Tuesday, November 06, 2007

Proposed Florida Property Tax Reform Explained!



On Jan. 29, 2008, Florida voters will decide whether or not to reform the property tax system in the state. Here is an explanation of the proposed changes related to portability.

Property tax savings portability (money saved over time on property taxes because of yearly increase limits through Florida’s Save Our Homes amendment) applies to homesteaders (homeowners with a homestead exemption) moving anywhere within Florida. Up to $500,000 of accumulated savings, applied to taxable value, may be transferred when one home is sold and another is purchased, with the transfer applying to all taxes, including the school portion. Homeowners have two years after they sell a home to buy a new one and transfer the savings.


If buying a more expensive home, a homesteader calculates savings by subtracting the assessed value (taxable value) from the just value (market value). The amount (savings over time) is then subtracted from the just value on the new home purchased. In most cases, the $50,000 homestead exemption will also be subtracted.

Example 1: Susie currently owns a home and has lived there for a long time. The house’s just value is $500,000, but because of Save Our Homes, the assessed value is only $200,000. Susie buys a new house for $700,000. The following year, she’ll pay taxes on only $400,000, however, because she’s “porting” $300,000 in value to her new home. After factoring in the new homestead exemption of $50,000, her total assessed value would be $350,000.

If buying a less-expensive home, the calculation changes and is based on the percentage of tax savings rather than a dollar amount. If the assessed value on the original home was 50 percent of the just value, for example, the homesteader would transfer that percentage to the new home, or have a new assessed value that is 50 percent of the new home’s just value. The percentage system was created to keep homesteaders from effectively eliminating their property taxes altogether by moving from a high-cost area of Florida to a low-cost area – a change that could severely hurt smaller rural economies.

Example 2: Susie currently owns a home and has lived there for a long time. The house’s just value is $500,000, but because of Save Our Homes, the assessed value is only $200,000. Susie buys a new town home for $300,000. She’ll pay taxes only on $120,000 because when buying down in value, she’ll keep the same ratio (40 percent) of assessed value to just value that she enjoyed in her old home. After factoring in the new homestead exemption of $50,000, her total assessed value would be $70,000. Also, portability is retroactive to Jan. 1, 2007 – so everyone who bought this year and moved from an established homestead will be able to “port” their savings for next year.

Since yearly tax values are based on ownership as of Jan. 1 each year, portability would not affect this year’s tax bills, which most homeowners have already received; but the savings will be applicable to next year’s tax bill.
We shall see what happens. Florida needs to do SOMETHING regarding portability. The current system is convoluted, and actuallg discourages real estate activity within the area. At least portability would open up the market a bit, encourage more activity and moves WITHIN the area, and hopefully take a neccessary step towards jumpstarting the current local housing market.

3 comments:

Unknown said...

Hi Bill,

Thanks for the great explanation. I do have one question that you may be able to answer. I sold a home in September of 2007 and plan on purchasing a new home in April/May of 2008. This time frame falls within the 2 year period but would I qualify for the portability since my home was sold before the Jan 29 vote (assuming it passes)?

Thanks again,
Nate

Bill McCue said...

Hi Nate,
I believe It will be retroactive for any moves made in 2007 as long as the property you sold was indeed your primary residence.

Here is a link which provides a little more information, and some frequently asked questions.

http://dor.myflorida.com/dor/property/reformfaqs112107.pdf

Unknown said...

Great! Thanks.