Illinois · Painting · Free 2026 timeline estimator
How long does a painting take in Illinois?
Typical 2026 timeline: 5 weeks – 6.5 weeks start-to-finish, averaging 5.8 weeks. That includes Illinois's permit lead-time — frequently the single biggest variable between states.
Phase-by-phase breakdown
Design — 4 days
Schematic + construction-ready drawings, materials selection, sub-trade sourcing.
Permit lead-time — 4 weeks Illinois
Plan review, zoning check, inspector scheduling. Where the state-by-state variance comes from.
Construction — 4 days–2 weeks
Demo + structural + finishes + inspections. Roughly state-agnostic.
Punchlist — 0 days
Final inspection, touch-ups, paperwork, certificate-of-occupancy if structural.
Illinois permit speed
slow
4–8 weeks typical — plan permit lead-time before signing a contract
Total — Painting in Illinois
5 weeks – 6.5 weeks
Midpoint: 5.8 weeks · pad ~15% for change-orders / materials delays
Before you sign — Illinois contractor + permit context
Illinois has no statewide general contractor license — licensing is handled at the city/county or trade-specific level. Electrical, plumbing, roofing licensed at state level. General contracting licensed city-by-city; Chicago requires a separate GC license + bond.
Compare painting in Illinois across all lenses
4 sister tools · same project, same stateBefore you sign, run the 3 other state-aware lenses for the same project.
FAQ — Painting timeline in Illinois
How long does a painting take in Illinois in 2026?
A typical painting in Illinois runs 5 weeks – 6.5 weeks start-to-finish. That breaks down as 4 days of design, 4 weeks of permit lead-time, 4 days–2 weeks of construction, and 0 days of punchlist. Permit lead-time is the single biggest source of variance between states.
Why is the permit step so long in Illinois?
Illinois has one of the slower residential permit markets in the U.S. — 4–8 weeks typical — plan permit lead-time before signing a contract The median in Illinois is significantly above the U.S. average of about 2 weeks, driven by staffing constraints, plan-review backlogs, and stricter energy-code reviews. Build the lead-time into your contract: don't sign a fixed start date until you have the permit in hand.
Can I overlap design and permitting to save time on my painting?
Partially. Schematic design (the rough layout) can happen before permits, but most Illinois jurisdictions require construction-ready drawings (engineered if structural changes are involved) before they'll accept a permit application. Realistic compression is design + permit = 4.5 weeks, not design × 2 in parallel. The build phase is the only phase that can't be compressed below the materials lead-time floor.
What can delay my Illinois painting beyond this estimate?
Three common late-stage delays: (1) failed inspections — every state requires multiple, and a single failure can add 1–2 weeks. (2) change-orders — every "while you're at it…" decision typically adds 0.5–1 week. (3) materials lead-time — semi-custom cabinets in Illinois typically run 6–10 weeks, often the binding constraint on kitchens. To protect your timeline: lock specs before signing, accept "no change-order" rules for the final 25% of the build, and order long-lead items in week 1.