Rob Hartley

Rob Hartley

Founder, AppealDesk · March 27, 2026

9 Property Tax Strategies for Florida Homeowners (2026)

Updated March 2026

Key Takeaway

The average Florida homeowner pays $2,213/year in property taxes. Using these strategies, most homeowners can save $221 to $443/year.

Strategy 1: Appeal Your Assessment

The single most effective way to lower your Florida property taxes. If your assessed value exceeds your home's actual market value, you have grounds to appeal.

  • Where to file: Value Adjustment Board
  • Deadline: 25 days from TRIM notice (typically September)
  • Assessment ratio: 100% of market value
  • Average savings: $266/year (10-15% reduction)

The key is comparable sales evidence. Find 3-5 similar homes that sold near you for less than your assessed value.

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Strategy 2: Claim Your Homestead Exemption

If you live in your home as your primary residence and haven't filed for homestead exemption, you're overpaying. This is the most commonly missed tax break in Florida.

Pro tip: Homestead exemption and tax appeals are separate strategies. You can (and should) use both.

Strategy 3: Check Your Property Record for Errors

Request your property record card from the county assessor. Common errors that inflate your assessment:

  • Wrong square footage (most common -- off by 100+ sqft)
  • Extra bedrooms or bathrooms
  • Pool, garage, or other improvements you don't have
  • Wrong construction type or quality grade
  • Incorrect lot size

Studies show 30-60% of property records contain at least one data error.

Strategy 4: Understand Your Assessment Cap

Florida has a Save Our Homes: 3% annual cap for homestead. This limits how fast your assessed value can grow. Make sure your cap is being applied correctly by checking your assessment notice each year.

Warning: The cap resets when you buy, sell, or transfer property. New homeowners are especially vulnerable to high assessments.

Strategy 5: Apply for Senior Exemptions

If you're 65 or older in Florida, you may qualify for:

  • Senior exemption: Additional $50,000 homestead exemption
  • Tax deferral: Available -- postpone payments until sale
  • Income requirement: $35,167

Strategy 6: Document Property Condition Issues

If your property has issues that reduce its value, document them:

  • Deferred maintenance (roof, foundation, HVAC)
  • Environmental issues (flood zone, contamination)
  • Neighborhood factors (noise, commercial encroachment)
  • Structural damage or code violations

Photos and repair estimates strengthen your appeal.

Strategy 7: Review Exemptions You May Be Missing

Beyond homestead and senior exemptions, check if you qualify for:

  • Veteran/military exemptions
  • Disability exemptions
  • Agricultural use classification (if applicable)
  • Energy-efficiency improvements credits
  • Historical property designation

Strategy 8: Appeal Every Year

In Florida, assessments can change every year. Don't assume last year's fair assessment is still fair. Market conditions change, and assessors don't always adjust downward when values decline.

Strategy 9: Know Your Deadlines Cold

Florida appeal deadline: 25 days from TRIM notice (typically September). Miss it and you wait until next cycle. Set a calendar reminder 2 weeks before.

Start With Strategy 1: Check Your Florida Assessment

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