50x50 Booth Rentals in Chicago: Costs, Venues, and What Ships
Chicago's McCormick Place is the largest convention venue in North America, and Chicago's labor and freight rules are among the most exacting. Getting a booth on the floor cleanly here means understanding the steward system, the marshaling yard rules, and McCormick's specific drayage tiers. For exhibitors at shows like IMTS, Pack Expo, RSNA, and the NRA Show, a 50x50 booth at 2500 square feet is a workable footprint. Pricing in Chicago typically runs $162,700–$317,200 per show on a fully turnkey basis — higher than Las Vegas because of labor jurisdictions, freight distance from our warehouse, and venue-specific drayage tiers. In practice this means McCormick's drayage tier, steward sign-offs at each install phase, and the hall-specific electrical and rigging submission windows all affect the final number. None of this is unusual, it's just Chicago, and it's why a 50x50 here costs more than the equivalent in Vegas.
Exhibit Rentals operates from a warehouse in Las Vegas. We ship from our Las Vegas warehouse with 5–7 day transit to McCormick Place. Every booth in our 50x50 inventory is fully pre-assembled and inspected at our facility before it ships to Chicago — so the install at McCormick Place and the Donald E. Stephens Convention Center is replication of an approved build, not first-time assembly on the show floor. For markets like Chicago where freight distance and labor rules add risk, the warehouse pre-build is what protects your show date.
Is a 50x50 the Right Size for Your Show?
The 50x50 booth works best for a few specific kinds of exhibitor:
- Anchor-tenant exhibitors at flagship shows like CES, RSNA, HIMSS, IMTS, or RSA
- Tier-one product launches with significant press, analyst, and partner programs
- Pharma, automotive, defense, and enterprise tech with full compliance and multi-line needs
- Teams of 28–35+ staff across sales, demos, hospitality, press, executive briefing, and operations
Beyond a 50x50, exhibitors typically transition to fully custom construction with separate fabrication contracts, multiple build crews, and significantly extended timelines.
Working With 2500 Square Feet
Twenty-five hundred square feet supports anchor-tenant programming of full conference scale. A 50x50 typically includes a four-sided hanging sign visible from across the show, a 40+ seat theater or product-launch stage, fifteen to twenty demo stations, five to six enclosed meeting rooms (multiple sound-private), an executive briefing center, a full hospitality bar with seating for 20–30, dedicated press and analyst areas, integrated lead-capture infrastructure across the booth, dedicated tech and storage rooms, and routinely a second-floor lounge or executive-only area.
What doesn't fit: nothing meaningful. The 50x50 footprint accommodates almost any programming an exhibitor needs. Constraints at this size are budget, build timeline (typically 90+ days), and operational complexity.
Floor-Plan Choices at 50x50
A 50x50 is one of the largest standard footprints available at most U.S. shows. Layouts typically split into quadrants: customer-facing demo and theater in two quadrants, hospitality and meeting infrastructure in a third, and back-of-house operations in the fourth. Double-decker construction is common where venue ceiling height allows, and effectively doubles the usable program area.
An anchor-tenant 50x50 is operationally a small conference. Assign a dedicated booth director, document a runsheet by the hour, train staff in shift rotations, and pre-schedule executive meetings and press briefings before the show opens. The architecture is only one variable; operations is the multiplier.
McCormick Place's South and North halls have different ceiling clearances, and your hanging sign rigging gets reviewed by the venue's rigging contractor weeks ahead. At 50x50 the rig coordination is meaningful — McCormick requires submission timelines that vary by hall, so design freeze comes earlier here than at most other venues.
Everything Your Quote Covers
Every quote from Exhibit Rentals is turnkey. One number on the proposal covers every line item below — there's no separate drayage invoice, no surprise electrical bill, no post-show reconciliation:
- Photorealistic 3D rendering before approval
- Full pre-build and inspection at our Las Vegas warehouse before shipping to Chicago
- Full graphics production — backlit fabric, direct-print, or tension fabric depending on design
- Round-trip freight from our Las Vegas warehouse to McCormick Place and the Donald E. Stephens Convention Center (or other Chicago venue)
- Certified installation and dismantling, fully labor-compliant for your venue
- Show services paperwork — EAC filings, Certificate of Insurance, electrical orders, drayage coordination
- One dedicated project manager from kickoff to load-out
- Hanging sign rigging coordination with venue
- AV equipment specification, sourcing, and on-site setup (monitors, sound, lighting controllers)
- On-site project lead for the duration of the show, separate from your project manager
What a 50x50 Costs in Chicago
A turnkey 50x50 trade show booth rental in Chicago typically falls between $162,700 and $317,200 per show. Where you land in that range comes down to materials, monitor and AV count, and how much custom architecture you add.
- $162,700–$240,000: Clean professional build with backlit fabric, standard counters, LED lighting. Right for flagship anchor-tenant programs at industry-defining shows.
- $240,000–$278,600: Adds monitor walls, upgraded lighting, additional counters, expanded meeting and executive programming. The mid-market sweet spot.
- $278,600–$317,200: Premium materials, architectural ceiling features, double-deck construction, executive briefing wing, custom architecture.
That works out to roughly $65–$127 per square foot in Chicago. Chicago pricing reflects McCormick Place's specific drayage tier structure and the steward-coordination overhead. Compared to a Vegas-local equivalent, expect roughly a 60–70% premium on the all-in number — most of that is freight and venue services, not design or fabrication. Booking 10–12 weeks ahead of major McCormick shows protects pricing, Chicago drayage and electrical rates climb noticeably for late orders.
Getting Into Chicago Venues
McCormick Place enforces the Trade Show Workers Right-to-Work Act — exhibitors have flexibility, but our crews still coordinate with the four house unions (Carpenters, Decorators, Electricians, Riggers) for steward sign-off.
McCormick Place uses a four-union model (Carpenters, Decorators, Electricians, Riggers) with steward sign-off at each phase. Drayage is tiered by package weight and material handling category — and the rules change periodically. Our project managers coordinate every steward sign-off and confirm drayage tier before crating, so you don't get a surprise material handling invoice after the show.
Where 50x50 Booths Go Wrong
At 50x50, the usual design errors cost you more. What we see at McCormick Place and the Donald E. Stephens Convention Center shows:
- Specifying double-deck without confirming venue clearance, load specs, and union approval timelines at least 90 days out
- Designing the booth without an assigned booth director who runs the floor as an event producer
- Underbuilding sound isolation on executive briefing rooms
- Skipping the documented runsheet — at anchor-tenant scale you cannot improvise the schedule
- Treating hospitality, press, and analyst infrastructure as parallel decoration rather than coordinated programming
- Missing the McCormick electrical-order deadline — late electrical at McCormick is significantly more expensive than on-time orders, and the deadlines are earlier than most exhibitors expect.
Rent or Buy a 50x50?
At the 50x50 footprint, the rent-versus-buy decision is rarely about cost alone — it's about how many shows you run per year and how aggressively your brand evolves. A purchased 50x50 runs $260,000–$508,000 upfront, plus $16,500–$57,000 per show in storage, refurbishment, freight, and labor. For one to three shows a year, the rental model at $162,700–$317,200 per show wins on cash flow and design flexibility. For five or more shows with stable branding, purchase can amortize lower, but at this booth size, refurbishment cycles and the cost of looking dated mid-purchase-life are real considerations. For Chicago-based exhibitors running shows in both Chicago and Vegas, a rental model often beats purchase outright — the freight savings from owning don't compensate for storage cost in Chicago real estate.
Next Step
Browse our 50x50 design gallery below, or fill out the quote form for a custom 3D rendering and full price within 24 hours. Every booth includes our warehouse pre-build guarantee and a dedicated project manager who handles every step from kickoff to load-out.


