House unveils proposals to cut property taxes
- CANA of Wilton Manors
- Oct 18
- 2 min read
TALLAHASSEE—The Florida House on Thursday rolled out a series of proposed constitutional amendments to cut property taxes, while looking to shield funding for schools and law enforcement. House Speaker Daniel Perez, R-Miami, outlined the menu of proposals, which came as Gov. Ron DeSantis has made a top priority of asking voters in the 2026 elections to slash homestead property taxes. “If we have faith in the voters to elect us, we should not be afraid to let them be a part of the conversation about the taxes they pay,” Perez wrote in a memorandum to House members.“It is our position that the House does not need to limit itself in presenting one single plan, but instead allow the people of Florida the ability to choose some, all, or none of the proposals on the 2026 ballot.” As examples, Rep. Kevin Steele, R-Dade City, is sponsoring a proposal(HJR201)that would eliminate non school homestead taxes. Meanwhile, Rep. Monique Miller, R-Palm Bay, is sponsoring a proposal(HJR203) that would phase out non-school homestead property taxes over 10 years. Under Miller’s proposal, the homestead tax exemption would increase by$100,000 annually. Currently, homeowners can qualify for a homestead exemption from local-government and school-district taxes on the first$25,000 of the taxable values of their properties and from local-government taxes on the values between$50,000 and$75,000.
Another proposal (HJR205), sponsored by Rep. Juan Carlos Porras, R-Miami, would exempt people ages 65 and older from paying non-school taxes on their homes. Perez this spring created a select committee to study property taxes. The issue is being closely watched by cities and counties, which rely heavily on property taxes to pay for services and say they could need other sources of money to make up for tax cuts. The House proposals include sections aimed at preventing reductions in law-enforcement funding. Asked Wednesday while in West Palm Beach about alternative revenue sources to replace property taxes, DeSantis reiterated a position that the “vast, vast majority of property tax revenue is not from homestead
Floridians’ properties. It’s second homes, investment properties, commercial properties.”
“Nobody asks, ‘Why can’t government spend less money?’” DeSantis added.
DeSantis has proposed the state cover lost property-tax revenues for rural “fiscally constrained” counties,
which have limited tax bases.
While the Senate doesn’t have a committee to focus exclusively on property taxes, Majority Leader Jim Boyd, a Bradenton Republican who will become Senate president after the 2026 elections, said Tuesday he’s interested in property tax reform. https://enewspaper.sun-sentinel.com/shortcode/SUN315/edition/3c7d8f6b-2c0a-4db8-b200-685190aecf9d?page=b26b4bfb-4496-4f6f-8ff0-d88502ddbfb5&


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