Quick Answer
Can you transfer your Save Our Homes cap to a new Florida home?
Yes – Florida property tax portability lets you transfer up to 0,000 of your Save Our Homes assessment difference to a new homestead property anywhere in the state, potentially saving thousands per year. You must apply within 3 years of leaving your previous homestead. Learn about homestead exemptions, understand Brandon property taxes, and explore Tampa Bay homes for sale.
One of the most valuable and most overlooked tax benefits available to Florida homeowners is property tax portability – the ability to transfer your accumulated Save Our Homes tax savings from one Florida home to another. If you’ve owned a homesteaded property in Florida for several years, you may be sitting on tens of thousands of dollars in protected assessed value that you can take with you when you move. And most people have no idea this benefit exists until someone tells them.
I’m Barrett Henry with REMAX Collective, and I work with buyers and sellers across the Tampa Bay area every day. Property tax portability comes up in nearly every conversation I have with sellers who are worried about losing their low tax bill – and with good reason. Without portability, moving to a new home means starting over at full market value for tax purposes. With portability, you can carry a significant chunk of your savings forward. The difference can be thousands of dollars a year on your new tax bill.
This guide covers everything you need to know about Florida property tax portability: what it is, how the math works, the deadlines you can’t miss, and the mistakes I see homeowners make. Whether you’re upsizing, downsizing, or relocating across the state, understanding portability could save you a significant amount of money.
What Is Save Our Homes?
Before we can talk about portability, you need to understand the Save Our Homes (SOH) benefit – because portability is the mechanism for transferring it. Save Our Homes is a provision in the Florida Constitution (Article VII, Section 4) that limits how much the assessed value of your homesteaded property can increase each year. Specifically, your assessed value cannot increase by more than 3% or the Consumer Price Index (CPI), whichever is lower, regardless of how much the market value rises.
This cap only applies to properties with an active Florida Homestead Exemption. It kicks in the year after you first receive homestead, and it compounds over time. The longer you stay in your home, the wider the gap can grow between your market value (what the county says your home is worth) and your assessed value (what your taxes are based on).
How Save Our Homes Savings Accumulate
Let’s say you bought a home in 2015 for $250,000. Over the next eight years, the Tampa Bay market has been on a strong upward trajectory. By 2023, the county appraiser determines your home’s market value is $425,000. Without Save Our Homes, your assessed value would also be $425,000, and your taxes would reflect that.
But because Save Our Homes capped your annual increases at 3% or less, your assessed value only climbed gradually – maybe to around $310,000 by 2023. That $115,000 gap between market value ($425,000) and assessed value ($310,000) is your Save Our Homes benefit. It’s real money: at a typical Hillsborough County millage rate of around 19 mills, that $115,000 benefit translates to roughly $2,185 per year in tax savings compared to what you’d pay without the cap.
The longer you own the home and the faster the market appreciates, the larger your SOH benefit becomes. I’ve worked with clients in Brandon and South Tampa whose SOH benefit has grown to $150,000, $200,000, or even more. That’s a massive tax advantage – and naturally, people don’t want to give it up when they move.
What Is Portability?
Portability is the Florida constitutional provision that allows you to transfer up to $500,000 of your Save Our Homes benefit from your previous homesteaded property to a new homesteaded property anywhere in Florida. It was approved by Florida voters in 2008 as Amendment 1, and it fundamentally changed the calculus of moving within the state.
Before portability existed, selling your homesteaded property meant losing every dollar of Save Our Homes benefit you had accumulated. That created a “lock-in effect” where long-time homeowners felt trapped in their current homes because the tax penalty for moving was so severe. Portability was designed to fix that problem and give Florida homeowners the freedom to move without losing their tax savings.
Here’s what portability does in simple terms: it takes the difference between your old home’s market value and assessed value (your SOH benefit) and applies it as a reduction to the assessed value of your new home. You’re essentially carrying your tax discount forward.
- Maximum transfer: Up to $500,000 of SOH benefit
- Geographic scope: Anywhere in Florida – you can move across county lines
- Timing: Must establish new homestead within 3 years of leaving old homestead
- Filing requirement: Must file a separate portability application (DR-501T) with your new county
Portability doesn’t transfer your exact tax bill – it transfers the assessed value differential. How the math works depends on whether you’re buying a home that costs more or less than your previous one.
How Portability Works – Step by Step
The portability calculation works differently depending on whether you’re upsizing (buying a more expensive home) or downsizing (buying a less expensive home). Let me walk through both scenarios with real numbers so you can see exactly how the math plays out.
Scenario 1: Upsizing to a More Expensive Home
When you buy a home with a higher market value than your old home, the portability calculation is straightforward. Your entire SOH benefit (up to $500,000) transfers as a dollar-for-dollar reduction to the assessed value of your new home.
Example:
- Old home market value: $300,000
- Old home assessed value: $200,000
- Save Our Homes benefit: $300,000 – $200,000 = $100,000
- New home purchase price (market value): $450,000
Because you’re upsizing, the full $100,000 benefit transfers directly:
- New home assessed value WITHOUT portability: $450,000
- New home assessed value WITH portability: $450,000 – $100,000 = $350,000
At a combined Hillsborough County millage rate of approximately 19 mills, that $100,000 reduction saves you roughly $1,900 per year in property taxes. Over 10 years, that’s $19,000 in savings – and the Save Our Homes cap will start protecting your new assessed value going forward, compounding the benefit even further.
Scenario 2: Downsizing to a Less Expensive Home
When you buy a home with a lower market value than your old home, the portability calculation uses a proportional formula. You don’t get the full dollar amount of your benefit – instead, it’s reduced proportionally based on the ration of your new home’s value to your old home’s value.
Example:
- Old home market value: $500,000
- Old home assessed value: $300,000
- Save Our Homes benefit: $500,000 – $300,000 = $200,000
- New home purchase price (market value): $350,000
Because the new home ($350,000) costs less than the old home ($500,000), the proportional formula applies:
Portable benefit = SOH benefit x (New home market value / Old home market value)
Portable benefit = $200,000 x ($350,000 / $500,000) = $200,000 x 0.70 = $140,000
- New home assessed value WITHOUT portability: $350,000
- New home assessed value WITH portability: $350,000 – $140,000 = $210,000
Even though your full SOH benefit was $200,000, you’re transferring $140,000 of it because of the proportional reduction. At 19 mills, that $140,000 reduction still saves you approximately $2,660 per year in property taxes. That’s real money – and it’s money many downsizers don’t realize they’re entitled to.
The proportional formula ensures that portability doesn’t create a situation where your assessed value on the new home drops below zero or becomes disproportionately low relative to the property’s market value. It’s designed to be fair while still giving downsizers a substantial benefit.
Portability Rules and Deadlines
Portability has specific rules and deadlines, and missing any of them means losing your benefit. Here are the requirements you need to know:
The 3-Year Window
You must establish a new homestead within 3 calendar years of January 1 of the year after you left your previous homestead. For example, if you sold your old home and gave up homestead in 2023, you have until January 1, 2026 to establish a new homestead and claim portability. If you miss that window, your accumulated SOH benefit is gone permanently.
This three-year gap gives homeowners flexibility to rent, travel, or take time finding their next home without losing their benefit. But I’ve seen clients push it too close to the deadline and almost lose out. Mark the date and don’t wait until the last minute.
Homestead Application Deadline
You must apply for homestead exemption on your new property by March 1 of the year after you purchase it. This is the same deadline that applies to all homestead exemption applications in Florida. Portability rides along with this filing – but you need to file the portability form (DR-501T) at the same time or before this date.
Statewide Applicability
Portability works anywhere in Florida. You can move from Hillsborough County to Pinellas County, from Miami-Dade to Duval, or from the Panhandle to the Keys. The benefit crosses county lines with no restrictions. The only limitation is that both the old and new properties must be in Florida – portability does not apply if you’re coming from or moving to another state.
Additional Rules
- Married couples: If both spouses are on the homestead, only one portability benefit can be transferred to the new home. However, if a married couple owned separate homesteaded properties before marriage, each may be able to port their individual benefit.
- Multiple owners: Portability applies to each owner’s proportional share. If you owned 50% of the old homestead, you can only port 50% of the SOH benefit.
- Maximum benefit: The portability cap is $500,000. This is rarely an issue for most homeowners, but if you’ve owned a high-value property for decades, the cap could come into play.
- New homestead required: The new property must qualify for and receive a homestead exemption. You can’t port to a rental property, second home, or investment property.
- Filing is mandatory: Portability is not automatic. You must file the DR-501T form. The county will not apply it on your behalf.
How Much Can Portability Save You?
The value of portability depends on the size of your Save Our Homes benefit and your local millage rate in Hillsborough County. To give you a clear picture, I’ve put together a table showing estimated annual tax savings at different portable benefit levels using an approximate combined millage rate of 19 mills (a reasonable midrange for unincorporated areas like Brandon).
| Portable SOH Benefit | Estimated Annual Tax Savings | 10-Year Savings | 20-Year Savings |
|---|---|---|---|
| $50,000 | ~$950 | ~$9,500 | ~$19,000 |
| $100,000 | ~$1,900 | ~$19,000 | ~$38,000 |
| $150,000 | ~$2,850 | ~$28,500 | ~$57,000 |
| $200,000 | ~$3,800 | ~$38,000 | ~$76,000 |
Note: These figures are estimates based on approximately 19 mills combined millage rate. Your actual savings will vary based on your specific taxing district, whether you’re inside city limits, and CDD or special district assessments. The savings figures above do not account for the additional accumulation of Save Our Homes protection on your new property over time, which would increase total savings further.
As you can see, portability is not a minor benefit. A homeowner porting $150,000 in SOH benefit is saving nearly $3,000 per year in property taxes compared to buying the same home without portability. Over 20 years, that’s close to $57,000 – and again, the Save Our Homes cap on the new property will continue generating additional savings on top of what you ported.
This is why I always tell my clients: portability should be a central part of your financial planning when you’re thinking about selling and buying in Florida. It changes the true cost of your next home.
Common Portability Mistakes
I’ve worked with enough buyers and sellers to know that portability mistakes happen all the time – and they’re almost always avoidable. Here are the most common errors I see:
1. Missing the Filing Deadline
The March 1 deadline for filing your homestead exemption and portability application is firm. If you close on your new home in December and assume you can “get to it later,” later can turn into too late very quickly. The county property appraiser’s office gets flooded with applications in February, and if your paperwork isn’t in by March 1, you’ll miss portability for that entire tax year. In some cases, you may lose the benefit permanently if you’ve already exceeded the three-year window.
2. Not Filing the DR-501T Separately
Filing for homestead exemption does NOT automatically apply portability. You must file the DR-501T (Transfer of Homestead Assessment Difference) form in addition to your standard homestead exemption application (DR-501). I’ve had clients tell me they filed for homestead and assumed portability came with it. It doesn’t. These are two separate filings, and you need both.
3. Assuming Portability Is Automatic
No one from the county, your title company, or your lender is going to remind you to file for portability. It’s entirely on you (or your real estate agent) to know about it and take action. This is one of the reasons I bring it up proactively with every seller I work with – too many people find out about portability after the deadline has passed.
4. Letting the 3-Year Window Expire
If you sell your homesteaded property and rent for a while before buying again, keep close track of the three-year portability window. The clock starts on January 1 of the year following the year you gave up your old homestead. If you owned a home with a $150,000 SOH benefit and let the window expire, you’ve just lost a benefit worth roughly $2,850 per year in tax savings. That’s an expensive oversight.
5. Not Understanding the Downsizing Formula
Some downsizers expect to transfer their full SOH benefit dollar-for-dollar and are surprised when the proportional formula reduces the amount. If you’re downsizing, run the numbers in advance so you know exactly what to expect. I walk my clients through this calculation before they list so there are no surprises.
6. Failing to Abandon Homestead on the Old Property
When you sell your old home, make sure the homestead exemption is properly removed. In most sale transactions, this happens naturally when the property changes ownership. But if you transfer the property to a family member, move out without selling, or have an unusual ownership situation, you need to ensure the old homestead is formally abandoned before you can claim a new one (and port the benefit).
How to Apply for Portability
Applying for portability is a straightforward process, but it requires you to be organized and meet the deadlines. Here’s exactly what you need to do:
Step 1: File Your Homestead Exemption Application (DR-501)
First, apply for homestead exemption on your new property. You can do this online through the Hillsborough County Property Appraiser’s website or in person at their office. If you need a detailed walkthrough of the homestead exemption process, check out my complete Florida Homestead Exemption Guide.
Step 2: File the DR-501T (Portability Application)
Along with your homestead application, file Form DR-501T – Transfer of Homestead Assessment Difference. This is the portability-specific form. You can download it from the Florida Department of Revenue website or get it from your county property appraiser’s office. The form asks for information about your previous homestead, including the county, address, assessed value, and market value.
Step 3: File by March 1
Both forms must be filed by March 1 of the year after you establish the new property as your primary residence. If you close in October 2023 and move in, you need to file both forms by March 1, 2024. Don’t wait – file as soon as possible after closing.
Where to File in Hillsborough County
In Hillsborough County, you file both forms with the Hillsborough County Property Appraiser’s Office:
- Online: www.hcpafl.org – the Property Appraiser’s website allows online homestead and portability filing
- In person: Hillsborough County Property Appraiser, 601 E Kennedy Blvd, 15th Floor, Tampa, FL 33602
- Phone: (813) 272-6100
If you’re porting from a different county into Hillsborough, you file the DR-501T with Hillsborough County (the new county), not the county you’re moving from. The property appraiser’s offices will coordinate with each other to verify your previous SOH benefit.
Documents You’ll Need
- Completed DR-501 (Homestead Exemption Application)
- Completed DR-501T (Transfer of Homestead Assessment Difference)
- Florida driver’s license or ID showing your new property address
- Social Security number (for identification purposes)
- Florida vehicle registration showing new address (if applicable)
- Information about your previous homestead (address, county, parcel number if available)
Frequently Asked Questions About Florida Property Tax Portability
Can I port my Save Our Homes benefit to a different county?
Yes. Portability works across all 67 Florida counties. You can move from Hillsborough County to any other county in Florida and transfer your SOH benefit. You file the portability application (DR-501T) with the property appraiser in your new county, and they will verify your benefit with the old county. There is no restriction on crossing county lines.
What happens if I rent for two years between selling and buying?
You’re fine, as long as you establish a new homestead within the three-year window. The clock starts on January 1 of the year after you gave up your old homestead. So if you sold and left your homesteaded property in 2023, you have until January 1, 2026 to establish a new homestead. Many people rent temporarily after selling, and portability accounts for this – just don’t let the three years slip by.
Can I port portability more than once?
Yes. Every time you sell a homesteaded property and buy a new one in Florida, you can port your current SOH benefit. The benefit you port is based on your most recent homesteaded property’s SOH differential at the time you leave it. If you ported $80,000 to your current home and have since accumulated an additional $50,000 in SOH benefit at your current home, your total SOH benefit when you sell next will reflect the full accumulated differential – you’re not limited to what you originally ported.
Does portability apply if I’m buying new construction?
Yes. Portability applies regardless of whether your new home is a resale or new construction. The key requirement is that the new property becomes your homesteaded primary residence and that you file the DR-501T form by the March 1 deadline. New construction buyers should pay extra attention to timing – if your home is completed late in the year, you’ll want to file for homestead and portability immediately in January to ensure you don’t miss the deadline.
My spouse and I are both on the deed. Do we each get portability?
If both spouses shared the same homestead, you get one portability benefit for that property – not two. The SOH benefit is tied to the property, not to each individual owner. However, if you and your spouse each owned separate homesteaded properties before combining households (for example, before getting married), each of you may be able to port your individual SOH benefit to the new shared home. This situation is less common but worth exploring if it applies to you.
What if I missed the March 1 deadline?
Florida law does allow for late filing of homestead exemption and portability applications up to the 25th day following the mailing of the TRIM (Truth in Millage) notice, which is typically sent in August. Late filings are reviewed on a case-by-case basis, and there’s no guarantee the property appraiser will approve a late application. The bottom line: file on time. Relying on the late-filing provision is risky and should only be a last resort.
Talk to Barrett Henry About Portability and Your Next Move
If you’re thinking about selling your current home and buying a new one in the Tampa Bay area, portability should be part of the conversation from day one. I help my clients understand exactly how much SOH benefit they’ve accumulated, what it will look like on their next property, and how to make sure the paperwork gets filed correctly and on time. Too much money is at stake to leave it to chance.
Whether you’re upsizing to a larger home for a growing family, downsizing in Tampa Bay, or buying your first home in Brandon and want to understand how these protections will benefit you down the road, I’m here to help you make an informed decision.
- Direct: (813) 733-7907
- Email: [email protected]
- Website: NOWtb.com
I’m Barrett Henry with REMAX Collective, and I work with buyers and sellers across Brandon, Tampa, Riverview, Valrico, and the greater Tampa Bay area. Let’s make sure your next move makes financial sense from every angle – including your property taxes.
Related Guides
- Florida Homestead Exemption Guide – Everything You Need to Know
- Hillsborough County Property Taxes – Complete Breakdown
- Selling Your Home in Brandon, FL
- Downsizing Your Home in Tampa Bay
- First-Time Home Buyer Guide – Brandon, FL
Last updated September 2023. Property tax rates, portability rules, and filing deadlines are subject to change. This guide is intended for general informational purposes and does not constitute legal or tax advice. Consult with a qualified tax professional or attorney for advice specific to your situation. Millage rates referenced are approximate and based on Hillsborough County 2023/2024 tax year data.
Need Help With Tampa Bay Real Estate?
Barrett Henry is a licensed Broker Associate with REMAX Collective, serving the entire Tampa Bay market. Whether you are buying, selling, or investing – get straight talk and real data. No pressure, no games.
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