Florida Property Tax Update · June 2026

Florida Property Tax Relief:
What the 2026 Homestead Amendment Means for You

Florida's "Save Our Homes from Excessive Property Taxes" amendment is on the November 2026 ballot. If voters approve it, homestead exemptions could rise from $50,000 to $250,000 by 2028. Use Ann's calculator below to see exactly what it could mean for your tax bill — year by year.

This amendment is on the November 2026 ballot — it requires 60% voter approval to take effect
The Roadmap

How the Exemption Would Grow

Your homestead exemption reduces your home's taxable value. A larger exemption = less taxable value = lower tax bill. Here's how it changes if the amendment passes.

Now (2026)
~$50,722
Current non-school exemption (Amendment 5 CPI-adjusted). School exemption: $25,000.
Nov 2026
Vote!
Amendment on the ballot. Requires 60% approval to take effect.
2027
$150,000
Non-school exemption triples if amendment passes. School exemption stays $25,000.
2028+
$250,000
Non-school exemption rises to $250K, then indexed to inflation each year after.
Key Facts

What You Need to Know

Who Qualifies?

Your Florida home must be your primary residence and you must have applied for the homestead exemption by March 1st. New Florida residents who move here after January 1, 2027 would receive only a $50,000 non-school exemption for their first five years of residency before the full exemption kicks in.

School Taxes Are Different

The new exemption only applies to non-school levies (county, city, special districts). Your school district portion — about 6.5 mills in Broward — continues to be calculated on the assessed value minus only $25,000, regardless of the amendment. This limits the total savings.

Save Our Homes Cap Still Applies

Existing homestead owners already benefit from the Save Our Homes cap — your assessed value can only increase 3% per year (or CPI if lower), even if your home's market value jumps much more. The new amendment works on top of this protection. New buyers start fresh at market value.

Interactive Tool

Your Property Tax Savings Calculator

Enter your property details below to see a year-by-year comparison of your estimated tax bill — under current law and if the 2026 amendment passes.

Calculate Your Savings

All figures are estimates. Verify your exact millage rate at bcpa.net or on your annual TRIM notice.

Enter the assessed value from your TRIM notice or tax bill, not the market price. New buyers: use the purchase price.
Year Non-School Exemption School Exemption Est. Annual Tax Annual Savings vs. 2026
Important notes: These estimates use approximate 2025–2026 Broward County millage rates and assume no change in your assessed value or the millage rates over time (both of which will change). The calculator splits your total millage into school and non-school portions — only the non-school portion is affected by the new amendment. Figures are for illustration only. The amendment is on the November 2026 ballot and requires 60% voter approval. New FL residents who move here on or after January 1, 2027 receive only a $50,000 non-school exemption for their first five years. Always confirm your exact rates at bcpa.net or with your local property appraiser.
Real Estate Implications

What This Means If You're Buying or Selling

🏠 If You're Buying

If the amendment passes, a home you purchase now could cost you significantly less in property taxes by 2028. At $250,000 in non-school exemptions, many mid-priced homes in Fort Lauderdale will see non-school taxes cut by 50–70%.

Keep in mind: when you buy a home, the assessed value resets to market value — meaning you start at a higher assessed value than the previous owner who benefited from the SOH cap. The new exemption helps offset this.

💰 If You're Selling

Lower property taxes make Florida homeownership more attractive to buyers — which is good news for sellers. Reduced tax burden can expand the pool of qualified buyers and support property values.

Remember portability: if you've accumulated significant Save Our Homes savings on your current home, you can port up to $500,000 of that benefit to your next Florida home. This is one of the most underused benefits in Florida real estate.

Have questions about how the amendment affects your specific situation — as a buyer, seller, or renter? Ann can walk you through the numbers.

Do Your Own Research

Official Sources & Further Reading

Have Questions About Your Property Taxes?

Whether you're buying, selling, or just trying to understand how the amendment affects your home's value — Ann is here to help.

Ann Chamberlain, Fort Lauderdale Realtor
Ann Chamberlain
REALTOR® · Keller Williams Realty Professionals
FL License #3279956 · (954) 612-0439