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Chicago Slip and Fall Injuries Caused by Failure to Salt Sidewalks

Every Chicago winter, sidewalks across the city turn into hazards. From the busy corridors near Millennium Park to neighborhood blocks in Logan Square, Pilsen, and Andersonville, unsalted and icy sidewalks send thousands of people to the emergency room each year. When a property owner fails to apply salt or other traction material to a frozen sidewalk, the consequences can be serious, including broken hips, fractured wrists, traumatic brain injuries, and worse. If you slipped and fell on an unsalted sidewalk in Chicago, you may have a legal claim, and understanding how Illinois law works is your first step.

Table of Contents

What Chicago Law Says About Salting Sidewalks

Chicago has clear rules about sidewalk maintenance in winter. Under the Municipal Code of Chicago, Sections 4-4-310 and 10-8-180, property owners are responsible for clearing snow and ice from the sidewalks bordering their property. The duty does not stop at shoveling. If snow on the sidewalk is frozen so hard that it cannot be removed without damaging the pavement, the person in charge of the building or lot must strew the sidewalk with sand, abrasive material, or other products made for the purpose of mitigating slipping hazards and preventing the accumulation of ice.

Snow that falls or accumulates between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m. must be removed no later than 10 p.m. that same day. Snow that falls between 7 p.m. and 7 a.m. must be removed by 10 a.m. These deadlines apply seven days a week. Property owners must create a clear path of at least five feet in width on any sidewalk abutting their building or lot, including any sidewalk ramps at intersections. Think about the sidewalks outside apartment buildings along North Clark Street in Lakeview or the storefronts lining Milwaukee Avenue in Wicker Park. Every one of those property owners carries this legal duty every time snow falls.

Under the Chicago snow removal law, buildings can face fines of $250 to $500 per day for failure to remove snow accumulation on the public sidewalk next to the property. Beyond city fines, a failure to salt can expose a property owner to civil liability when someone gets hurt. When ice is bonded to the pavement, landlords must apply salt, sand, gravel, or other traction materials to reduce slip hazards. That obligation is not optional. It is part of what it means to own or manage property in this city.

Illinois Premises Liability Law and the Natural Accumulation Rule

Illinois premises liability claims involving snow and ice are governed by a specific legal framework. Most Illinois slip and fall claims are governed by the Premises Liability Act, 740 ILCS 130, which abolishes the old distinction between invitees and licensees and provides that landowners owe people lawfully on the property a duty of reasonable care under the circumstances. However, winter injury cases come with an important complication.

Illinois courts have long held that, as a general rule, property owners have no duty to remove natural accumulations of snow, ice, or meltwater from their premises. A “natural accumulation” means snow or ice that forms directly from the weather, such as snowfall, freezing rain, sleet, or normal melting and refreezing. If you fall on this kind of ordinary, weather-created ice, there is usually no claim against the owner.

So when does a failure to salt create liability? The answer lies in the concept of an “unnatural accumulation.” Courts have consistently found liability for unnatural accumulations where a particular defect in the property, such as a drain or downspout, causes snow or ice to accumulate in a specific location, or where a property owner causes snow or ice to accumulate in a particular location through plowing or shoveling. For example, if a building’s gutters on a Bridgeport apartment complex direct melting snow onto the front sidewalk, and that water refreezes into a sheet of ice, the resulting hazard is not a natural accumulation. It is a condition created by the property’s design or maintenance failures. The Illinois Supreme Court held that there is no immunity for failing to correct dangerous conditions that could lead to the accumulation of ice on the public sidewalk.

Commercial property owners face a higher standard than residential ones. You could have the right to bring a claim against a commercial property owner who caused an unnatural accumulation of snow, ice, or water due to negligent removal of snow or ice. A Chicago slip and fall lawyer can evaluate the specific facts of your fall and determine whether the condition that caused your injury qualifies as unnatural under Illinois law.

The Illinois Snow and Ice Removal Act and Its Limits

The Illinois Snow and Ice Removal Act, codified at 745 ILCS 75/1, plays a central role in these cases, and its protections are often misunderstood. There is a law in Illinois to address the liability of homeowners if someone falls on their icy sidewalk. It is called the Illinois Snow and Ice Removal Act, passed in 1979. It protects the homeowner from being legally responsible for injuries, unless the homeowner acted in a way that was “willful or wanton.”

Critically, this protection does not cover everyone. The law does not protect business owners or commercial properties. So if you slipped on an unsalted sidewalk outside a restaurant in the West Loop, a retail store in the Loop, or a grocery store in Hyde Park, the Snow and Ice Removal Act does not shield the business from your claim. Commercial property owners in Chicago are held to the full standard of reasonable care under the Premises Liability Act.

Even for residential properties, the Act has real limits. Maintaining the premises in a negligent manner, contributing to hazardous conditions, or ignoring code violations and property defects that cause winter hazards are situations where the Act does not shield the property owner from liability. A property owner who allows a broken downspout to drip water onto the sidewalk every night, where it refreezes by morning, cannot hide behind this statute. Landowners only have a duty of reasonable care to prevent unnatural accumulations of ice and snow, provided they had actual or constructive knowledge of the condition. If a dangerous icy patch forms repeatedly in the same spot, knowledge is difficult to deny.

Contractors hired to salt and treat sidewalks also carry legal exposure. The court in Mickens held that once a voluntary undertaking is based on a contractual promise, the scope of the voluntarily assumed duty is defined by the contractual promise. A snow removal contractor who agrees to salt a property and then skips a treatment during a freezing rain event can be liable when someone falls as a result. An experienced resbalón y caída abogado can identify all potentially liable parties, including contractors, property managers, and owners.

Common Injuries From Unsalted Sidewalk Falls in Chicago

Falls on icy, unsalted sidewalks are not minor events. The human body does not absorb the impact of a sudden fall on hard pavement well, and the injuries that result can change a person’s life. Hip fractures are among the most serious outcomes, particularly for older adults in neighborhoods like Andersonville or near senior housing along Lake Shore Drive. A broken hip often requires surgery, extended rehabilitation, and can permanently limit mobility.

Wrist and arm fractures are also common. When a person slips on ice, the instinct is to reach out and catch the fall. That reflex puts enormous force on the wrist and forearm, often resulting in fractures that require casting or surgical repair. Knee injuries, including torn ligaments, happen when a leg slides out unexpectedly on a slick surface. Traumatic brain injuries and concussions occur when a person’s head strikes the pavement, which is a real risk when there is nothing to break the fall.

Spinal injuries, herniated discs, and soft tissue damage to the back and neck are also frequent outcomes. These injuries may not be immediately obvious after a fall, but they can cause chronic pain that persists for months or years. If you were hurt on an unsalted sidewalk outside a Chicago apartment building, a business, or a parking area, the medical costs, lost wages, and pain and suffering you experience are real damages that may be recoverable. A resbalón y caída abogado can help you understand the full scope of compensation you may be entitled to under Illinois law.

What to Do After a Slip and Fall on an Unsalted Sidewalk

The steps you take right after a fall on an unsalted sidewalk can make or break your legal claim. First, get medical attention. Even if you feel okay in the moment, some injuries, including concussions and soft tissue damage, do not show their full severity right away. A medical record created close to the time of the fall is critical evidence.

Document the scene before the evidence disappears. Take photos of the sidewalk, the ice, the absence of salt or sand, and any visible drainage issues nearby. Note the address and the time. If there are witnesses, get their contact information. Under Chicago Municipal Code 10-8-180, the property owner had a legal duty to salt or treat that sidewalk. Proof that they failed to do so is the foundation of your claim.

Report the incident. If the fall happened outside a business, ask to file an incident report. If it happened on a public sidewalk, consider calling 311 to document the condition. You can report locations that do not clear their sidewalks by making a “Snow, Uncleared Sidewalk or Bike Lane” request with the City of Chicago 311 Service Request line. That report creates a timestamped record of the hazard.

Illinois has a two-year statute of limitations for personal injury claims, meaning you generally have two years from the date of the fall to file a lawsuit. Claims against a government entity, such as the City of Chicago, carry shorter deadlines and specific notice requirements. Do not wait to speak with a resbalón y caída abogado about your options. The team at Briskman Briskman & Greenberg offers free consultations and handles these cases on a contingency fee basis, meaning you pay nothing unless they recover compensation for you.

Who Can Be Held Liable for Your Injuries

Identifying the right defendant is one of the most important parts of a Chicago slip and fall case involving unsalted sidewalks. Liability can fall on more than one party, and getting this right matters for your recovery.

Commercial property owners, including retail stores, restaurants, office buildings, and apartment complexes, bear direct responsibility for the sidewalks adjacent to their properties. The sidewalk snow regulations affect all home, business, and property owners in Chicago, and business owners that rent space adjacent to sidewalks are responsible for shoveling snow under the ordinance. A business that opens its doors each morning but fails to salt its entrance sidewalk is putting every customer and passerby at risk.

Property management companies are also liable in many cases. The Illinois Supreme Court held that property managers owe a duty to pedestrians to direct snowmelt and drainage away from the sidewalk so that ice does not accumulate and cause a hazard. If a management company oversees a Gold Coast high-rise or a South Loop condominium building and fails to maintain proper drainage or apply salt when needed, it can be held accountable for resulting injuries.

Third-party snow removal contractors carry their own liability when they have a contractual duty to treat sidewalks and fail to perform. Landlords, building owners, and tenants with contractual responsibility for maintenance are all potentially liable depending on the lease terms and the facts of the case. A contract or lease agreement may create a duty of a property owner or occupier to remove snow or ice. If the owner knows or reasonably should know that snow, ice, or water has accumulated on the property and failed to address or warn about the hazard, the owner could potentially be held liable.

Sorting out who is responsible requires a thorough investigation, including reviewing property records, lease agreements, maintenance contracts, and inspection logs. The attorneys at Chicago abogado de lesiones personales firm Briskman Briskman & Greenberg have the experience to conduct that investigation and pursue every available avenue of recovery on your behalf. Contact them today for a free, no-obligation consultation about your case.

FAQs About Chicago Slip and Fall Injuries Caused by Failure to Salt Sidewalks

Can I sue a property owner for failing to salt a sidewalk in Chicago?

Yes, in many cases you can. If the property owner’s failure to salt created an unnatural accumulation of ice, or if the owner is a commercial property not protected by the Illinois Snow and Ice Removal Act, you may have a valid premises liability claim. The specific facts of your fall, including the type of property, the cause of the ice, and whether the owner had knowledge of the hazard, all affect your case. Speaking with an attorney is the best way to assess your options.

Does the Illinois Snow and Ice Removal Act protect businesses from liability?

No. The Illinois Snow and Ice Removal Act, 745 ILCS 75/1, applies only to residential property owners. Commercial property owners, including stores, restaurants, office buildings, and apartment complexes used as rental income properties, do not receive the same immunity. They are held to the full standard of reasonable care under the Illinois Premises Liability Act, 740 ILCS 130.

What is an “unnatural accumulation” of ice, and why does it matter?

An unnatural accumulation is ice or snow that formed because of something a property owner did or failed to do, rather than simply from the weather. Common examples include ice created by a broken downspout directing water onto a sidewalk, drainage from a parking lot flowing across a walkway, or snow plowed into a pile that repeatedly melts and refreezes in a dangerous location. Proving an unnatural accumulation is often the key to winning a slip and fall claim in Illinois, because natural accumulations generally do not create liability.

How long do I have to file a slip and fall lawsuit in Illinois?

Illinois law generally gives injured people two years from the date of the injury to file a personal injury lawsuit. However, if your claim involves a government entity, such as the City of Chicago or a public agency, the deadlines are shorter and specific written notice requirements apply. Missing these deadlines can permanently bar your claim, so contacting an attorney as soon as possible after your fall is essential.

What evidence do I need to support a claim for a fall on an unsalted sidewalk?

Strong evidence includes photos of the icy sidewalk showing no salt or sand was applied, photos of any drainage issues or structural defects nearby, medical records documenting your injuries, witness contact information, and any incident reports filed at the scene. A 311 report filed with the City of Chicago about an uncleared sidewalk can also serve as useful documentation. Surveillance footage from nearby businesses, like those along Halsted Street or Damen Avenue, can sometimes capture the fall itself or confirm the condition of the sidewalk before it was treated.

More Resources About Causes of Slip and Fall Injuries

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