How the Illinois Freedom of Information Act works
Illinois's Freedom of Information Act (5 ILCS 140) provides any person with the right to request records from all state and local public bodies, including state agencies, universities, municipalities, and school districts. Illinois is notable for having a dedicated oversight body, the Public Access Counselor (PAC) within the Attorney General's office, that handles binding review of denials without requiring litigation. Agencies must respond within five business days (extendable by five more), and the law requires substantive responses, not mere acknowledgments.
Fees may be charged for reproduction beyond the first 50 pages; no fee applies to records already in electronic format. Willful violations carry fines of $2,500 to $5,000 per incident. Common exemptions include pre-decisional deliberative materials, personnel records, attorney-client communications, and law enforcement investigative records. The PAC system significantly lowers the barrier to enforcement, making Illinois one of the more accessible states for asserting open records rights.
Prefer to file yourself? Visit the official Illinois portal ↗
All Illinois agencies (22)
Every Illinois agency we file public records requests with. Click an agency to start a request.
General Government (22)
- Champaign County
- City of Aurora
- City of Belleville
- City of Champaign
- City of Chicago
- City of Decatur
- City of Joliet
- City of Peoria
- City of Rockford
- City of Springfield
- City of Waukegan
- Cook County
- DuPage County
- Kane County
- Lake County
- Macon County
- McHenry County
- Peoria County
- Sangamon County
- St. Clair County
- Will County
- Winnebago County
