Calumet Heights · Cook County · IL
Active listings
About the community
Calumet Heights is Community Area 48 on Chicago's Far Southeast Side, roughly 11 miles southeast of the Loop, bounded by 87th Street on the north, South Chicago Avenue on the east, and railroad lines on the west and south along 95th Street. The community takes its name from the nearby Calumet River and from a ridge of Niagara limestone that runs through the area, the high ground early settlers called Stony Island. Its housing stock leans toward mid-century single-family homes, including brick bungalows, ranches, and split-levels, with roughly three-quarters of homes being single-family as of 1990 and four of five of those owner-occupied. The community's most distinctive section is Pill Hill, an affluent enclave of spacious homes perched on the Stony Island ridge that became a favored address for African American doctors from the nearby South Chicago Community Hospital. Calumet Heights is a stable, predominantly Black, middle and upper-middle class community, well suited to buyers who want a quiet, owner-occupied residential neighborhood with durable masonry homes and yards. Today the community is home to about 11,645 residents across 1.77 square miles.
Community Area 48
Calumet Heights is Chicago Community Area 48 on the Far Southeast Side, about 11 miles southeast of the Loop.
About 11,645 residents
The community had a population of 11,645 across 1.77 square miles as of 2023.
Median household income
The community's median household income was reported at $49,923.
Predominantly owner-occupied
As of 1990, nearly three-quarters of homes were single-family, and four of five of those were owner-occupied.
Median sale price near $208K
In October 2025 the median sale price in Calumet Heights was about $207,950, per Redfin.
Walk Score of 62
Calumet Heights is somewhat walkable with a Walk Score of 62, the 88th most walkable Chicago neighborhood.
Metra Electric line
The Metra Electric District line runs along the western border, with the 87th Street (Woodruff) station serving the area.
Pill Hill on the ridge
Pill Hill is the more affluent enclave atop the Stony Island ridge, named for doctors from the nearby South Chicago Community Hospital.
Daily life in Calumet Heights centers on a quiet, residential grid of well-kept single-family homes with private yards and built-in one-car garages, a community with little commercial development inside its borders and a strong owner-occupant character. The housing reflects mid-century tastes, well-preserved brick ranches, split-levels, and bungalows, and Pill Hill in particular is known for its grand homes on the ridge. Everyday errands and culture draw on assets just at the edges of the community, such as the Avalon Branch of the Chicago Public Library at 8148 South Stony Island Avenue, a 14,000-square-foot branch that opened in 2006 and serves Calumet Heights along with several neighboring community areas. Walk Score rates Calumet Heights as somewhat walkable with a Walk Score of 62, the 88th most walkable of Chicago's neighborhoods.
Getting around is anchored by a mix of rail, bus, and expressway access. The Metra Electric District line runs along the community's western edge, with the 87th Street (Woodruff) station providing a direct rail commute toward downtown Chicago, and Walk Score reports good transit with about six bus lines passing through the area, giving it a Transit Score of 58. Drivers reach the rest of the region quickly via the Chicago Skyway and Interstate 90 corridor along the community's eastern and southern edges. For green space, residents have Jesse Owens Park at 8800 South Clyde Avenue, an 18.4-acre park with a 2009 fieldhouse, ball diamonds, tennis courts, and an Olympic-themed playground, plus the much larger lakefront Calumet Park just to the southeast at 9801 South Avenue G, which spans 181.70 acres with a beach, boat launch, and fieldhouse.
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.
Jesse Owens Park
An 18.4-acre park within Calumet Heights with a 2009 green fieldhouse, four ball diamonds, tennis courts, and an Olympic-themed playground, named for the four-time 1936 Olympic gold medalist.
Calumet Park and Beach
A 181.70-acre lakefront park just southeast of the community with a Lake Michigan beach, boat launch, fieldhouse, and a Lake Shore Model Train exhibit.
Bronzeville Children's Museum
Located at 9301 South Stony Island Avenue in Calumet Heights, this is the first and only African American children's museum in the United States.
Avalon Branch, Chicago Public Library
A 14,000-square-foot branch at 8148 South Stony Island Avenue, opened in 2006, that serves Calumet Heights and neighboring community areas with free internet, programs, and collections.
Calumet Beach
A Lake Michigan swimming beach at Calumet Park with restrooms, food concessions, and an ADA-accessible beach walk, open from the Friday before Memorial Day through Labor Day.
Jesse Owens Nature Garden
A nature garden surrounding the green-roofed Jesse Owens fieldhouse at 8800 South Clyde Avenue, part of the park's sustainable design features.
How Calumet Heights got here
The land that became Calumet Heights was swampy and largely unoccupied through much of the nineteenth century, with travelers passing through but few settling. In the 1870s the Calumet and Chicago Canal and Dock Company acquired property in what was then the Township of Hyde Park, and in 1881 the New York, Chicago & St. Louis railroad built rail yards at the area's western border, prompting a small settlement to grow nearby. A new limestone quarry near 92nd Street drew further settlement, and in 1887 real-estate developer Samuel E. Gross purchased part of the company's land to create the Calumet Heights subdivision. Chicago annexed Hyde Park Township in 1889, and the adjacent Stony Island and South Chicago Heights subdivisions followed in 1890 and 1891. The geographic feature the community is named for, the stony ridge beginning around 91st Street and Constance Avenue, was once an island in glacial Lake Chicago.
Residential growth was slow for decades, then surged: the population more than doubled from 3,248 in 1920 to 7,343 in 1930, with many Polish, Italian, Irish, and Yugoslavian residents, before the postwar years brought renewed building when the 92nd Street quarry was filled in and lined with small homes. Population grew to 9,349 in 1950 and surged to 19,352 in 1960. Between 1960 and 1980 the community underwent a major change, as African American families who first arrived in the early 1960s grew to about 45 percent of the population by 1970 and more than 86 percent by 1980, and unlike many areas that lost wealth to white flight, Calumet Heights remained solidly middle class. The more affluent Pill Hill neighborhood, said to be named for the many doctors from the nearby South Chicago Community Hospital who owned spacious homes atop the Stony Island ridge, earned its reputation for quality residences by the 1970s.
The questions buyers actually ask
The questions I get most from buyers shopping Calumet Heights. 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.