Latest Property Tax Info!
Amendment 1 Impact:
- 2008 property tax bills will include additional $25,000 homestead exemption on local government taxes, but not school taxes.
- Homeowners who establish a new homestead in 2008 will be the first to be allowed to transfer Save Our Homes tax benefits if they had a different property homesteaded in 2007.
- New $25,000 exemption for some business equipment and mobile home properties
- Non-homesteaded property's annual increase in assessments capped at 10 percent annually
Voters say ‘Yes on 1’
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Jan. 30, 2008 –Realtors around the state expect buyers and sellers’ pent up demand to generate an immediate increase in home sales following passage yesterday of Amendment 1, which allows buyers to take their Save Our Homes tax savings with them when they move.
“People who buy now are getting a great deal because home prices have fallen,” says 2007 FAR President and St. Petersburg Realtor Nancy Riley, who led the charge last year in support of Amendment 1. “These price reductions, combined with portability, will mean a great deal on the taxes owed on their new home.”
Some Realtors expect to see sales activity from first-time buyers thanks to a slight increase in the homestead exemption provided by Amendment 1, record-low mortgage rates, pent-up demand and a large selection of properties.
“Again, given the lower cost of housing and the increased homestead exemption, those who have been dreaming of buying their first home will find this the best market in many years,” Riley adds.
While demand builds, Realtors should take the opportunity to contact clients who sold a home in 2007 and bought another property that qualifies as a homestead. The portability provision of Amendment 1 is retroactive to Jan. 1, 2007. Sellers may transfer their Save Our Homes credit (the difference between the assessed value of a homestead and the market [or “just”] value) provided:
1. The residence sold last year was homesteaded;
2. The new residence qualified for the homestead exemption as of Jan. 1, 2008;
3. The owner applies for the exemption and transfer with the county property appraiser by March 1, 2008.
For specific questions about property tax reform, tell clients to contact their local property appraiser. [http://dor.myflorida.com/dor/property/appraisers.html]
© 2008 FLORIDA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®
