Lincoln Square · Cook County · IL
Active listings
About the community
Lincoln Square sits on Chicago's North Side, roughly seven miles north of the Loop, bounded by Bryn Mawr and Peterson Avenues to the north, Montrose Avenue to the south, Ravenswood Avenue to the east, and the Chicago River to the west. Its heart is the German-rooted shopping district where Lincoln, Lawrence, and Western Avenues meet, anchored by a pedestrian plaza and long-running businesses like Merz Apothecary and Gene's Sausage Shop. The housing stock leans toward private residences and small apartment buildings, with a mix of single-family homes, vintage greystones and condos, and classic Chicago two-flats and bungalows that filled in the old farmland after the streetcars and the Ravenswood Elevated arrived. Commuters love the CTA Brown Line, which puts the Western and Rockwell stations within easy reach of downtown. With its family-friendly feel, strong schools, and genuinely walkable main street, Lincoln Square suits buyers who want neighborhood character and transit access without giving up green space.
North Side location
Lincoln Square is a Chicago community area about seven miles north of the Loop, bounded by Bryn Mawr and Peterson, Montrose, Ravenswood, and the Chicago River.
German heritage district
Historically a heavily German-influenced neighborhood, it still hosts institutions like Merz Apothecary, Lutz Cafe, and the DANK Haus German American Cultural Center near Lincoln Avenue.
Homes and small flats
The housing stock consists of private residences and small apartment buildings, including bungalows and two-flats that filled in the area's former farmland.
Very walkable
Lincoln Square earns a Walk Score of 85, rated Very Walkable, meaning most errands can be accomplished on foot.
Brown Line access
With a Transit Score of 60, the neighborhood is served by the CTA Brown Line, including the Western and Rockwell stations toward the Loop.
Median sale price around 500K
The median sale price of a Lincoln Square home was about 500,000 dollars in late 2025, in a competitive market with homes selling in around six weeks.
Welles Park
The roughly 16-acre Welles Park sits at Lincoln and Montrose with an indoor pool, fitness center, tennis and pickleball courts, and a European-style gazebo for concerts.
Folk-music landmark
The Old Town School of Folk Music, founded in 1957 and one of the largest community arts schools in the country, anchors the arts scene on Lincoln Avenue.
Daily life in Lincoln Square revolves around its walkable main street and its parks. The neighborhood earns a Walk Score of 85 and a Transit Score of 60, with hundreds of restaurants, bars, and coffee shops in easy reach, and the CTA Brown Line at Western and Rockwell gives commuters a direct ride toward downtown. The pedestrian plaza near Lincoln, Lawrence, and Western makes the commercial core feel like a town square. It is an easy place to live car-light, run errands on foot, and still reach the Loop without a long drive.
The community area is home to roughly 40,000 residents and leans toward families and professionals, with a median household income around 81,000 dollars and a well-educated population. Families are served by a slate of Chicago Public Schools and by ample green space. Welles Park offers a pool, fitness center, and a gazebo used for summer concerts, while River Park, along the Chicago River south of Foster, anchors the start of the North Shore Channel Trail. Between the schools, parks, and festivals like the summer Square Roots Festival, Lincoln Square delivers a genuinely neighborhood-scaled lifestyle on the North Side.
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.
Old Town School of Folk Music
Founded in 1957 at 4544 N. Lincoln Ave., one of the largest nonprofit community arts schools in the country, offering concerts, classes, and lessons across many genres.
Welles Park
A roughly 16-acre park at Lincoln and Montrose with an indoor pool, fitness center, tennis and pickleball courts, and a European-style gazebo used for outdoor concerts.
Davis Theater
An independent cinema at 4614 N. Lincoln Ave. that first opened in 1918 and was revived in 2016 as a historic community movie house.
Gene's Sausage Shop & Delicatessen
A European gourmet market at 4750 N. Lincoln Ave. known for house-made sausages, imported specialties, and a seasonal rooftop beer and wine garden.
River Park
A large riverside park where the North Branch and North Shore Channel meet, offering a pool, fields, and the start of the North Shore Channel Trail.
Lincoln Square Pedestrian Plaza
The Old World style pedestrian mall developed in 1978 at the heart of the Lincoln Avenue shopping district, lined with shops, cafes, and a European-imported lantern.
How Lincoln Square got here
Lincoln Square began as farm country. In 1836 the Swiss immigrant Conrad Sulzer bought property near present-day Montrose and Clark, and truck farmers of mostly German and English descent followed, driving their produce in wagons down the old Little Fort Road, now Lincoln Avenue, to market in Chicago. The celery crop grew so widely that local growers proudly called the area a celery capital, and the Budlong brothers opened a successful pickle factory in 1857 before expanding into the flower business with Budlong Greenhouses in 1880. As electric street railways arrived in the 1890s and the Ravenswood Elevated opened in 1907, the farmland gradually filled in with bungalows, two-flats, and small apartment buildings.
The neighborhood took its modern identity from its commercial corridor. In 1925 the Chicago City Council named the area Lincoln Square in honor of Abraham Lincoln, and a prominent statue of the president was erected in 1956 at the intersection of Lincoln, Lawrence, and Western Avenues. Beginning in 1949 the local chamber of commerce promoted the district's commercial identity, and in 1978 it developed the Lincoln Square pedestrian mall, evoking an Old World flavor with European-style shops and a lantern imported from Hamburg, Germany. While the neighborhood remains known for its German heritage and businesses, its storefronts today reflect a broader mix that includes Thai, Latino, and other communities drawn by its family-friendly character.
The questions buyers actually ask
The questions I get most from buyers shopping Lincoln Square. 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.