Florida's homestead exemption can save you thousands of dollars a year in property taxes. Here is exactly what it covers, who qualifies, and how to apply before the deadline.
One of the most valuable benefits of owning a primary residence in Florida is the homestead exemption. It reduces your taxable property value, caps how fast your assessed value can increase year over year, and provides meaningful savings that compound over time. Yet many buyers — especially those purchasing in South Florida for the first time or relocating from another state — either miss the deadline to apply or do not fully understand what they are entitled to.
This guide explains how the Florida homestead exemption works, who qualifies, what it saves you, and how to apply correctly before the March 1 deadline.
The Florida homestead exemption is a property tax benefit that reduces the assessed value of your primary residence by up to $50,000 for tax purposes. Since you pay property taxes based on assessed value, reducing that number directly reduces your tax bill every year you own and live in the home.
The exemption is structured in two parts. The first $25,000 applies to all taxing authorities including school taxes. The second $25,000 applies to the assessed value between $50,000 and $75,000 and applies to all taxing authorities except school taxes. In practical terms, if your home is assessed at $400,000 and you qualify for the full exemption, your taxable value for most purposes drops to $350,000.
The homestead exemption also activates Florida's Save Our Homes assessment limitation. Once you receive a homestead exemption, the assessed value of your home cannot increase by more than 3% per year or the rate of inflation — whichever is lower — regardless of what the property is actually worth on the open market.
This protection compounds significantly over time. A homeowner who purchased a property in 2015 for $350,000 and has had the homestead exemption since then may have an assessed value well below the current market value of the home — which in many South Florida neighborhoods has increased dramatically. That gap between assessed value and market value is what creates the portability benefit discussed below.
To qualify you must meet all of the following as of January 1 of the tax year for which you are applying:
Non-resident aliens and foreign nationals who are not permanent residents do not qualify for the homestead exemption. If you purchased a property as a vacation home, investment property, or rental, it does not qualify regardless of how much time you spend there. The property must be your legal primary residence.
The savings depend on your local millage rate — the tax rate expressed per $1,000 of taxable value. In Miami-Dade County the combined millage rate (county, city, school board, and special districts) typically runs between 18 and 22 mills depending on your municipality. Here is an example at 20 mills:
Beyond the standard $50,000 exemption, Florida offers additional property tax benefits for qualifying homeowners:
Florida's portability provision allows you to transfer the accumulated Save Our Homes benefit — the difference between your assessed value and your home's market value — to a new homestead property in Florida. This is one of the most powerful and least understood benefits of the Florida homestead exemption.
If you sell your home in Doral, for example, and the assessed value was $200,000 below the sale price due to years of Save Our Homes capping, you may be able to port up to $500,000 of that accumulated benefit to your next Florida homestead. This can significantly reduce the assessed value of your new home from day one rather than starting fresh at the purchase price. Portability must be applied for within three years of selling or abandoning your previous homestead.
The application process varies slightly by county but follows the same general steps:
InvesTeam Realty has been working in Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach County for over 24 years. We make sure every buyer we work with understands their property tax obligations and benefits before closing — not after. Contact us before you start your search.
Talk to an Agent →This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or tax advice. Property tax rules, millage rates, and exemption eligibility requirements change. Verify current rules and deadlines directly with your county property appraiser before taking action.
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