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Florida Is Rethinking Property Taxes. Other States Are Watching Closely.

For years, Florida's tax reputation has been relatively simple:

  • No state income tax.

  • Moderate property taxes.

  • Heavy reliance on sales taxes and tourism.

Now, that formula may be changing.

In recent weeks, Florida lawmakers and Governor Ron DeSantis have advanced a series of tax proposals ranging from targeted tax breaks to one of the most ambitious property tax overhauls currently under discussion anywhere in the United States. The debate is drawing attention far beyond Florida because it raises a larger question: If one of America's fastest-growing states can significantly reduce property taxes, could others follow?

The Tax Package That Actually Passed

Despite early discussions about cutting Florida's gas tax, lawmakers ultimately moved in a different direction.

The final tax package approved by the Legislature includes a collection of targeted tax reductions, exemptions, and sales-tax holidays rather than a broad gas-tax cut. Among the provisions are tax relief measures for outdoor recreation purchases, hunting and fishing equipment, aviation fuel, and certain business taxes. Lawmakers also continued discussions about using tourist-development tax revenues for broader tax relief purposes.

While none of those measures are likely to transform a family's finances overnight, they reflect a broader effort to provide tax relief without introducing an income tax or significantly increasing state debt.

The Bigger Story: Property Taxes

The real headline here isn't the tax package, though.

It's property taxes.

In late May and early June, Florida lawmakers approved a proposed constitutional amendment that would dramatically expand the state's homestead exemption if voters approve it in November 2026. Under the proposal, the homestead exemption would increase from $50,000 today to $150,000 in 2027 and eventually to $250,000 in 2028. For some homeowners, that could eliminate most or all non-school property taxes.

Supporters argue the proposal is a logical response to rising housing costs, soaring insurance premiums, and rapid increases in property values across much of the state. Critics worry about the impact on local government budgets and the services those taxes help fund.

Florida Is Even Discussing Property Tax Elimination

If that sounds dramatic, the conversation has gone even further.

Governor DeSantis has publicly discussed long-term plans that could eventually eliminate property taxes on homestead properties altogether, positioning Florida as a state with neither a personal income tax nor meaningful property taxes on primary residences. Several legislative proposals this year explored versions of that concept, though some stalled before reaching the ballot.

Whether full elimination is politically or financially realistic remains an open question.

According to analysis from the Tax Foundation, replacing all property tax revenue would require major changes elsewhere in the tax system and could significantly increase reliance on sales taxes or other revenue sources.

Why the Rest of the Country Should Care

Florida's debate matters because it reflects a broader national trend.

Across the country, policymakers are increasingly focused on property taxes.

Unlike income taxes, which many taxpayers only think about once a year, property taxes arrive annually and are often impossible to ignore. Rising home values have pushed tax bills higher in many markets, leading to growing pressure for relief.

We've already seen:

  • Property tax relief proposals in Texas

  • Expanded homestead exemptions in several states

  • New tax-credit programs aimed at homeowners

  • Growing efforts to shift local government funding away from traditional property taxes

Florida simply happens to be pursuing one of the most aggressive versions of that idea.

The Potential Tradeoffs

The challenge is that property taxes fund many local services Americans rely on every day.

Depending on the jurisdiction, property tax revenue may support:

  • Police and fire protection

  • Roads and infrastructure

  • Libraries

  • Parks

  • Local government operations

  • Public schools

Florida's current proposals generally preserve school funding while targeting other property-tax obligations, but local officials have still expressed concerns about long-term revenue impacts.

That's why many tax experts argue the real debate isn't whether taxpayers want lower property taxes.

It's what replaces the revenue if those taxes disappear.

A New Twist: New Residents May Not Get the Same Benefit

One controversial aspect of the Florida proposal is that some of the largest benefits could be reserved for existing Florida residents.

Under current discussions, homeowners who establish Florida residency before the end of 2026 could potentially qualify sooner for expanded exemptions than those who move to the state later. Critics argue that could create a two-tier system, while supporters say it rewards current residents who have absorbed years of rising housing costs.

Florida's 2026 tax debate is no longer just about sales-tax holidays or niche tax breaks. It's become one of the country's most closely watched experiments in property tax reform.

Whether voters ultimately approve the proposed constitutional amendment remains to be seen. But the discussion itself reflects a growing reality nationwide: As housing costs continue to rise, property taxes are becoming one of the most politically important taxes in America.

Florida may simply be the first state trying to rewrite the rules. 

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