Illinois Environmental Regulations 2026
What laundromat owners need to know about Illinois environmental rules and how they're changing.
Read MoreOwning a laundromat legally in Illinois isn't complicated, but it does have moving parts — from business registration to local licenses to water rules. Here's the complete checklist, including a tax break many owners don't realize they have.
One of the underrated advantages of the laundromat business is how lightly regulated it is compared to, say, a restaurant or a childcare center. There's no health-department kitchen inspection, no liquor license, no food-handler certifications. But "lightly regulated" isn't "unregulated," and buyers who assume a laundromat is a license-free enterprise can get tripped up at the worst possible moment — during a purchase, when a lender or the municipality asks for paperwork the seller never kept.
This checklist walks through everything you need to own and operate a laundromat legally in Illinois in 2026: registering the business, the local licenses that actually matter, water and wastewater compliance, and the tax registrations — including a favorable Illinois quirk that works in your favor. One important caveat up front: requirements vary meaningfully by municipality, and this article is educational, not legal or tax advice. Treat it as your organized starting point, then confirm the specifics with the local authorities and your own professionals.
Before you can license a laundromat, you need a legal business to license. This is the foundation layer, handled mostly at the state and federal level.
Most laundromat owners operate through a limited liability company (LLC) or a corporation rather than as a sole proprietor, primarily for liability protection — a sensible choice given that you're operating a space the public walks into. In Illinois, you form an LLC or corporation by filing with the Illinois Secretary of State and maintaining the entity in good standing (including annual reports and fees). Many buyers set up a new entity to purchase the business rather than taking over the seller's entity, which is often cleaner from a liability and tax standpoint — a point worth discussing with your attorney, especially in an asset purchase.
Obtain a federal Employer Identification Number (EIN) from the IRS — it's free, quick, and required for banking, taxes, and hiring. You'll need it before most other registrations.
Register your business with the Illinois Department of Revenue (IDOR) for the tax accounts that apply to you. Which taxes apply depends on your revenue mix (more on the important sales-tax nuance below), and if you'll have employees you'll also handle withholding and unemployment registration. Our Illinois laundromat tax guide goes deeper on the tax side.
This is where the real variation lives, and where sellers most often have gaps. There is no single statewide "laundromat license" in Illinois. Instead, the operative license is issued by the municipality — the city or village where the store sits — and requirements differ from town to town.
When purchasing, verify what licenses the current store holds and what will be required to transfer or reissue them to your new entity. Don't assume they exist or transfer automatically. Confirm directly with the municipality what you'll need — this belongs on every buyer's due diligence checklist. Location matters here too; browse market-specific pages in our Illinois cities directory for the community where you're buying.
A laundromat is a heavy water user, and water is where a laundromat's compliance obligations are most substantive.
Your store connects to municipal water and sanitary sewer, so you'll operate under the local water authority's and sanitary district's rules and rate structures. Sewer charges are commonly billed based on metered water usage, so high wash volume means both a high water bill and a high sewer bill — a cost dynamic covered in our operating cost guide and used as a revenue cross-check in the water bill test.
Because laundry wastewater carries lint, detergents, and sometimes heat, many jurisdictions have discharge standards and may require interception (lint traps/interceptors) so the sanitary system isn't fouled. Whether a specific permit is required, and what discharge limits apply, is set locally by the municipality or sanitary district. When you buy, confirm the store's plumbing meets current local requirements — retrofitting an interceptor or correcting a non-compliant connection is a cost you want to know about before closing, not after.
Straight self-service coin laundries are far less environmentally regulated than dry cleaners (which handle solvents). Still, Illinois environmental rules evolve, and equipment and utility standards change over time — our overview of Illinois environmental regulations for laundromats in 2026 covers what's shifting. If a store offers any dry-cleaning service, a whole additional layer of environmental regulation applies, and you should get specialized advice.
Here's the pleasant surprise, and a genuinely useful piece of Illinois-specific knowledge.
Self-service coin-operated (and card-operated) laundry is generally excluded from Illinois sales tax. In other words, Illinois does not tax the charge a customer pays to use a self-service washer or dryer. This is a favorable feature of the business and a real operational simplification compared to many service businesses that must collect and remit sales tax on every transaction. Only a small number of states tax coin-operated self-service laundry; Illinois is not one of them.
The exemption applies to the self-service laundry charge itself. It does not eliminate every tax obligation a laundromat might have:
Because the exact treatment depends on how your store operates, confirm your situation with the Illinois Department of Revenue or a qualified tax professional. But the headline is genuinely good news: the core self-service laundry revenue is not subject to Illinois sales tax. Our tax guide puts this in the fuller context of buying and selling.
Use this as your working list when opening or acquiring a laundromat in Illinois:
One of the most common gaps I find in laundromat purchases is missing or lapsed local licensing and unclear water/wastewater compliance — issues that are far cheaper to catch before closing than after. I help Illinois buyers confirm a store's compliance as part of due diligence, and connect them with the right local authorities and professionals.
There's no single statewide "laundromat license," but you need a registered business entity, an EIN, IDOR registration for applicable taxes, and — most importantly — a local business license from the municipality where the store operates. Requirements vary by city, so the local clerk is the definitive source.
Self-service coin- and card-operated laundry is generally excluded from Illinois sales tax — the charge to use a self-service machine isn't taxed. The exemption applies to that self-service charge; other revenue streams and taxes (like income tax) still apply. Confirm your specifics with IDOR or a tax professional.
A laundromat operates under the local water authority's and sanitary district's rules, which can include discharge standards and interceptor requirements. These are set locally, so check with the municipality's water/sewer authority and, where relevant, the sanitary district serving the store.
Not automatically. Licenses are typically tied to the operating entity and location, and often must be reissued or transferred to your new entity. Always verify with the municipality what's required to license the store under your ownership — don't assume it carries over.
Compared to food or childcare businesses, no — self-service laundromats are relatively lightly regulated, with no health-department kitchen inspections or specialized licensing. The main compliance areas are local business licensing, zoning, and water/wastewater. Dry-cleaning services, if offered, add significant environmental regulation.
Laundromat compliance in Illinois is manageable, but it rewards organization. Register your entity, secure the local business license that actually governs your store, get the water and wastewater side right, and take advantage of the coin-op sales-tax exemption that Illinois grants self-service laundry. When you're buying, treat licensing and compliance as a due-diligence line item, not an afterthought — confirming it up front protects both your closing and your first year of ownership.