Tallahassee — Gov. Ron DeSantis called lawmakers into a special legislative session this week and proposed the "Save Our Homes from Excessive Property Taxes" amendment to expand the homestead exemption, set residency requirements, and limit assessments; the measure would require a constitutional amendment and eventual voter approval to take effect. Florida municipalities and school districts have publicly warned this week that the plan could create multibillion-dollar revenue shortfalls, prompting local officials and the Florida Policy Institute to testify at hearings; lawmakers discussed bill drafts on Monday and any amendment would need at least 60% voter approval in a statewide referendum likely in November.
Prepared by Lauren Mitchell and reviewed by editorial team.
The "Save Our Homes" plan could affect your property taxes. If passed, it could expand homestead exemptions and limit assessments. But, it could also lead to local revenue shortfalls. That could impact services like schools. Check how this might affect your county.
This isn't a done deal. The plan needs a constitutional amendment and 60% voter approval. The vote could happen in November. So, stay informed and ready to vote. Worth forwarding if you know a Florida homeowner.
Florida homeowners who meet proposed residency and ownership criteria would see lower taxable home values and reduced annual property tax bills under the plan.
Local governments, school districts and municipal services could lose billions in revenue, potentially forcing cuts to parks, libraries, public safety and emergency services.
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Florida lawmakers debate DeSantis' Save Our Homes plan
Florida Politics - Campaigns & Elections. Lobbying & Government. Spectrum News Bay News 9 Florida Today Tallahassee Democrat WKMG WKMGNo right-leaning sources found for this story.
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