Updated
Updated · The Conversation · Jul 8
Florida Lawmakers Approve $150,000 Homestead Tax Break as State Population Growth Slows to 0.9%
Updated
Updated · The Conversation · Jul 8

Florida Lawmakers Approve $150,000 Homestead Tax Break as State Population Growth Slows to 0.9%

3 articles · Updated · The Conversation · Jul 8

Summary

  • Early June action by the Florida Legislature put a November ballot measure before voters to expand the homestead exemption on primary residences to $150,000 in 2027 and $250,000 in 2028.
  • That tax cut leans on continued in-migration to offset lost local revenue, but Florida’s population growth slowed to 0.9% in 2025 from a 2.5% peak in 2022.
  • Just 22,000 more people moved to Florida from other states in 2025, down from an average 208,000 during 2020-2022, while deaths exceeded births and immigration from abroad also fell sharply.
  • County data shows the slowdown is uneven: Sumter fell to 2.3% growth from 7.4% in 2022 and Collier to 0.1%, while St. Johns led at 3.9% and lower-cost Marion grew 3.4%.
  • The shift matters beyond taxes because Florida officials are also redrawing political maps around migration patterns, even as the state’s long-running growth model looks less reliable.

Insights

Florida's population boom is over. Will a massive property tax cut for homeowners stabilize the state or backfire on its economy?
With migration to Florida plummeting, can the state's economy still thrive or is its 'miracle' run officially over?
As people bypass Florida's coasts, are affordable inland towns the new key to the state's future growth and stability?