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Finishing a Basement in a Chicago Two-Flat

7 min readLee & Sam Property Care

Chicago's two-flats and bungalows are sitting on thousands of square feet of unfinished basement — and finishing that space is one of the highest-value moves a homeowner or landlord can make. It's also one of the most code-sensitive. Here's what shapes every basement project in this city.

The Big Three: Height, Egress, Moisture

Ceiling height is the first gate. Habitable basement rooms need adequate finished height, and many older Chicago basements come up short once you account for ductwork and framing. Sometimes the answer is reorganizing mechanicals; sometimes it's underpinning or bench footings — a much bigger project that changes the budget entirely. We measure this on the first visit.

Egress is non-negotiable: bedrooms below grade need a code-compliant escape route — typically an egress window with a properly sized well, or direct exterior access. This is a life-safety item, and it's the line between a legal bedroom and an expensive room you can't call one.

Moisture decides whether the finishes survive. Before drywall goes anywhere, we want to know how the basement behaves in a March thaw — drain tile, sump condition, grading, and wall sealing all get evaluated first. Finishing a wet basement is just scheduling a demolition.

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What It Costs

In Chicago, a straightforward basement finish — framing, insulation, drywall, flooring, lighting, a rec room and storage — typically runs $30,000–$55,000. Add a full bathroom and wet bar and you're in the $50,000–$80,000 range. Underpinning for height or major waterproofing sits on top of those numbers and deserves its own conversation before you commit to the project.

For two-flat owners: a finished basement can serve the owner's unit, become shared amenity space, or — under Chicago's ADU ordinance in eligible areas — potentially become a legal additional unit. Which path you choose changes the code requirements, so decide the use before the design.

The Right Sequence

  • Moisture evaluation and any drainage work first
  • Layout and permit drawings — habitable space requires permits, full stop
  • Rough mechanicals: plumbing, electrical, HVAC, then inspections
  • Insulation and drywall only after roughs pass
  • Finishes: flooring rated for below-grade, lighting layered for low ceilings

Done in that order, a basement finish is predictable. Done out of order, it's the most common source of horror stories we get called in to fix.

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