February 27, 2026

Someone will have to pay for Florida’s irresponsible plan to cut property taxes

The op-ed below was published in the Miami Herald on February 27, 2026.

In Ernest Hemingway’s 1926 novel “The Sun Also Rises,” when asked about how he went bankrupt, Mike Campbell answers: “two ways… gradually and then suddenly.” Today, his poignant response typifies the seemingly single-minded effort to eliminate property taxes in Florida, a state Hemingway once called home. Consider, for example, the Florida House’s flagship property tax proposal: House Joint Resolution (HJR) 203. The legislation started as a way to phase out non-school property taxes for primary residences over a 10-year period. However, just before its final vote in the House, lawmakers abandoned the incremental phase out and changed it to take effect all at once next year.

The once gradual elimination would have cost Miami-Dade County roughly $1.5 billion annually, according to an analysis of state data by Florida Policy Institute; the amended proposal would now cost the county $2.3 billion each year. The amended resolution would also prohibit counties, including Miami-Dade, from lowering their budgets for first responders despite billions in forgone revenue. The truth is that property taxes support a wide range of public services and programs, including Miami-Dade’s Jackson Health System, the Children’s Trust, disaster preparedness and public schools — all while safeguarding local choices.

The prospect of eliminating property taxes, whether gradually or suddenly, is a fiscally irresponsible attempt to control how communities spend their money and shifts the cost burden onto Floridians who are already struggling to make ends meet. Consider that the first iteration of the idea was HB 1371 in 2024 to study the impact of eliminating property taxes and swapping them with a “consumption tax.” That could have meant swapping property taxes with a 12-to-14.3 percent sales tax plus Miami-Dade’s local penny sales surtax.

The 2024 bill did not make it out of committee. Then, in 2025, the Legislature included a provision in a tax package to commission state economists to assess the impact of eliminating property taxes on homesteaded properties. Gov. Ron DeSantis vetoed it.

Although the idea has now morphed to partially eliminate property taxes, policymakers have offered no revenue alternatives nor implementation guidance, leaving many of us to wonder who will pay for this.

Read full op-ed at miamiherald.com [gift link]

Downloadable Resources

There are no attachments currently.
No items found.
Related posts
No items found.