Florida Property Tax Portability 2026: How Long-Term Homeowners Can Take Their Savings With Them

Florida Property Tax Portability 2026: How to Port Your Save Our Homes Savings | RealtorStephens.com
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Florida Property Tax · Seller Resources · 2026

Your Property Tax Savings Can Move With You — But Only If You Know How

Florida’s Save Our Homes cap has been protecting your tax bill for years. Before you sell, you need to know exactly how to port that benefit to your next home — before the deadline closes.

By Stacy Ann Stephens, REALTOR® · Keller Williams Winter Park · Updated June 2026

📞 Free Net Sheet + Tax Analysis Book Consultation
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Stacy Ann Stephens | REALTOR®
Keller Williams Realty Winter Park · 147 W Lyman Ave, Winter Park FL 32789 · 407-603-1664 · License #BK3393979

I have sat across from too many long-term Florida homeowners who are stunned at the moment of selling — not by what they’re getting for their home, but by what their buyer is going to pay in property taxes afterward. And then the panic sets in: “Does that mean I’m going to pay that much when I buy my next place?”

The answer is: only if you don’t port your homestead.

If you’ve owned your Florida home for five or more years and have a homestead exemption, you’ve been receiving something called the Save Our Homes (SOH) assessment cap. It’s limited how much your property’s assessed value can increase each year — capping it at 3% or the rate of inflation, whichever is lower. Over time, that creates a massive gap between what your home is assessed at for tax purposes and what it’s actually worth on the market.

That gap is your accumulated benefit. And when you sell and move within Florida, you can take up to $500,000 of it with you. But only if you do it right — and on time.

How the Save Our Homes Cap Works

When you establish homestead exemption on a Florida property, the assessed value for tax purposes is capped at your purchase price (plus the $25,000 standard homestead exemption). After that, the assessed value can only increase by 3% per year OR the Consumer Price Index — whichever is lower.

In the 2020–2022 period, Florida home values jumped 25–40% in many areas. But if you had a homestead, your assessed value only crept up 3% per year. The result: a massive differential between your market value and your taxable assessed value.

Example: You bought your Orange County home in 2012 for $210,000. Today it’s worth $485,000. With the SOH cap at 3%/year for 13 years, your assessed value might be around $290,000. You’re being taxed on $290,000 instead of $485,000. At Orange County’s millage rate (~11 mills), that difference saves you roughly $2,145 per year. Every year. That’s your SOH benefit.

The Reset Reality: What Happens When You Sell

Here’s where long-term homeowners get blindsided: when you sell your home, the Save Our Homes cap does not transfer to the buyer. The buyer’s property taxes will reset to the full market value of their purchase price.

This matters to your sale in two ways:

  1. It affects buyer affordability. A buyer purchasing your $485,000 home will be taxed on close to $485,000 — not your protected $290,000. That could add $150–$200+/month to their total housing payment. This is real and it affects your buyer pool.
  2. It affects your next purchase. If you’re buying another Florida home, YOUR property taxes will also reset to full market value — unless you port your SOH benefit.

Portability: How to Take Your Savings With You

Florida law allows homeowners to “port” their accumulated SOH benefit — up to $500,000 — to a new Florida homestead property. This can dramatically reduce your taxable assessed value on your next home.

The Portability Rules

  • You must establish homestead exemption on your new Florida property within 3 years of when you abandon your previous homestead (i.e., sell and move)
  • The maximum portable benefit is $500,000
  • You must apply for portability when you file for homestead on your new property
  • Portability only works within Florida — you cannot port a Florida SOH benefit to another state
  • The application deadline is typically March 1 of the year following your move-in
Don’t miss this deadline. The homestead + portability application must be filed by March 1 of the year following your purchase. If you buy in September 2026 and don’t file by March 1, 2027, you miss the portability benefit for 2027 and may have to wait another year.

How the Portability Calculation Works

Your portable benefit is calculated as the difference between your old home’s just (market) value and its assessed value. This is your “SOH differential.” You carry this differential to your new property.

However, if you’re moving to a less expensive home, the benefit is proportionally reduced (portability is capped at the new home’s just value). If you’re moving to a more expensive home, you port the full dollar amount, reducing your new assessed value by your saved differential.

🧮 Florida Property Tax Portability Calculator

Estimate your annual tax savings from porting your Save Our Homes benefit. For educational purposes — actual results vary by county millage rates and specific circumstances. Consult your county Property Appraiser for official figures.

Your SOH Differential (Portable Benefit):
Benefit Eligible to Port (max $500K):
New Home Market Value:
New Assessed Value WITH Portability:
New Assessed Value WITHOUT Portability:
Estimated Annual Tax WITH Portability:
Estimated Annual Tax WITHOUT Portability:

This calculator uses simplified millage estimates and a $50,000 combined homestead exemption. Actual taxes depend on your county’s total millage, special districts, and exemptions. Consult your county Property Appraiser for official figures.

Orange County vs. Seminole County Case Study

Here’s a hypothetical scenario showing the real-dollar impact of portability vs. no portability for a homeowner who has lived in their home since 2010:

ScenarioOrange County ExampleSeminole County Example
Current Home Market Value$480,000$420,000
Current Assessed Value (with SOH)$280,000$255,000
SOH Differential (Portable Benefit)$200,000$165,000
New Home Purchase Price$525,000$475,000
New Assessed Value WITH Portability$325,000$310,000
Annual Tax WITH Portability (~11 mills)~$3,025~$2,730
Annual Tax WITHOUT Portability (~11 mills)~$5,225~$4,675
Annual Savings from Portability~$2,200/year~$1,945/year
Ten-year impact: $2,200/year in saved taxes = $22,000 over 10 years — all because you filed the portability paperwork by March 1. This is money that stays in your pocket with zero effort beyond filing on time.

Step-by-Step: How to File for Portability in Florida

  1. Confirm your departure homestead date. This is the date you moved out and sold your old home. Your 3-year porting window starts here.
  2. Establish homestead on your new property. You must actually live in the new home and it must be your primary residence in Florida.
  3. Contact your new county’s Property Appraiser’s office. File for homestead exemption AND portability at the same time — these are separate applications but submitted together.
  4. Complete the DR-501 form (Homestead) AND the DR-501T form (Transfer of Homestead Assessment). Both are available from your county Property Appraiser’s office.
  5. Submit before March 1. If you purchase in 2026, you must file by March 1, 2027 to receive the benefit for the 2027 tax year.
  6. Your previous county Property Appraiser will verify your old SOH differential. The two counties communicate to confirm the amount.

Want a Custom Seller Net Sheet That Includes Tax Portability?

Most agents just calculate commissions and closing costs. I calculate your complete financial picture — including what your taxes will look like on the next purchase, with and without portability. That’s the “One Agent. One Lender.” difference.

📞 Call Stacy: 407-603-1664

Frequently Asked Questions

How does the Save Our Homes cap affect selling my house in Florida?+
The Save Our Homes cap limits how much your property’s assessed value can increase while you own it — up to 3% per year. When you sell, that cap resets to market value for the buyer. For you as the seller, the impact is on your next purchase: without porting, your new property taxes will reflect the full market value of whatever you buy next.
Can I transfer my Florida homestead tax savings to a new home?+
Yes. Florida’s portability law allows you to transfer up to $500,000 of your accumulated Save Our Homes benefit to a new Florida homestead property. You must file for portability by March 1 of the year following your purchase, within 3 years of abandoning your previous homestead.
What are the Florida property tax portability rules in 2026?+
In 2026, Florida portability rules allow homeowners to port up to $500,000 of their Save Our Homes differential to a new Florida homestead. The application must be submitted to your new county Property Appraiser by March 1 of the year following purchase. The benefit must be used within 3 years of selling your previous homestead.
What forms do I need to file for Florida homestead portability?+
You need the DR-501 (Application for Homestead Tax Exemption) and the DR-501T (Transfer of Homestead Assessment Difference). Both are available from your county Property Appraiser’s office. File both at the same time when applying for homestead on your new property.
What is the deadline to file for homestead portability in Florida?+
The deadline is March 1 of the year following your purchase. If you buy a home in August 2026, you must file for homestead and portability by March 1, 2027 to receive the benefit for tax year 2027. Missing this deadline can cost you tens of thousands of dollars in taxes over the coming years.
Does portability work if I’m moving to a more expensive home?+
Yes. If you move to a more expensive home, you port the full dollar amount of your SOH differential (up to $500,000), which reduces your new home’s assessed value by that amount. If you move to a less expensive home, the portable benefit is proportionally reduced based on the ratio of the new home’s value to your old home’s value.

Ready to Understand the Full Financial Picture of Your Sale?

As both your REALTOR® and Mortgage Broker, I can model your net proceeds, your portability benefit, and your estimated taxes on your next home — all in one conversation.

📞 407-603-1664 — Free Consultation
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Stacy Ann Stephens | REALTOR®
Keller Williams Realty Winter Park · 147 W Lyman Ave, Winter Park FL 32789 · 407-603-1664 · License #BK3393979
This post is for educational purposes only. Property tax calculations vary by county and individual circumstances. Consult your county Property Appraiser’s office and a licensed professional for guidance specific to your situation.