From July 1885 to July 1888, the editorial office, administration and printing house of the newspaper were located in the premises of the Hamburg Hotel (later called Imperial Hotel) in Chaim Bławat's tenement house at 17 Piotrkowska Street.
It was, among others, thanks to his efforts that the newspaper received financial support from Edward Herbst.
The first page was usually a full-page text on economic issues, supplemented with quotations from stock exchanges.
The third page was supplemented with the statistics of population movement, which also included important hotel guests staying in Łódź at that time.
The newspaper's publishing cycle was interrupted by World War II.
As part of the 1990s liberalization of the economy, Dziennik Łódzki was sold to a company created by circles linked to Christian National Union and the French Hersant group.
In 1994, the title was bought from Hersant by the Polska Press group, which merged the editorial office of Dziennik Łódzki with that of Wiadomości Dnia in 2000, creating the largest regional newspaper in the province of Łódź.