Dixie County Homestead Exemption: How to File & What You Save (2026)
If you own and live in your Dixie County home, the Florida homestead exemption can cut your property-tax bill by roughly $722 a year and cap how fast your assessed value can rise. Here’s what it is, who qualifies, and exactly how to file by the March 1 deadline.
Your typical savings in Dixie County
At Dixie County’s typical total millage of about 17.69 mills, the full $50,000 homestead exemption is worth roughly $722 per year for a home assessed at $75,000 or more (which is nearly all homes). On top of that, the Save Our Homes cap limits future assessment increases — often the bigger long-term benefit. Run your own number with the Save Our Homes estimator or the Dixie County property-tax calculator.
What the Florida homestead exemption is
If you own a home in Florida and it’s your permanent residence, the homestead exemption removes up to $50,000 from the home’s assessed (taxable) value, lowering your annual property-tax bill. The first $25,000 applies to all taxing authorities, including schools. A second $25,000 applies to the assessed value between $50,000 and $75,000 for non-school levies. It also unlocks the Save Our Homes cap, which limits how fast your assessed value can rise.
Save Our Homes 3% cap
Once your home is homesteaded, Save Our Homes caps the annual increase in its assessed value at 3% or the rate of inflation, whichever is lower. Over time this is often worth far more than the exemption itself, because it shields you from rising market values. You can estimate the effect with our Save Our Homes tax estimator.
Portability: take your savings with you
If you sell and buy another Florida homestead, portability lets you transfer up to $500,000 of your accumulated Save Our Homes benefit to the new home (file Form DR-501T within three tax years). It’s one of the most valuable and most overlooked parts of the program.
Who qualifies
You must own and occupy the home as your permanent residence as of January 1 of the year you’re applying. It must be your primary home, not a second home or rental. You only file once — the exemption renews automatically each year as long as you still qualify; just tell the appraiser if that changes.
How to file in Dixie County
File for homestead by the March 1 deadline for the current tax year. You file with the Dixie County Property Appraiser. Find their official website and online homestead application through the Florida Department of Revenue’s official county appraiser directory.
To file, the appraiser will generally ask for proof that the home was your permanent residence as of January 1: a Florida driver license or ID showing the property address, your Florida vehicle registration, voter registration or a declaration of domicile, and your Social Security number (and your spouse’s). Non-citizens provide their permanent-residency card. Requirements can vary slightly by county, so check your appraiser’s page.
Either way, the official statewide directory of every county property appraiser is here: Florida DOR — county appraisers.
- Dixie County property-tax calculator
- Save Our Homes tax-savings estimator
- Homestead exemption guide for all 67 Florida counties
Dixie County homestead exemption FAQ
When is the homestead deadline in Dixie County?
Do I have to file every year?
How much does the homestead exemption save?
What is portability?
General information for Florida homeowners, current for the 2026 tax year; not legal or tax advice. The homestead exemption is administered by your county property appraiser — confirm details, forms, and online filing on their official site (linked above) or via the Florida Department of Revenue. Typical-savings figures are estimates from county-average millage (in-repo, FY2025-26) and your actual savings depend on your home’s assessed value and taxing district. As of 2026-06-16.
