You are living in a Logan Square two-flat built in 1922, a Lincoln Park greystone converted to condos, a Bridgeport bungalow, or a Fulton Market loft build-out, and you need drywall work done. The challenge is not finding a contractor who does drywall. It is finding one who does it correctly for the specific type of building you are in, because Chicago’s housing stock is unusually diverse, and what that wall is actually made of varies significantly by neighborhood and decade of construction.
Illinois construction costs run approximately 15 percent above the national average in 2026, with skilled labor averaging around $58 per hour in the Chicago market. But before the cost conversation, there is a more fundamental question that affects everything: do you even have drywall, or do you have plaster?
The First Question Every Chicago Homeowner Needs to Answer: Plaster or Drywall?
How do you know whether your Chicago home has plaster walls or drywall?
A significant portion of Chicago’s residential buildings, particularly anything built before 1940 and a meaningful share of buildings from the 1940s through the mid-1950s, have original plaster walls, not drywall. Plaster walls are harder to the touch, produce a lower-pitched sound when knocked (drywall sounds slightly hollow), and often have a very smooth or slightly textured finish that is almost perfectly flat. Screws and nails go in with noticeably more resistance.
This distinction matters because plaster and drywall are different materials requiring different repair techniques, different finishing compounds, and in most cases, contractors with different areas of expertise. Plaster replacement in Chicago runs $1.45 to $2.90 per square foot, compared to $2 to $5 per square foot for drywall installation. A contractor who primarily works on new drywall and modern remodels may not produce clean, invisible repairs in original plaster, and a plaster specialist may not have the finishing equipment for smooth Level 5 drywall work in a newer building.
Most experienced Chicago contractors ask about wall type before bidding. A contractor who gives you a price on a repair in a pre-1945 North Side greystone without asking whether you have plaster or drywall has not assessed the job correctly.
Chicago’s Housing Stock by Neighborhood: What This Means for Your Project
Which Chicago neighborhoods have the oldest housing stock and the most complex drywall challenges?
Chicago’s neighborhoods fall into distinct tiers based on the decade of construction and the building types that dominate each area. Understanding where your building falls tells you what to expect from a contractor conversation.
| Neighborhood Area | Dominant Building Type | Typical Wall Material | Key Contractor Considerations |
|---|---|---|---|
| North Side: Lincoln Park, Lakeview, Bucktown, Wicker Park | Greystones, vintage condos, two-flats (1890s–1930s) | Original plaster in unrenovated units; drywall in rehabbed spaces | Plaster expertise critical; confirm wall material before contracting; ceiling heights often 9–11 ft |
| Northwest Side: Logan Square, Avondale, Humboldt Park, Pilsen | Two-flats, three-flats, worker cottages (1900s–1930s) | Original plaster frequently intact; some mixed plaster and drywall after past repairs | Mixed-material walls common; matching texture between old plaster and new drywall patches is technically demanding |
| Southwest and Northwest Bungalow Belt: Bridgeport, Portage Park, Irving Park, Garfield Ridge | Chicago bungalows (1910s–1950s) | Plaster in original construction; many units have been partially converted to drywall | Partial plaster-to-drywall transitions are common; attic finishing increasingly popular |
| Gold Coast, Streeterville, South Loop, River North | High-rise condos and vintage apartments (1920s–1980s) | Drywall in most post-1960 buildings; plaster in older pre-war buildings | Building management approval often required; high-rise access and logistics add cost; COI requirements typically higher |
| Fulton Market, West Loop, Logan Square new construction | New construction and gut-rehab buildings (2000s–present) | Standard drywall throughout; Level 5 smooth finish common in high-end units | Standard drywall contractor expertise sufficient; Level 5 finish skill important in high-end build-outs |
| North Shore suburbs: Evanston, Oak Park, Wilmette, Winnetka | Mix of older single-family (1920s–1960s) and newer construction | Plaster in pre-1960 homes; drywall in post-1960 | Separate municipal licensing requirements vary by suburb; verify contractor license in each jurisdiction |
The practical implication of this neighborhood context: when getting quotes for any repair or renovation in a pre-1960 Chicago building, confirm explicitly whether the contractor has experience working with original plaster, not just drywall. Ask to see examples of previous work in similar buildings.
The Asbestos Requirement Chicago Homeowners Often Miss
Does Chicago require asbestos testing before drywall work in older buildings?
Yes, and it is more stringent than most homeowners realize. Chicago requires asbestos inspections by inspectors licensed through the Illinois Department of Public Health before any renovation of pre-1981 buildings. This requirement applies before cutting, removing, or disturbing walls, ceilings, or flooring in any building constructed before that date, which encompasses an enormous portion of Chicago’s existing housing stock.
Joint compound and texture coatings used before 1977 commonly contained asbestos. In Chicago buildings, this means a plaster repair in an unrenovated 1920s greystone, a ceiling texture scrape in a 1960s bungalow, or a bathroom wall removal in a 1950s two-flat may all require testing before any contractor touches the wall. Testing costs $250 to $800 depending on the number of samples required, and results take 24 to 72 hours.
A Chicago contractor who proceeds with cutting or removing wall material in a pre-1981 building without addressing the asbestos testing requirement is not in compliance with city regulations, and the homeowner who authorized the work shares exposure to that violation. When getting quotes for any older Chicago building, ask each contractor how they handle the asbestos verification requirement. A legitimate contractor with experience in Chicago’s older building stock will have a clear process for this and will not be surprised by the question.
Chicago Contractor Licensing: What to Verify Before Hiring
What licenses should a Chicago drywall contractor carry?
Chicago has its own contractor licensing system through the City of Chicago Department of Buildings that is separate from state-level licensing. A contractor must hold a city-issued license to perform repair and renovation work in Chicago residential buildings, in addition to any trade-specific licenses for electrical, plumbing, and HVAC work that may be part of the larger project scope.
You can verify a contractor’s Chicago city license at the City of Chicago Data Portal. Enter the contractor’s name or license number to confirm active status. This verification takes less than five minutes and tells you whether the contractor is legally authorized to work in Chicago, is in good standing with the Department of Buildings, and has the required insurance on file with the city.
For work in Chicago’s suburbs, each municipality has its own licensing requirements. Evanston, Oak Park, and other North Shore communities maintain separate contractor registration systems. If your home is in the suburbs rather than within Chicago city limits, confirm the contractor’s license is valid in your specific municipality, not just in the city.
What Chicago Drywall Work Actually Costs in 2026
How do Chicago labor rates compare to national averages?
Chicago’s construction labor market is one of the strongest union markets in the country. This structure supports a well-trained, accountable workforce, but it also means labor rates for residential drywall work run above national averages. Drywall installation in Chicago runs $0.95 to $2.05 per square foot for labor alone, with total installed project costs typically falling between $1,085 and $2,896 for a standard room scope.
The range within that spread reflects the building type as much as the room size. A straightforward drywall installation in a modern condo or new construction build falls at the lower end. Work in an older building that involves plaster removal, ceiling heights above nine feet, asbestos testing, access logistics in a multi-unit building, or mixed plaster-and-drywall finishing pushes toward the upper end and often beyond it.
For repair work specifically, Chicago pricing by repair type in 2026:
- Small hole or crack repair (cosmetic): $200 to $450, average around $287 per project based on Chicago contractor data
- Medium hole repair with texture match: $400 to $750, higher for plaster walls
- Water damage ceiling repair: $500 to $2,000+, frequently higher in high-rise buildings where access and management approvals add cost
- Plaster replacement with drywall (per sq ft): $1.45 to $2.90 per sq ft for removal and replacement; higher finishing cost if matching surrounding plaster texture
- Full room drywall installation (labor only): $665 to $2,125 for a standard room
How Chicago’s Freeze-Thaw Cycle Drives Drywall Damage
Why does Chicago’s climate produce specific types of drywall damage that other cities don’t see?
Chicago’s continental climate creates seasonal humidity swings that directly stress interior wall systems. Winter heating drops indoor relative humidity to 20 to 30 percent, causing wood framing and trim to contract and drywall seams to open slightly. This is why nail pops, hairline seam cracks, and gaps at trim transitions are common in Chicago homes every late winter and early spring after the heating season.
The freeze-thaw cycle also drives pipe burst events. Chicago averages temperatures below 32 degrees Fahrenheit for extended stretches each winter. Pipes in exterior walls or inadequately insulated spaces freeze and burst, typically during the coldest overnight periods in January and February. A single pipe burst in a Chicago two-flat can saturate walls across multiple units, requiring coordinated repair across the building and often involving building insurance and individual unit owner policies simultaneously.
Summer brings the opposite: outdoor humidity above 70 percent in July and August, combined with high indoor air conditioning use, creates condensation risks in basements and on cooled surfaces. Finished basements in Chicago are more vulnerable to moisture intrusion during summer than during winter, and moisture-resistant board should be specified for any basement drywall installation regardless of how dry the basement appears at the time of construction.
High-Rise and Multi-Unit Building Logistics: A Different Hiring Conversation
Is hiring a drywall contractor in a Chicago high-rise or multi-unit building different from a single-family home?
Significantly, and this is where many Chicago homeowners are surprised by additional requirements and costs. Most Chicago condo buildings and co-ops require contractors to provide a Certificate of Insurance (COI) naming the building as an additional insured before any work can begin. The required coverage amounts vary by building, but $1 million to $2 million in general liability is common for residential work in managed buildings.
Work hours are typically restricted by the building to weekday business hours, sometimes with additional weekend restrictions. Freight elevator access must be coordinated with building management. Debris removal has to comply with building disposal procedures rather than the homeowner simply arranging a dumpster. In larger older buildings with original plaster walls throughout, a contractor unfamiliar with these building logistics will either price the job incorrectly or create friction with building management that delays the project.
Most drywall pros who work regularly in Chicago high-rises and managed multi-unit buildings maintain pre-approved contractor status with several buildings and are familiar with these administrative requirements. Ask any contractor you interview whether they have worked in managed buildings and whether they have encountered COI requirements before. Their answer tells you whether they are prepared for your building’s specific administrative process.
When to Call a Pro Rather Than Monitor
Chicago’s housing stock, age range, and climate make certain damage patterns worth addressing promptly:
- Any crack in a pre-1981 building where wall material may not have been tested for asbestos, before any repair attempts begin
- Recurring seam cracks or nail pops that appear every winter and reopen after repair, which may indicate a framing or insulation issue rather than a surface problem
- Any ceiling stain or soft spot following a freeze event, where hidden moisture and mold risk is meaningful
- Plaster walls in unrenovated buildings where the substrate is failing, not just the surface, which requires a different repair approach than cosmetic patching
- Any work in a managed building where COI, work hours, and building coordination must be addressed before the first day on site
Find a Drywall Contractor for Your Chicago Neighborhood
In a city with as much housing diversity as Chicago, the right contractor is one who has worked in buildings like yours, understands the wall materials your neighborhood produces, and is licensed and insured for work within city limits or your specific suburb.
DrywallProCenter.com connects Chicago homeowners with verified drywall professionals in their area. Search by zip code, compare contractor profiles, and request quotes from multiple local pros in one place. Whether your walls are original 1920s plaster or new construction drywall, finding the right Chicago contractor starts here.
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This article was drafted with the assistance of AI and has been reviewed and edited by our editorial team for accuracy and quality.





