All 67 Florida Counties · Updated 2026

Save Our Homes Tax Estimator.

Calculate your real year-1 Florida property tax at purchase for any of the state's 67 counties, then see how much you would save if Governor DeSantis's proposed $250,000 homestead exemption passes. Save Our Homes resets at sale, so the seller's bill is rarely what you will pay.

Your inputs
Your home's purchase price (not the seller's assessed value).
County sets the millage rate. This estimator covers all 67 Florida counties, using verified 2025 appraiser rates for Northeast Florida and Florida TaxWatch county averages statewide. Your exact rate varies by city, CDD, and special district.
Homestead reduces assessed value by $50,000 and activates Save Our Homes 3% cap. Required filing by March 1 of the year following purchase.
Enter to see the "tax shock" — how much more you'll pay than the seller did. Find this on the property's tax record or MLS listing.
Your estimated savings if the DeSantis $250K exemption passes
$2,304/yr
About $192/month back in your pocket. Your year-1 bill would drop from $6,411 to $4,107 in Duval County.
Proposed only, not yet law. The plan exempts the first $250,000 of a homesteaded value from non-school property taxes. School taxes still apply, so the bill does not reach zero. It needs 60% of the Legislature to reach the November 2026 ballot, then 60% of voters to pass.
Your estimated Year-1 tax bill today
$6,411
Approximately $534/month. Effective rate of 1.60% on your purchase price in Duval County, at the 2025 total millage of 17.87 mills.
Tax shock vs seller's bill
+$1,820/year
Your year-1 bill is 62% higher than the seller's. This is the Save Our Homes reset in action.
10-year projection (with Save Our Homes 3% cap)
YearAssessed ValueAnnual TaxMonthly

The DeSantis property tax proposal, explained.

Governor Ron DeSantis announced a plan on May 27, 2026 called Save Our Homes from Excessive Property Taxes. The first step raises the homestead exemption from $50,000 to $250,000. That larger exemption applies to every property tax levy except school district taxes, so the first $250,000 of a homesteaded value would no longer be taxed by the county, the city, or most special districts. School taxes stay in place, which is why the estimator above still shows a bill rather than zero.

The state frames this as the opening move toward removing non-school property tax on primary homes entirely. DeSantis has said a $250,000 exemption would let roughly 60% of Florida homesteads pay nothing in non-school property tax, and that lifting it to $500,000 later would push that figure to about 92%. The plan describes a schedule that keeps raising the exemption over time until the non-school portion is gone for homesteaded owners.

How it would change your bill.

The exemption only touches the non-school millage. In Duval County the 2025 total rate is about 17.86 mills, and roughly 6.34 of those mills fund schools. The proposal would wipe out the non-school mills on your first $250,000 of value while leaving the school mills in place. A $400,000 homesteaded home in Duval drops from about $6,411 to about $4,107, a savings near $2,304 a year. Enter your own price and county in the calculator to see your number.

Two things stay on your bill no matter what passes. School taxes continue, and so do non-ad-valorem assessments like CDD bonds, fire fees, and stormwater charges, which are billed separately from millage. A new buyer in a master-planned community still budgets for those.

The timeline and the odds.

This is a proposed constitutional amendment, not current law. It needs 60% approval in both chambers of the Legislature to reach the November 2026 ballot, and then 60% of voters statewide to pass. Lawmakers took it up in a special session that began the week of May 27, 2026. If voters approve it in November 2026, the change would take effect for the following tax year.

New Florida residents would not qualify right away. The plan asks new residents to wait until their fifth year of residency before claiming the larger exemption, which keeps the biggest benefit with established homesteaders. A companion measure in the House, HJR 203, takes a slower path. It would add $100,000 to the homestead exemption each year for a decade, reaching a full non-school exemption around 2037. The two approaches may merge or compete as the session plays out.

Where the pushback is coming from.

Counties and cities raise most of their operating money from property tax, so a large exemption changes the math for local budgets. The Florida Association of Counties has opposed the broader elimination effort and warns about the revenue loss to services. The DeSantis plan includes a clause protecting public-safety funding, stating that money for law enforcement, firefighters, and first responders would not fall below 2024 and 2025 levels. How the rest of the gap gets covered, whether through state backfill, spending cuts, or other revenue, is the open question lawmakers are debating.

For a buyer, the practical move is straightforward. Price your home on today's real tax bill, the year-1 number the calculator shows, and treat any DeSantis savings as upside that may or may not arrive. If it passes, your carrying cost drops. If it stalls, you already planned for the honest number.

What this calculator does.

The calculator uses 2025 county millage rates for all 67 Florida counties, split into school and non-school portions, and applies them to your purchase price, which becomes your new assessed value once you take ownership. Northeast Florida counties use rates verified against county property appraisers. The other 60 counties use Florida TaxWatch county average millage, so treat those as close estimates rather than exact figures. For a homesteaded primary residence the tool applies the standard $50,000 homestead exemption, with $25,000 of that also lowering school taxes, before computing tax. The 10-year projection then applies the Save Our Homes 3% annual cap on assessment growth for homesteaded owners. Total millage varies by municipality, CDD, and special district, so this is a close estimate, not a quote for a specific address.

The seller's bill is shown for shock-factor comparison only. It is not what you will pay. Save Our Homes protection is reset at ownership transfer — the seller's accumulated assessment cap is wiped clean, and your tax starts fresh at full market value.

Why this matters at purchase.

Most Florida buyers reference the seller's current tax bill when estimating their carrying costs. This is one of the most common Florida buying mistakes. A 15-year Mandarin homeowner with a $400K market / $250K assessed home pays roughly $2,950 per year in property tax. The new buyer of that same home pays approximately $4,720 per year — a $1,770 difference, or $147 per month. On a 30-year mortgage at current rates, an extra $147/month adds approximately $52,000 of total interest cost.

Insurance, HOA, and CDD assessments are also typically higher for new buyers than for long-tenured owners. The honest total carrying cost analysis for a new Florida home purchase requires using your own projected numbers, not the seller's historical bills.

What this calculator doesn't include.

Five things to layer on top of this estimate. CDD assessments in master-planned communities (Nocatee, SilverLeaf, Wildlight, eTown) typically add $1,200-$2,400 per year on top of property tax. HOA dues vary widely by community ($60-$500+ per month). City overlays in incorporated areas add additional millage in some Jacksonville submarkets. Special districts for some neighborhoods (lighting, drainage, downtown improvement). Additional exemptions for qualifying buyers (veterans, seniors, widow/widower, low-income) can reduce the calculated bill further if applicable.

For a precise tax estimate including all jurisdiction-specific overlays, contact your county property appraiser's office with your purchase price. Many offer free estimation tools online.

Common questions.

What is the DeSantis $250,000 homestead exemption proposal?
It is a proposed Florida constitutional amendment announced by Governor Ron DeSantis on May 27, 2026, called Save Our Homes from Excessive Property Taxes. It would raise the homestead exemption from $50,000 to $250,000 on every property tax levy except school taxes. The first $250,000 of a homesteaded value would no longer be taxed by the county, the city, or most special districts. It is not yet law and would need to pass the Legislature and a statewide vote in November 2026.
How much would I save under the DeSantis property tax plan?
Your savings equal the non-school millage in your county applied to the value between the current exemption and $250,000. On a $400,000 homesteaded home in Duval County the bill drops from about $6,411 to about $4,107, a savings near $2,304 a year. Use the calculator above with your own purchase price and county to see your estimated savings. School taxes still apply, so the bill does not reach zero.
Does the DeSantis proposal eliminate Florida property taxes completely?
No. The first step removes non-school property tax on the first $250,000 of a homesteaded value. School district taxes remain, and so do non-ad-valorem assessments like CDD bonds and fire fees. DeSantis has described later steps that would raise the exemption toward $500,000 and eventually remove the full non-school portion for homesteaded owners, but only the first step has been proposed in detail.
When would the DeSantis property tax change take effect?
If the Legislature places it on the ballot with 60% support in both chambers and 60% of voters approve it in November 2026, the change would apply to the following tax year. Until then, your real bill is the year-1 number this calculator shows.
Do school taxes go away under the proposal?
No. The larger exemption applies to county, city, and most special-district millage, not to school district millage. In most Florida counties school taxes run between 6 and 7 mills, which is why a homesteaded bill under the proposal still has a meaningful balance.
Who qualifies for the larger homestead exemption?
Florida homesteaded primary residences would qualify. The plan asks new Florida residents to wait until their fifth year of residency before claiming the larger exemption. Rental properties and second homes would not qualify, the same as the current homestead rules.
Why is my Florida property tax higher than the seller's?
Save Our Homes caps annual increases in assessed value at 3% for homesteaded properties. When a Florida home sells, the cap resets and the new owner pays tax based on full market value (purchase price). The seller may have owned the home for years with assessed value far below market — their tax bill reflects that protection. Your year-1 bill is typically 30-60% higher because it resets at your purchase price.
How accurate is this Florida tax estimator?
The estimator covers all 67 Florida counties and assumes you will file homestead exemption. Northeast Florida uses 2025 rates verified against county property appraisers. Other counties use Florida TaxWatch county average millage, so those run a little less precise. Actual bills vary 5-10% based on city, special-district, and school-district overlays within a county. For an exact number, contact your county property appraiser with your purchase price. Most appraisers offer free estimation tools.
Do I get homestead exemption automatically?
No. You must file a homestead exemption application with your county property appraiser by March 1 of the year following your purchase. Without filing, you pay tax on full assessed value without the $50,000 exemption and without Save Our Homes cap protection. This is the single most common Florida buyer mistake — the exemption is not automatic.
Does Save Our Homes transfer to the new buyer?
No. The Save Our Homes assessment cap protection stays with the prior homeowner, not the property. When you buy a Florida home, the seller's accumulated cap protection is wiped clean and your assessed value starts at full market value (your purchase price). This is true regardless of how long the seller owned the home or how much accumulated SOH benefit they had.
What is the difference between assessed value and market value?
Market value is what the home is worth on the open market — typically your purchase price for a new buyer. Assessed value is the value the county property appraiser uses to calculate property tax. For homesteaded properties, the assessed value can fall below market value over time due to Save Our Homes cap. For new buyers, assessed value generally equals market value (purchase price) until cap protection accumulates over multiple years of ownership.

Florida property tax by county.

This calculator covers all 67 Florida counties. These pages break down the rate, a worked year-1 bill, and the proposed DeSantis $250K savings for the state's largest metro markets. See the full Florida property tax hub.

Disclaimer: This calculator provides estimates based on 2025 county-wide millage data and assumed homestead exemption filing. Actual tax bills can vary based on specific jurisdiction overlays, additional exemptions, and changes in millage rates. For tax planning decisions, consult a licensed Florida tax professional or your county property appraiser. Momentum Realty is not a tax advisor and does not provide tax advice.

Want a tax estimate for a specific property?

Talk to Jon or Brittany — we can pull recent comparable tax bills, estimate your carrying cost, or just answer questions about how Save Our Homes affects your purchase.

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