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Florida Property Tax Vote Could Change What Buyers Can Afford in Central Florida

Date:
25 Jun 2026
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A ballot measure arriving in November 2026 could do more to change Central Florida’s housing market than any interest rate move in recent memory. Real estate professionals in the region are watching it closely, and some argue that buyers who understand what is at stake will be better positioned than those who don’t.

Lisa Foor, Vice President of Sales and Marketing at Newberry Homes & Development,  a custom and luxury home builder operating across Central Florida, says the potential elimination of property taxes in Florida is the single biggest variable she is tracking over the next twelve months.

What Property Taxes Cost

The numbers explain why. In certain parts of Orlando, annual property taxes range from $10,000 to $25,000. That translates to an extra $200 to $500 added to a homeowner’s monthly payment on top of their mortgage. For buyers already stretching to afford a home at current interest rates, that monthly figure is often the difference between qualifying for the home they want and settling for something smaller or farther out.

If property taxes were eliminated, buyers would effectively gain thousands of dollars in purchasing power without any change in interest rates or home prices. A buyer who previously topped out at a certain price point could suddenly qualify for a meaningfully larger loan. “If you can increase your purchase price by taking that two hundred or five hundred dollars away from your mortgage payment a month,” she says, “then you’ve just increased the sales price of the house tremendously.”

In a market where affordability has been the central obstacle for buyers since rates climbed above six percent, adding back $500 a month in borrowing capacity could push a meaningful number of buyers off the sidelines.

Out-of-State Migration

The ripple effects would extend beyond individual buyers. Foor expects that if the measure passes, Central Florida would see an influx of new residents from out of state – a trend already underway. Buyers from New York, New Jersey, California, and Texas are moving into the region in steady numbers, particularly into Lake County and surrounding areas. A property tax elimination would considerably sharpen Florida’s cost-of-living advantage over those states, potentially accelerating that migration.

That is the optimistic scenario. The downside deserves equal attention. A sharp increase in demand driven by new purchasing power would likely push home prices upward. Buyers who wait to see how the vote plays out before entering the market may find that higher asking prices offset any savings they gain from lower monthly payments. Markets tend to price in good news quickly.

There is also the question of what property tax revenue currently funds and how its elimination would be offset, a policy question that could produce its own economic uncertainty. The ballot measure has not passed, and its effects, if it does, would take time to work through the market.

Not a Footnote

For buyers currently house-hunting in Central Florida, the most practical takeaway is understanding how property taxes factor into their monthly payment calculations. In a high-tax pocket of Orlando, a buyer comparing two homes at the same purchase price could face a monthly payment difference of several hundred dollars, depending on the county and the assessed value. That gap is large enough to determine whether a buyer qualifies for a given loan.

Foor points out that many buyers focus almost entirely on the purchase price and interest rate when running their numbers, and underweight the tax line. In Central Florida’s patchwork of counties – Orange, Lake, Osceola, Polk – tax rates vary enough that the county a buyer chooses can affect affordability as much as a half-point difference in their mortgage rate.

For Buyers

The November 2026 vote will not resolve that complexity on its own. Even if the measure passes, implementation would follow its own timeline. But for buyers trying to understand what their monthly payment will actually look like in Central Florida, property taxes are not a footnote; they are a core variable that deserves the same attention as the rate sheet. Those who account for it now will be better prepared regardless of which way the vote goes.

About the Expert: Lisa Foor is Vice President of Sales and Marketing at Newberry Homes & Development, with over 25 years of experience in the Central Florida market. She oversees custom home sales and directs a nine-agent boutique real estate team.

This article is intended for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or investment advice. The views and opinions expressed herein reflect those of the individuals quoted and do not represent an endorsement of any company, product, or service mentioned. Readers should conduct their own due diligence and consult qualified professionals before making any investment decisions.