Bucktown · Cook County · IL
Active listings
About the community
Bucktown sits on Chicago's northwest side, directly north of Wicker Park and a few miles northwest of the Loop, in the eastern portion of the Logan Square community area. The Bucktown Community Organization describes its rough boundaries as Fullerton Avenue on the north, the Chicago River on the east, North Avenue on the south, and Western Avenue on the west. The name traces to the 1830s, when many of the area's Polish settlers raised goats, and because a male goat is a buck the area earned the nickname Bucktown, a translation of the Polish phrase for goat prairie. German tradesmen from Schleswig-Holstein arrived from 1848 and established the town of Holstein in 1854, which was annexed to Chicago in 1863. Today the neighborhood counts about 17,318 residents, and its housing stock blends sturdy century-old brick and frame workers cottages and greystones with newer construction and loft conversions. The 606, an elevated 2.7-mile rail trail centered on the Bloomingdale Trail, opened June 6, 2015 and runs through the neighborhood, knitting it together with Wicker Park, Humboldt Park, and Logan Square. Bucktown has a dense dining and nightlife scene with roughly 246 restaurants, bars, and coffee shops, and the CTA Blue Line serves the area at the Western and Damen stations with direct service to downtown and O'Hare. In March 2026, Bucktown homes sold for a median of about 698,000 dollars.
Community area and location
Bucktown is on Chicago's northwest side in the eastern part of the Logan Square community area, just north of Wicker Park.
Population
The neighborhood has about 17,318 residents within its rough boundaries.
Walk Score
Bucktown scores 93 for walkability, with a Transit Score of 73 and a Bike Score of 94, ranking among the most walkable neighborhoods in Chicago.
Median home price
Homes sold for a median of roughly 698,000 dollars in March 2026, after a median of about 34 days on market.
The 606 and Bloomingdale Trail
The elevated 2.7-mile rail trail opened June 6, 2015 and runs through Bucktown, connecting four neighborhoods and four ground-level parks.
Dining and nightlife
The neighborhood has about 246 restaurants, bars, and coffee shops, with residents able to walk to roughly ten within five minutes.
Transit
The CTA Blue Line serves Bucktown at the Western and Damen stations, running around the clock with direct service to downtown and O'Hare.
Shopping
Damen Avenue is the area's upscale retail corridor, lined with boutiques, eateries, and wellness businesses.
Daily life in Bucktown is highly walkable, with a Walk Score of 93 and roughly 246 restaurants, bars, and coffee shops, and residents can walk to about ten dining or coffee spots within five minutes. Damen Avenue serves as the upscale retail corridor, lined with boutiques, eateries, and wellness businesses, while longtime restaurants such as the French bistro Le Bouchon, open since 1993, anchor the dining reputation. Neighborhood bars like the Map Room at Hoyne and Armitage round out the nightlife. The 606 trail offers a car-free path for running, biking, and strolling, connecting to ground-level parks along its route.
Green space includes Holstein Park, a 3.25-acre park at 2200 North Oakley Avenue with a historic fieldhouse, pools, and ballfields, and Walsh Park at 1722 North Ashland Avenue, which marks the eastern end of the Bloomingdale Trail and was rebuilt with a new playground in 2019. The housing market reflects strong demand, with a median sale price of about 698,000 dollars in March 2026 and homes selling in a median of 34 days. The neighborhood draws a mix of professionals and families, with excellent Blue Line transit access via the Western and Damen stations supporting car-free commutes.
Neighborhoods
Browse the listings above. Detailed neighborhood pages with market stats, school info, and lifestyle take-downs land here as we roll them out.
Around town
A handful of the places people who live here actually use. Not a directory.
The 606 and Bloomingdale Trail
A 2.7-mile elevated greenway running through Bucktown for biking, running, and walking above the city streets.
Holstein Park
A 3.25-acre neighborhood park at 2200 North Oakley Avenue with a historic 1912 fieldhouse, pools, ballfields, and a playground.
Walsh Park
A park at 1722 North Ashland Avenue that anchors the eastern end of the Bloomingdale Trail, with a playground, athletic field, and dog-friendly area.
Le Bouchon
A cozy, Parisian-style French bistro on Damen Avenue serving classics like steak frites and escargot since 1993.
The Map Room
A travel-themed Bucktown beer bar at Hoyne and Armitage with a deep rotating tap and bottle list.
Damen Avenue Shopping District
Bucktown's upscale retail corridor, lined with boutiques, restaurants, and wellness businesses.
How Bucktown got here
Bucktown's settlement predates Chicago's 1833 incorporation as a town. Polish immigrants began arriving around 1831, and some settled in an area near the north branch of the Chicago River that later became known as Holstein. The neighborhood's name is generally believed to date to the 1830s, when many of the Polish settlers raised goats, and because a male goat is called a buck, the area earned the nickname Bucktown, a translation of the Polish phrase for goat prairie. Several hundred German immigrants, including tradesmen from Schleswig-Holstein, arrived in the winter of 1848, and in 1854 the town of Holstein was established, then annexed to the City of Chicago on February 13, 1863. From the 1870s to World War I, the area saw a major influx of largely Polish immigrants, and the stretch between the river and Milwaukee Avenue became known as part of Chicago's Polish Downtown.
Industry shaped the neighborhood as it grew. Clay was dredged near Webster Avenue for brickmaking, which intensified after the Great Chicago Fire, and the intersection of Armitage and Elston became an industrial hub. Beginning in the mid-1970s, a new wave of mostly middle-class, native-born residents was drawn by affordable housing, good transportation, and proximity to the Loop and lakefront, a trend that accelerated into gentrification through the 1990s and 2000s. A defining recent change came on June 6, 2015, when the first phase of The 606 opened, converting the disused, elevated Bloomingdale rail line into a 2.7-mile greenway and trail that runs through Bucktown and links it to neighboring communities.
The questions buyers actually ask
The questions I get most from buyers shopping Bucktown. If yours isn't here, text 815-355-0582, same-day reply.
Your local agent
Most agents will list anything. I focus on the places I actually know, and the things that move value here don't show up in the MLS write-up: which streets and buildings hold demand, what the HOA or assessments really cover, how the comps read once you account for condition and location, and where buyers consistently want to be.
When you're ready to tour or list, you want someone who has read the last 50 closed comps in this specific market, not a national average, and can tell you what they actually mean for your price. That's how I work. Text or call any time, and I'll give you a real take, not a brochure.
Thinking of selling?
Not a Zestimate. A real CMA from someone who's sold this neighborhood, knows the floor plan premiums, and can tell you which upgrades the buyer pool here actually pays for.