Portability First: Keep Your Florida Tax Savings When You Move (Up to $500,000)
If you owned a prior Florida homestead, portability can reduce the taxable value of your new primary residence by transferring your Homestead Assessment Difference (your “Save Our Homes” benefit) — up to $500,000. Miami-Dade confirms portability transfers the difference between assessed and market value to another homestead.
What changes for property taxes after you buy a home
The biggest surprise for new Florida homeowners: the prior owner’s tax bill is not your tax bill. A change in ownership can reset assessed value closer to market value, and exemptions don’t automatically transfer. Miami-Dade’s Property Appraiser explicitly warns buyers not to assume taxes will stay the same after a sale.
How to find and pay your property taxes (simple workflow)
- Search your property in your county Property Appraiser portal (verify owner name, mailing address, exemptions).
- Confirm homestead/exemption status (if you’re living there as your primary residence).
- Go to the Tax Collector site to pay your bill online once billed (typically after Nov 1).
- Pay early if available — Palm Beach publishes early payment discounts (Nov–Feb).
Homestead Exemption: the cornerstone benefit (and why it matters)
Florida’s Homestead Exemption can reduce your taxable value, and it unlocks the “Save Our Homes” assessment limitation (which caps annual assessed value increases). Broward summarizes the cap as no more than 3% or CPI (whichever is lower) for homesteaded property.
What you file for Homestead
The Florida Department of Revenue’s homestead application is Form DR-501. It states permanent residency is required on January 1 and the application is due by March 1.
Portability (explained like you’re actually using it)
Portability does not “transfer your homestead exemption.” Florida DOR clarifies you can’t transfer homestead itself, but you may be able to transfer your homestead assessment difference (“portability”), lowering your new assessed value.
What you’re transferring
The “Save Our Homes” benefit is the difference between your home’s market (just) value and your assessed value (limited by the SOH cap). Portability allows you to transfer that difference — up to $500,000 — to your next Florida homestead.
Deadlines and filing rules that matter
- You generally file portability when you apply for homestead on the new home (Palm Beach notes you can e-file portability with homestead).
- Florida DOR’s portability form is DR-501T (“Transfer of Homestead Assessment Difference”).
- Monroe explains you must establish the new homestead on or before January 1 of the third tax roll year after leaving the prior homestead; and the filing deadline is March 1.
Portability example (real numbers)
Old home: Market value $550,000. Assessed value (with SOH cap) $360,000.
SOH/Portability difference: $190,000.
New home: Market value $650,000. If you qualify and file portability, that $190,000 can reduce the assessed value used for taxes on the new homestead. Miami-Dade provides portability calculations guidance and examples for how it’s applied in practice.
Note: the exact taxable value depends on county calculation method, ownership structure, and whether the new home costs more/less than the prior home. Use the county calculators below to estimate.
County links: Search your property, apply for exemptions, pay taxes
| County | Property Appraiser (Search / Homestead / Portability) | Tax Collector (Pay Property Taxes) |
|---|---|---|
| Palm Beach |
pbcpao.gov Portability page: pbcpao.gov/portability.htm |
Pay Online hub: pbctax.gov/pay-online
Property Tax info/discounts: pbctax.gov/taxes/property-tax |
| Broward |
Homestead info: bcpa.net/homestead.asp
Online Homestead filing: bcpa.net/onlinehomestead.asp |
Property tax payment info: browardtax.org/property-tax |
| Miami-Dade |
Homestead apply online: Homestead (apply online)
Portability info: Portability |
Real Estate Tax Payments: mdctaxcollector.gov |
| Monroe |
Portability (rules + timing): mcpafl.org/exemptions/portability
Real property exemptions: mcpafl.org/exemptions/real-property-exemptions |
Pay property taxes: monroetaxcollector.com/pay-property-taxes |
Fast checklist for new homeowners (do this, don’t guess)
- Apply for homestead (DR-501) if this is your primary residence.
- File portability (DR-501T) if you had a prior Florida homestead and moved within the allowed window.
- Confirm your mailing address on the Property Appraiser record (so TRIM/tax notices reach you).
- Know who does what: Property Appraiser = value/exemptions; Tax Collector = bills/payments.
Official forms (download)
Homestead application (DR-501): Download PDF
Portability application (DR-501T): Download PDF