Removing a wall without knowing whether it’s load bearing is one of the most expensive mistakes a homeowner can make. A structural wall holds up the floors, roof, or other walls above it — remove it without proper support and you risk ceiling collapse, cracked drywall throughout the house, and a very large repair bill. This guide explains exactly how to identify load bearing walls before you touch them.
The Fastest Way to Check: Look at Your House’s Structure
Load bearing walls almost always run perpendicular to the floor joists above them. Floor joists span the shortest dimension of a house, so load bearing walls typically run the length of the house (parallel to the ridge of the roof). Here’s how to figure that out without an engineer:
6 Ways to Tell if a Wall is Load Bearing
1. Check the Basement or Crawlspace
Go to the basement directly below the wall in question. If you see a beam, post, or wall directly underneath it, that’s a strong indicator the wall above is load bearing. The structural support stack runs vertically — foundation → beam → wall → wall above. If there’s nothing below the wall but open floor, it’s more likely non-load bearing.
2. Look at the Direction of Floor Joists
Floor joists run perpendicular to load bearing walls. From the basement, look at which direction the joists span. Any wall running perpendicular to those joists is potentially load bearing. In Chicago’s typical balloon-frame and platform-frame houses, joists usually span the shorter dimension of the house.
3. Check Your Attic
In the attic, look for where ceiling joists or roof rafters bear down onto a wall below. If a wall sits directly under where rafters land or where ceiling joists are supported, it’s almost certainly load bearing.
4. The Center of the House Rule
In most homes built before 1970 (which includes most of Chicago’s housing stock), the wall running down the center of the house is load bearing. It supports the ridge beam or the floor joists that span from the exterior walls to the center. If the wall you want to remove is near the middle of the house, assume it’s load bearing until proven otherwise.
5. Walls on Every Floor Directly Above Each Other
In multi-story homes, load bearing walls tend to stack directly above each other on each floor. If there’s a wall on the second floor directly above the first-floor wall you want to remove, that first-floor wall is almost certainly load bearing.
6. Check the Original Blueprints
Chicago homes permitted after 1950 will have building permits on file at the City of Chicago Department of Buildings. Original blueprints clearly show structural vs. non-structural walls. For older homes, the Chicago History Museum and local preservation groups sometimes have original plans for notable building types.
Load Bearing vs. Non-Load Bearing: Quick Reference
| Indicator | Likely Load Bearing | Likely Non-Load Bearing |
|---|---|---|
| Direction vs. joists | Perpendicular to floor joists | Parallel to floor joists |
| Location in house | Center of house, exterior walls | Off-center, room dividers |
| Below the wall | Beam, post, or wall in basement | Open floor/joists, no support |
| Above the wall (attic) | Rafters or joists rest on it | No structural members land on it |
| Multi-story alignment | Wall stacks with walls on other floors | Wall doesn’t align with floors above/below |
| Wall thickness | Often 2×6 framing (but not always) | Often 2×4 framing (but not always) |
When to Call a Structural Engineer
When in doubt — always call a structural engineer before removing any wall. A structural engineer consultation in Chicago typically costs $300–$600 and provides a written assessment you can use for permitting. This is mandatory if you’re pulling a permit (which you should be for any load bearing wall removal in Chicago).
Chicago requires a permit for any structural wall removal. Unpermitted work that removes a load bearing wall will need to be disclosed in any future home sale and can void homeowner’s insurance coverage for related damage.
Chicago-Specific Note: Greystones and Two-Flats
Chicago’s characteristic greystones, two-flats, and brick three-flats built between 1880–1940 use balloon framing — a construction method where studs run continuously from the foundation to the roof. In balloon-framed homes, nearly every interior wall that runs front-to-back in the building is structural. Be especially cautious with these buildings before any wall removal.
Need Help with Drywall or Wall Repairs in Chicago?
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