NFL 2026
Around the League June 6, 2026 · Touchdown Week Staff

The Bears' board voted to advance a Hammond, Indiana stadium. Illinois is now playing catch-up.

For the first time, Chicago's board voted on a specific site, and it wasn't in Illinois. Indiana's $1 billion in incentives and a passed stadium-authority law have pushed the move from threat to front-runner.

When we covered the failed Illinois stadium bill, the Bears had two options on the table: Arlington Heights or Hammond, Indiana. The needle has now moved decisively. Chicago's board of directors voted Thursday to advance stadium development in Hammond, the first time it has voted on any specific site, and Indiana leads the negotiations.

What did the board actually do?

It voted to advance Hammond, a procedural but meaningful step. This is the first time the Bears' board has formally voted on a specific stadium location, which signals genuine momentum rather than the leverage-seeking the franchise has been accused of. The exact site within Hammond is still undetermined, and team leadership framed the vision broadly: 'We believe a world-class stadium project in Hammond will transform the region, connecting Northwest Indiana and the South Side.'

Why has Indiana pulled ahead?

Money and legislation, the two things Illinois couldn't deliver. Indiana passed a law in February creating the Northwest Indiana Stadium Authority with bonding and land-acquisition powers, and has offered the Bears up to $1 billion in incentives. Governor Mike Braun pitched it as transformational: 'An NFL franchise in Northwest Indiana will be an economic boost to the entire region like we haven't seen before.' Concrete incentives and enabling legislation beat a stalled bill every time.

Is Arlington Heights dead?

Not officially, but it's on life support. The Illinois 'megaprojects' bill died in the Senate, and the replacement that would let Cook County cities create stadium authorities passed the Senate but stalled when the House adjourned without voting. The Bears still own the 326-acre former Arlington International Racecourse site they bought in 2021, so the option exists on paper. League sources say Illinois can 'theoretically still get back in the race,' but Indiana currently leads, and the Illinois governor's office has complained that the Bears' constant shifting has 'hindered' progress.

What's the timeline?

No hard deadline, but no rush either. The Bears' Soldier Field lease runs through 2033, which gives the franchise runway to get the next stadium right rather than fast. The board vote starts a process; it doesn't end one. The next markers are a defined site within Hammond and a finalized incentive package, with Illinois holding a narrowing window to counter. After years of false starts, this is the closest the Bears have come to actually choosing a future home, and for the first time it's across a state line.

Sources

  • ESPN: Bears edge closer to move for new stadium in northwest Indiana

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Published June 6, 2026 Touchdown Week Staff