Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has unveiled his plan to radically reform the state’s property tax system, potentially eliminating taxes on most owner-occupied homes.

DeSantis called for a special legislative session to begin Monday, where state lawmakers can consider putting a new initiative to make homestead property tax-free on the ballot. If approved, Florida voters would be able to vote in November.

“Taxing something that you own repeatedly, which is a property tax, is the worst way to do taxation,” DeSantis said at a press conference on Wednesday.

“You pay all these taxes to acquire that property, and then, year after year, you have to write a check just for the privilege of being able to maintain ownership of something that is supposedly yours.”

DeSantis proposes raising the state’s homestead exemption, currently set at $50,000 for owner-occupied houses, to a $250,000 limit, which he estimates would eliminate property tax for 60% of Florida homeowners.

In general, a “homestead” property in Florida is defined as a person’s primary residence, one they must live in and own or have a primary interest in. If the effort succeeds, Florida will become the first state in the nation with no property taxes.

“If it’s successful, when you raise it to the $500,000 limit, that’s 92% of all Florida residents would be tax-free. I think this bottom-up approach is a better approach,” the governor said.

How would it work?

DeSantis said he supported a phased approach to eliminate the tax, moving up from the $250,000 baseline. He didn’t think he could get political support for an outright abolition of property taxes in the legislature.

Those who move into the state after the law could be compelled to pay taxes for up to five years. That would prevent a mass migration into the state, DeSantis said.

Homestead residential property tax takes make up about a third of property tax revenues to local government. Local governments took in about $32 billion from property taxes in 2019, DeSantis said. But now governments take in almost $60 billion. Florida estimates at this rate, it would collect $83 billion by 2032.

DeSantis said that’s because of inflating property values in the state. He said he thinks the system should be reformed outright as homeowners face inflated burdens.

“There’s not really a connection to what you’re consuming and what they’re charging you,” DeSantis said.

Meantime, the cities will rely on non-homestead and commercial tax revenue. Florida cities bring in between $50 billion to $55 billion of that revenue. But it can go up as the economy expands, DeSantis said.

The state could create a trust fund to provide grants to local governments for core services. That helps rural areas with smaller tax bases, DeSantis said.

Lawmakers in Tallahassee will meet next week to discuss a potential property tax reform.Getty Images

Florida’s property tax problem

While property tax burdens are rising in every state, Florida has seen some of the sharpest increases in years, according to LendingTree. Tampa saw the its property tax increase 7.7% between 2023 and 2024, more than any other city in the nation. The median property tax paid there was $2,569 in 2024.

Also in the top ten by median property tax increase were Miami ($3,823, up 7.1%), Jacksonville ($2,549, up 6.2%), and Orlando ($2,749, up 6.1%.)

Realtor.com data estimate that property values in the state would jump 7% to 9% right away if property taxes were eliminated. That could boost the aggregate value of its housing stock by $200 billion to $250 billion.

But that might also come at the expense of future first-time homebuyers, senior economist Joel Berner said.

A number of states have considered property tax rollbacks recently, including Ohio. A similar bill was recently introduced in Michigan.

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