
During an Oct.15 event[1] in West Palm Beach, a high school student asked DeSantis if there are alternative revenue sources that could replace property tax funding. Lawmakers have offered competing proposals[2], but appear to be focused on changing how primary residences are taxed.
“The vast, vast majority of property tax revenue is not from homestead Floridians’ properties. It’s second homes, investment properties, commercial properties, Airbnb, all those other things,” DeSantis said. “That’s about 68 to 70% of property tax revenue statewide.”
Sixty-four percent of Florida’s property tax revenue comes from properties that are not primary residences, preliminary 2025 data shows.
The idea of changing how Florida collects property taxes makes counties and cities nervous because no one has spelled out where the lost revenue would come from.
PolitiFact contacted DeSantis’ office for comment but received no reply.
The Florida Policy Institute estimated[5] that ending property taxes for these properties would cost about $18.5 billion, which breaks down to $7.8 billion for counties, $3 billion for cities and $7.7 billion for school districts.
This kind of overhaul “limits local fiscal autonomy, gives outsized benefits to owners of more expensive properties, and makes the state more susceptible to economic downturns,” he said.
Since August, DeSantis and Florida Chief Financial Officer Blaise Ingoglia have traveled the state to talk about their efforts to root out what they describe as “waste, fraud and abuse.” Floridians don’t need to pay property taxes, they say, when local governments are misusing millions.
But local governments[7] have pushed back[8] on those statements, saying some spending examples were misrepresented, approved by voters or weren’t funded by property taxes.
Ending taxes for primary residences could cost about $18.5 billion across Florida counties, cities and school districts. That might result in reducing or privatizing services, or increasing the sales or corporate tax rates.
References
- ^ Oct.15 event (www.facebook.com)
- ^ competing proposals (floridaphoenix.com)
- ^ Florida Policy Institute (www.floridapolicy.org)
- ^ Office of Economic and Demographic Research (www.flhouse.gov)
- ^ estimated (www.floridapolicy.org)
- ^ Florida renters (shimberg.ufl.edu)
- ^ local governments (mynews13.com)
- ^ have pushed back (www.wesh.com)