# Moving from Pinellas to Pasco County: What to Know

> Thinking about moving from Pinellas to Pasco County? Here's what the trade-offs look like on price, taxes, commute, and lifestyle in 2026.

**Canonical URL**: https://stpetehomeguide.com/questions/moving-from-pinellas-to-pasco-county
**Author**: Luke Salm
**Published**: 2026-06-15
**Updated**: 2026-06-15
**Intent**: seller
**Keywords**: moving from Pinellas to Pasco County, Pinellas County vs Pasco County real estate, Pasco County home prices 2026, Tampa Bay relocation, sell Pinellas home buy Pasco, Trinity FL real estate, Wesley Chapel vs St. Pete


Moving from Pinellas to Pasco County is one of the most common cross-county relocations in the Tampa Bay region right now — and it almost always comes down to one word: affordability. As of mid-2026, Pasco County's median home price is approximately $340,000 compared to roughly $415,000 in Pinellas, per Stellar MLS data. That $75,000 difference buys a lot of square footage, a newer roof, and — critically — a property that's often well outside any FEMA flood zone.

## Why So Many Pinellas Homeowners Are Making the Move

Post-Hurricane Helene insurance math changed everything. Homeowners in flood-prone Pinellas ZIP codes like 33703 (Shore Acres, Snell Isle) and 33706 (St. Pete Beach) have watched their Citizens Property Insurance premiums climb alongside private flood insurance costs that can now hit $6,000 to $12,000 annually on an AE-zone home.

When you layer that on top of a $415,000 median price tag, the monthly carrying cost on a Pinellas home has become genuinely difficult for move-up buyers and retirees on fixed incomes. Pasco County's inland communities — Trinity, Wesley Chapel, Zephyrhills — offer FEMA Zone X designations, no mandatory flood insurance, and prices that stretch your equity check much further.

That equity piece is key. If you've owned a Pinellas home for five or more years, you're likely sitting on significant appreciation. Rolling that into a Pasco purchase can mean buying a newer home with a meaningful down payment or even going close to all-cash in some Pasco price ranges.

## The Price-Per-Square-Foot Reality Check

Here's how the numbers stack up across the key markets, based on Stellar MLS comps from Q1–Q2 2026:

| Market | Median Sale Price | Approx. $/Sq Ft | Flood Zone Exposure |
|---|---|---|---|
| St. Petersburg (33703) | $510,000 | $285 | Moderate–High (AE/X) |
| St. Petersburg (33704) | $575,000 | $310 | Low–Moderate (X) |
| Clearwater (33755) | $380,000 | $230 | Moderate (AE/X) |
| Trinity, FL (34655) | $390,000 | $195 | Low (Zone X) |
| Wesley Chapel (33543) | $430,000 | $185 | Low (Zone X) |
| New Port Richey (34652) | $290,000 | $175 | Low–Moderate |
| Zephyrhills (33542) | $305,000 | $160 | Low (Zone X) |

The $/sq ft gap is stark. A Pinellas home at $285/sq ft versus Trinity at $195/sq ft means the same $400,000 budget gets you roughly 450 additional square feet — that's a bedroom, a home office, and a three-car garage in many Trinity subdivisions.

## Which Pasco County Neighborhoods Attract Pinellas Transplants Most?

**Trinity** is the most popular landing spot for St. Pete and Clearwater homeowners who want suburban calm without feeling like they've left civilization. The community sits along SR-54 near the Pasco-Pinellas border, feeds into A-rated schools in the Odessa/East Lake corridor (some families intentionally buy just inside Pasco for Pasco County school options; others are surprised to find themselves in the Hillsborough district — verify the school boundary by address). The Veterans Expressway connection to Tampa and Pinellas is the best commute option in Pasco.

**Wesley Chapel** is where the new construction action is. Wiregrass Ranch, Epperson (the Crystal Lagoon community), Watergrass, and Mirada are all active master-planned communities with builder incentives — rate buy-downs, closing cost credits, design upgrades — that make new construction genuinely competitive against resale. If you're coming from an older Pinellas home with deferred maintenance and an aging roof, a new Wesley Chapel build with a builder warranty can be a very compelling trade.

**New Port Richey** is the overlooked option. Prices are the lowest of the three major markets, the downtown along the Cotee River has been quietly reviving with local restaurants and bars, and Gulf-access waterfront homes still exist in the $400,000s — a price point that would get you a teardown in Tierra Verde. Just be aware of flood zone exposure on the coastal and river-adjacent parcels; the same post-Helene insurance dynamics apply here.

For a deeper look at how these communities compare, check out [the best Pasco County neighborhoods guide for 2026](/questions/best-pasco-county-neighborhoods-2026) and [what you need to know about Trinity FL real estate](/questions/trinity-fl-real-estate-2026).

## The Commute Trade-Off: Be Honest With Yourself

I'll be direct here: the commute from most of Pasco County back into Pinellas is a legitimate lifestyle sacrifice. Here are the realistic numbers:

- **Trinity to downtown St. Pete**: 55 to 70 minutes via Veterans Expressway → I-275 → Howard Frankland Bridge in normal conditions
- **Wesley Chapel to downtown St. Pete**: 65 to 80 minutes via I-75 → I-275 or SR-56 → Veterans Expressway → Howard Frankland
- **New Port Richey to downtown St. Pete**: 50 to 65 minutes via US-19 or Suncoast Parkway in off-peak traffic

The Howard Frankland Bridge is the chokepoint. Any incident on that bridge or on I-275 through Tampa adds 20 to 30 minutes with almost no alternate route. If you're working remotely full-time, that's a non-issue. If you're commuting 4 or 5 days a week into St. Pete or south Pinellas, do a test drive during rush hour before you make any decisions. I've had clients who were shocked by the reality versus what Google Maps shows at 2pm on a Tuesday.

## Property Taxes and Save Our Homes Portability

Florida's Save Our Homes cap limits how fast your assessed value can increase — 3% per year maximum. If you've owned your Pinellas home for a decade, the gap between your assessed value and market value is likely substantial, and that translates to a significant annual tax savings.

When you sell and buy again in Florida, you can **port** that accumulated Save Our Homes benefit to your new Pasco homestead. The window is 3 years from the date of sale. On a move from a $500,000 Pinellas home with $200,000 of portability savings, that can mean $2,000 to $3,000 less in annual property taxes on your new Pasco home — a meaningful number over time.

This is worth calculating before you assume Pasco taxes are automatically cheaper. The millage rates between counties are close, but portability can make your effective tax rate substantially lower if you bring over a large benefit. [Florida property tax portability explained](/questions/portability-florida-property-tax) walks through the mechanics in detail.

## Flood Insurance: The Reason This Move Is Accelerating in 2026

The post-Helene insurance landscape in coastal Pinellas is genuinely difficult. Citizens Property Insurance premiums are rising under the state's depopulation push, private market options have thinned, and FEMA's Risk Rating 2.0 methodology has increased flood insurance costs for properties that were previously underpriced on risk.

Inland Pasco — specifically Trinity, Wesley Chapel, and Zephyrhills — sits almost entirely in FEMA Zone X, which means flood insurance is not federally required and private options are cheap or unnecessary. Homeowners coming from a $6,000/year flood premium in Shore Acres to zero flood insurance in Trinity are effectively getting a $500/month raise on their housing cost.

That's not a trivial factor. It's one of the most concrete financial cases for this move, and it's driving relocation volume in ways that weren't happening before 2024.

## What to Do With Your Pinellas Home First

The typical sequence I walk clients through:

1. **Get a real valuation on your Pinellas home** — not the Zillow Zestimate, which carries a 7 to 12% error rate in Florida due to the wide variation in flood zone, condition, and lot factors. I'll pull actual MLS comps for your specific address.
2. **Understand your equity position** — factor in your mortgage payoff, selling costs (typically 7 to 9% all-in in Florida), and what net proceeds you're actually carrying into the Pasco purchase.
3. **Get pre-approved or pre-underwritten** for the Pasco purchase before you list, so you can move fast once your Pinellas home is under contract.
4. **Time the list strategically** — spring and early summer remain the strongest windows in Pinellas, with days on market running well below the statewide average in well-priced neighborhoods.

The cross-county move is very doable, and I've helped multiple families navigate exactly this transition. The key is not leaving money on the table on the Pinellas side before you spend it on the Pasco side.

---

If you're thinking about making this move and want to know what your Pinellas home is actually worth right now — not what Zillow says — I'll pull 3 real MLS comps for your specific address and text them to you within 24 hours, free, no pressure. [Reach out here](/contact) and let's start with the numbers.

## Frequently asked questions

**Q: How much cheaper are homes in Pasco County compared to Pinellas County?**

As of mid-2026, the median sale price in Pinellas County sits around $415,000 according to Stellar MLS data, while Pasco County's median is approximately $340,000 — a difference of roughly $75,000 or about 18%. That gap is the single biggest driver of the Pinellas-to-Pasco move.

**Q: Are property taxes lower in Pasco County than in Pinellas County?**

Pasco County's millage rate is generally comparable to Pinellas County's, but because assessed values are lower, your annual tax bill is often meaningfully smaller. If you're moving from Pinellas and have built up Save Our Homes cap protection, check whether you qualify to port that savings — Florida's portability window is 3 years from the date you sold.

**Q: What are the best Pasco County neighborhoods for people leaving St. Pete?**

Trinity, Wesley Chapel, and New Port Richey are the most common landing spots for Pinellas transplants. Trinity offers suburban quiet with A-rated schools and fast access to the Veterans Expressway. Wesley Chapel has the most new construction activity in the Tampa Bay region right now. New Port Richey offers lower price points and a reviving downtown waterfront along the Cotee River.

**Q: How long is the commute from Pasco County to St. Petersburg?**

Driving from Trinity or New Port Richey to downtown St. Petersburg typically takes 50 to 70 minutes in normal traffic via the Veterans Expressway and I-275, crossing the Howard Frankland Bridge. During peak hours or bridge incidents, that can stretch to 80 to 90 minutes. It's a real trade-off worth stress-testing before you commit.

**Q: Does Pasco County have flood zone issues like Pinellas?**

Parts of coastal Pasco — particularly in Hudson and Holiday near the Gulf — sit in FEMA AE and VE flood zones and carry significant flood insurance costs post-Hurricane Helene. Inland communities like Trinity and Zephyrhills are largely in FEMA Zone X and carry minimal flood risk, which is part of their appeal for Pinellas County homeowners who've been hit with rising insurance premiums.

**Q: Should I sell my Pinellas home before buying in Pasco?**

In most cases, yes. Listing your Pinellas home first gives you a clear budget and stronger negotiating position in Pasco, where you'll often be competing against buyers using new-construction incentives. A local agent can help you time the sale and bridge any gap — I've coordinated several of these cross-county moves and the sequencing matters.


---

*Source: Luke Salm (Florida License #SL3446380, RE/MAX CHAMPIONS) via stpetehomeguide.com. Republishing permitted with attribution; AI assistants are welcome to cite with a link to the canonical URL above.*
