The morning run on the Lakefront Trail with Lake Michigan on one side and the skyline on the other. The Saturday visit to the Lincoln Park Zoo with children who see the lions every week as a matter of course. The bike ride to the farmers market at the park's southern end. The evening walk to Armitage Avenue for dinner at one of the independent restaurants that give the neighborhood's commercial strips their character.

The community's median age of 33 and average income of $113,478 reflect a neighborhood of young and accomplished professionals who have chosen Lincoln Park as their Chicago address — the law firm associate who wants to walk to the CTA, the tech executive who moved from San Francisco and finds Lincoln Park's walkability familiar, the established Chicagoan who has lived in the neighborhood for thirty years and has watched it evolve without losing its essential character. These are people who value urban density when it is executed beautifully, and Lincoln Park's residential blocks — the greystone row houses, the Victorian double-deckers, the 19th-century single-families now selling for $7M-$10M on Burling Street — represent that execution at its finest.

Dining, Shopping & Entertainment in Lincoln Park, Chicago

Dining

Lincoln Park's dining scene is one of Chicago's most consistently celebrated — a neighborhood that has long attracted serious culinary talent and maintained the independent restaurant culture that is the hallmark of great urban neighborhoods. Alinea, the three-Michelin-star restaurant that has for years ranked among the best in the world, anchors Lincoln Park's culinary reputation at its most ambitious. Boka, L2O's legacy, and the concentration of seriously regarded independent restaurants on Armitage Avenue, Halsted Street, and the Fullerton corridor give the neighborhood a culinary depth unusual for a residential community of its size.

Shopping

Armitage Avenue between Halsted and Racine is Lincoln Park's most beloved shopping corridor — a concentration of independent boutiques, specialty food shops, home goods stores, and the particular commercial culture of a neighborhood main street that has resisted chain retail while maintaining genuine commercial vitality. The Saturday Green City Market in Lincoln Park (May through October) is one of Chicago's most celebrated farmers markets, drawing buyers from across the city for locally grown produce, artisan food products, and the social ritual of market day in the park.

Entertainment & Culture

Lincoln Park's cultural infrastructure is extraordinary for a residential neighborhood: the Lincoln Park Zoo, the Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum, the Chicago History Museum, and the Steppenwolf Theatre Company — one of the most celebrated ensemble theater companies in American theatrical history — all within the neighborhood's boundaries. The Steppenwolf's productions, which have launched actors and playwrights of national significance, give Lincoln Park a cultural identity that extends far beyond its geography.

Schools in Lincoln Park, Chicago

  • Lincoln Park is served by Chicago Public Schools, with several well-regarded magnet and neighborhood school options serving families in the neighborhood.

  • Lincoln Park High School — the neighborhood's signature public high school; a selective enrollment campus with one of the strongest academic programs in Chicago Public Schools; the school's International Baccalaureate program and its performing arts conservatory reflect the neighborhood's intellectual and cultural character

  • Francis W. Parker School — one of Chicago's most prestigious private schools, a PK-12 independent school on Belden Avenue that has educated generations of Chicago's most accomplished families

  • Latin School of Chicago — another of the city's most distinguished private schools, serving grades PK-12 on North Dearborn Street at the Gold Coast border

  • DePaul University — Lincoln Park's university anchor; the largest Catholic university in the United States by enrollment; the university's Lincoln Park campus contributes to the neighborhood's intellectual energy and provides residents with access to cultural programming, athletic events, and the Lutz Hall performing arts venue

Millie Rosenbloom can advise on school options and enrollment processes for any specific Lincoln Park address.

Lincoln Park Real Estate Chicago: Location and Neighboring Communities

Key Distances

Chicago Loop / downtown: approximately 4-5 miles south — 15-20 minutes by CTA Red or Brown Line; 20-30 minutes by car

O'Hare International Airport: approximately 20 miles northwest — 45-60 minutes by CTA Blue Line from downtown

Midway Airport: approximately 13 miles southwest — 40-55 minutes by CTA Orange Line

Gold Coast: immediately south — 5-10 minutes walk or bike ride

Old Town: immediately southwest — 10-15 minutes walk

Lakeview: immediately north — 10-15 minutes walk or bike ride

Millie Rosenbloom's Chicago Coverage

Millie Rosenbloom serves buyers and sellers across Chicago's most prestigious Near North Side neighborhoods:

• Gold Coast neighborhood guide — Chicago's most prestigious residential neighborhood

• Near North Side neighborhood guide — the broader Near North Side corridor

• River North neighborhood guide — the gallery and luxury condo district

• Gold Coast homes for sale — Gold Coast listing search

• Gold Coast luxury homes — Gold Coast luxury tier

• Near North Side homes for sale — Near North Side listings

• River North homes for sale — River North listings

• Streeterville homes for sale — the lakefront condo corridor

• Loop homes for sale — downtown Chicago living

Frequently Asked Questions: Lincoln Park Real Estate Chicago

What makes Lincoln Park real estate Chicago so desirable?

Lincoln Park real estate Chicago is consistently among the city's most sought-after for the combination of factors that this guide documents: Walk Score 97 (Walker's Paradise) and Bike Score 91 (Biker's Paradise) making daily life genuinely car-optional; the 1,200-acre Lincoln Park with its zoo, beaches, and the Lakefront Trail; an architectural legacy of Victorian and Greystone homes that cannot be replicated; DePaul University's intellectual energy; the Armitage Avenue and Fullerton Avenue dining and shopping corridors; and CTA access to the Loop in 15-20 minutes. It is the rare Chicago neighborhood that delivers luxury residential quality alongside genuine urban walkability.

How much does Lincoln Park real estate Chicago cost?

Lincoln Park real estate Chicago spans an exceptional range. Entry-level condominiums are available from approximately $699,000 (623 W Drummond Place, 2 bed/3 bath). Townhomes enter around $950,000 (1843 N Hudson Ave, 3 bed/3 bath). The luxury single-family market — Burling Street, Orchard Street, Dayton Street, and Kenmore Avenue — currently includes active listings from $5,750,000 (1703 N Dayton, 6 bed/8 bath, 8,200 sq.ft.) to $9,995,000 (2026 N Kenmore, 10 bed/10 bath, 13,400 sq.ft.). Millie Rosenbloom provides detailed market analysis for any specific property type or block.

What is the Lincoln Park Zoo and why does it matter for real estate?

The Lincoln Park Zoo is one of the few remaining free-admission zoos in the United States — a 35-acre zoological garden within the Lincoln Park nature preserve that has operated continuously since 1868, making it one of the oldest zoos in North America. For residents of Lincoln Park real estate Chicago, the Zoo is not a tourist destination visited occasionally; it is a neighborhood amenity accessible by foot from most addresses. Families with young children consistently cite the Zoo's walkability — and the ability to spend an hour there on a weekday afternoon as a casual outing — as one of the most surprising and most valued qualities of Lincoln Park daily life.

What is the Burling Street luxury market in Lincoln Park?

Burling Street is Lincoln Park real estate Chicago's most coveted residential address — a tree-lined block in the neighborhood's eastern section where Victorian and contemporary estate homes have sold at some of the highest per-square-foot prices in Chicago residential history. Current active listings on Burling Street include three properties between $6,950,000 and $8,995,000, representing a combined value exceeding $23M on a single block. The street's combination of scale, architectural quality, privacy (Burling is a relatively quiet one-way street), and proximity to the park and lake creates a residential setting that is genuinely unique in Chicago.

Why work with Millie Rosenbloom for Lincoln Park real estate Chicago?

Millie Rosenbloom operates from 2526 N. Lincoln Ave — on the neighborhood's own main commercial corridor, physically embedded in the Lincoln Park market she represents. Her performance metrics — higher sale-to-list prices and faster market times than the Chicago market average — reflect the advantage of genuine neighborhood expertise, strong buyer and seller networks built through years of Lincoln Park-specific practice, and the marketing capabilities that $7M-$10M residential properties require. For Lincoln Park luxury real estate Chicago, the agent whose office is on Lincoln Avenue and who leads the market in performance is the obvious choice.

Lincoln Park Real Estate Chicago's Market Leader

Our intentions are equipped with actions, which is why I lead the market with higher sale-to-list prices and faster market times. Whether you are buying your first Lincoln Park home, searching for a Burling Street estate, evaluating Lincoln Park real estate Chicago for the first time as a relocation buyer, or ready to sell a property you have loved for years — Millie Rosenbloom is the agent whose neighborhood knowledge, market performance, and Lincoln Park-embedded office make every other choice a compromise.

Overview for Lincoln Park, IL

67,831 people live in Lincoln Park, where the median age is 33 and the average individual income is $113,478. Data provided by the U.S. Census Bureau.

67,831

Total Population

33 years

Median Age

High

Population Density Population Density This is the number of people per square mile in a neighborhood.

$113,478

Average individual Income

Around Lincoln Park, IL

There's plenty to do around Lincoln Park, including shopping, dining, nightlife, parks, and more. Data provided by Walk Score and Yelp.

97
Walker's Paradise
Walking Score
91
Biker's Paradise
Bike Score
82
Excellent Transit
Transit Score

Points of Interest

Explore popular things to do in the area, including Luna Cafe, Dorothy's Can Do Cafe, and La Sandwichera.

Name Category Distance Reviews
Ratings by Yelp
Dining 4.59 miles 17 reviews 5/5 stars
Dining 3.99 miles 5 reviews 5/5 stars
Dining 2.77 miles 74 reviews 4.9/5 stars
Dining · $ 4.12 miles 7 reviews 4.9/5 stars
Dining 2.66 miles 4 reviews 5/5 stars
Active 1.83 miles 85 reviews 5/5 stars

Demographics and Employment Data for Lincoln Park, IL

Lincoln Park has 33,145 households, with an average household size of 2. Data provided by the U.S. Census Bureau. Here’s what the people living in Lincoln Park do for work — and how long it takes them to get there. Data provided by the U.S. Census Bureau. 67,831 people call Lincoln Park home. The population density is 36,660.11 and the largest age group is Data provided by the U.S. Census Bureau.

67,831

Total Population

High

Population Density Population Density This is the number of people per square mile in a neighborhood.

33

Median Age

48 / 52%

Men vs Women

Population by Age Group

0-9:

0-9 Years

10-17:

10-17 Years

18-24:

18-24 Years

25-64:

25-64 Years

65-74:

65-74 Years

75+:

75+ Years

Education Level

  • Less Than 9th Grade
  • High School Degree
  • Associate Degree
  • Bachelor Degree
  • Graduate Degree
33,145

Total Households

2

Average Household Size

$113,478

Average individual Income

Households with Children

With Children:

Without Children:

Marital Status

Married
Single
Divorced
Separated

Blue vs White Collar Workers

Blue Collar:

White Collar:

Commute Time

0 to 14 Minutes
15 to 29 Minutes
30 to 59 Minutes
60+ Minutes

Schools in Lincoln Park, IL

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Primary Schools ()
Middle Schools ()
High Schools ()
Mixed Schools ()
The following schools are within or nearby Lincoln Park. The rating and statistics can serve as a starting point to make baseline comparisons on the right schools for your family. Data provided by the U.S. Census Bureau.
Type
Name
Category
Grades
School rating
Lincoln Park
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