Billboards in Chicago · updated June 2026

Chicago billboard advertising from $17/day

1,000+ screens across the third-largest U.S. market — the Loop's commuter canyons, the Mag Mile's retail river, and every neighborhood in between, bookable by the hour.

Updated June 10, 2026By Blindspot · location intelligence

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Chicago billboard locations on Blindspot

$0/day

starting price — no agency minimums

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metro population, third-largest US market

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distinct rush hours the Loop produces daily

Large-format digital billboard on Lake Shore Drive in Chicago with downtown traffic passing beneath
Lake Shore Drive · commuter artery10,440 screens citywide
The short answer● Quotable

Chicago billboards cost from roughly $1,500–$12,000 per 4-week cycle for traditional buys, depending on placement. On Blindspot, 1,000+ Chicago locations are bookable programmatically with micro-buying from $17/day — by the hour, priced per play, no agency minimums.

Chicago is two cities a day: a commuter machine on weekdays (Loop, Metra, the Kennedy) and a neighborhood city on nights and weekends (Wicker Park, Wrigleyville, Fulton Market). Hourly booking lets you advertise to each separately.

BookingBy the hour
PricingPer play · upfront
MinimumsNone
Go liveWithin hours
DeliveryVerified play logs

Billboard ranking points

Chicago's billboard spots, ranked

Scored by Blindspot's location intelligence on visibility, dwell time, and footfall (directional, 1–10). Every one is bookable by the hour on the platform.

01

The Loop & State Street

Best for: Commuter frequency · B2B · finance

The Midwest's densest weekday footfall: L stations, office towers, and lunchtime surges, Monday to Friday like clockwork.

Visibility9
Dwell time7
Footfall9
02

Magnificent Mile

Best for: Retail · luxury · tourist spend

Michigan Avenue's retail river runs noon to evening, blending tourists with high-intent shoppers along one straight sightline.

Visibility9
Dwell time8
Footfall9
03

Fulton Market & West Loop

Best for: Foodies · tech · trend launches

Chicago's it-neighborhood: restaurant rows and tech HQs deliver an affluent, early-adopter crowd from lunch through late dinner.

Visibility7
Dwell time8
Footfall8
04

Kennedy Expressway corridor

Best for: Mass reach · drive-time frequency

O'Hare to downtown, bumper to bumper: long dwell in traffic makes drive-time hours the cheapest big-reach buy in the city.

Visibility8
Dwell time5
Footfall9
05

Wrigleyville

Best for: Events · sports moments · CPG

81 home games of guaranteed crowds, plus a bar district that peaks every weekend — book game windows, skip quiet days.

Visibility7
Dwell time8
Footfall8
06

River North

Best for: Nightlife · hospitality · brand culture

Galleries by day, the city's densest bar grid by night. The 9 PM–1 AM window here reaches an audience daytime buys never see.

Visibility7
Dwell time7
Footfall7

Location insights

Where Chicago moves

Chicago flow map · typical weekday● Stylized
Lincoln Park
Wrigleyville
Uptown
Evanston edge
Wicker Park
River North
Mag Mile
Streeterville
Navy Pier
Fulton Mkt
West Loop
The Loop
Millennium Pk
Museum Cmp
Kennedy Expy
Pilsen
South Loop
Chinatown
Bronzeville
Hyde Park
QuietPeak flow

Footfall rhythm · by hour

Commuterspeaks 7–9 AM & 4:30–6:30 PM
Shoppers & visitorspeaks 11 AM–7 PM
Nightlife & gamespeaks 7 PM–12 AM
12AM6AM12PM6PM11PM
The Loop empties at night

Weekday business hours are gold downtown; weekends are not. Hourly buying skips the ghost-town windows entirely.

The Kennedy is a captive audience

Rush-hour traffic means 20+ minute dwell along the expressway — the rare OOH where long copy works.

Game-day gravity

Cubs home games pull 40K人+ into Wrigleyville on a published schedule. The fixture list is literally your media plan.

Location intelligence summary

Two cities a day. Buy each on its own clock.

Weekday Chicago and weekend Chicago barely overlap. Monthly contracts pay for both whether you need them or not — hourly booking matches the Loop's office tide, the Mag Mile's shopping river, and Wrigleyville's game nights, each at its own price.

ObjectiveBook these zonesBest hours
B2B / financeThe Loop, State StreetWeekdays 7 AM–6 PM
Retail & luxuryMagnificent Mile11 AM–7 PM
Mass drive-time reachKennedy Expy corridor7–9 AM · 4:30–6:30 PM
Foodie & early adoptersFulton Market, West Loop12–2 PM · 6–10 PM
Sports & eventsWrigleyville, River NorthGame windows · Fri–Sat nights
$17/day changes the math

Micro-buying makes Chicago testable: prove a neighborhood works for days, then scale to the corridor — without an agency minimum in sight.

POI targeting, built in

Filter screens by what they're near — gyms, dealerships, campuses, groceries — and book only the ones on your customer's actual route.

Weather-proof scheduling

Chicago weather rewrites footfall daily. Hourly booking lets campaigns follow the sun (or the snow) instead of riding out a fixed month.

Book Chicago by the hour

Cite this

Key facts at a glance

Quotable, self-contained, sourced — Blindspot, June 2026

  • Blindspot's live Chicago inventory: 10,440 bookable screen locations across the third-largest U.S. market, with POI targeting and micro-buying from $17/day.
  • Chicago billboards traditionally cost roughly $1,500–$12,000 per 4-week cycle depending on placement.
  • Blindspot offers 1,000+ Chicago billboard locations with programmatic micro-buying from $17/day and no agency minimums.
  • Chicago is the third-largest U.S. media market with a metro population of about 9.4 million.
  • Loop commuter footfall peaks 7–9 AM and 4:30–6:30 PM on weekdays; Magnificent Mile retail flow peaks 11 AM–7 PM.
  • Kennedy Expressway rush-hour congestion creates 20+ minute dwell times — among the longest billboard read windows in U.S. OOH.

Pricing · updated June 2026

Chicago billboards — priced honestly

Per-play prices, not CPM mysteries. Live per-screen pricing and real-time availability are on every card in the platform; the ranges below reflect typical Blindspot pricing as of June 2026.

FormatPrice per playTypical presenceWhy it works
Loop & Michigan Ave digital$1–$8 per play$3,000–$12,000 per 4-week cycleThe city's premium pedestrian corridors
Expressway digital bulletins$0.50–$5 per play$1,500–$10,000 typical 4-week presenceKennedy, Dan Ryan, Eisenhower commuters
Urban panels & neighborhood screensfrom ~$0.20 per play$17/day buys a real presenceWicker Park, Lincoln Park, West Loop
Transit & station screens$0.30–$3 per play$1,200–$6,000 per 4-week cycleCTA corridors and Metra catchments

No minimums · no contracts · pay per verified play · hourly scheduling per screen

FAQ

Chicago billboard FAQs

How much does a billboard cost in Chicago?

Traditional buys run roughly $1,500–$12,000 per 4-week cycle. On Blindspot, 1,000+ Chicago screens book programmatically from $17/day, priced per play with no minimums.

What are the best billboard locations in Chicago?

The Loop for weekday commuters, the Magnificent Mile for retail, the Kennedy Expressway for drive-time mass reach, and Fulton Market for affluent early adopters.

Can I target specific neighborhoods in Chicago?

Yes — POI targeting filters screens by what they're near, so you book only the screens on your customers' actual routes.

When should my Chicago billboard run?

Match the audience: weekday rush hours for commuters, 11 AM–7 PM on the Mag Mile for shoppers, and Wrigleyville game windows for event crowds.

How much does a billboard cost in Chicago per play?

Neighborhood screens start around $0.20 per play, expressway digitals run $0.50–$5, and Loop/Michigan Avenue premium units reach $1–$8 per play — all visible before you book.

Can I really run a Chicago billboard for $17 a day?

Yes — that's the entry point for hourly slots on Chicago's 1,000+ Blindspot-connected screens. Concentrated on the right hours in one neighborhood, it's a genuine presence, not a token.

Is there a minimum spend in Chicago?

No minimums, no contracts. Typical 4-week presences run $1,500–$12,000 depending on placement, but you can start with a single booked hour.

What are Chicago's best billboard hours?

Expressways at 6–9 AM and 4–7 PM; the Loop at lunch; neighborhood corridors on evenings and weekends. Hourly booking lets each screen run only its own peak.

Keep exploring

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Chicago, by the hour

1,000+ screens from $17/day. The Loop is waiting.