# Florida Property Tax Portability: How It Works in Tampa Bay

> Florida property tax portability lets you transfer up to $500,000 in Save Our Homes savings to your next home. Here's how it works in Pinellas, Pasco, and Hillsborough.

**Canonical URL**: https://stpetehomeguide.com/questions/portability-florida-property-tax
**Author**: Luke Salm
**Published**: 2026-05-22
**Updated**: 2026-05-22
**Intent**: seller
**Keywords**: florida property tax portability, portability amendment florida, save our homes portability, pinellas county property tax portability, transfer homestead exemption florida, property tax portability tampa bay, how to transfer SOH benefit florida


Florida property tax portability lets homeowners transfer their accumulated Save Our Homes (SOH) tax savings — up to $500,000 — from one Florida homestead to another. For Tampa Bay homeowners who have owned their St. Pete, Pinellas County, or Hillsborough property for more than a few years, that benefit can easily be worth tens of thousands of dollars in lifetime tax savings, and understanding how to move it correctly is one of the most financially consequential steps in any local home sale.

## What Is the Save Our Homes Differential — and Why It Matters

Florida's Save Our Homes Amendment (Amendment 10, passed in 1992) caps the annual increase on a homesteaded property's assessed value at 3% or the rate of inflation — whichever is lower. When home values rise faster than that cap, a gap opens between your property's market value (what it would sell for) and its assessed value (what the county taxes you on). That gap is your SOH differential.

Here's why this is such a big deal in Tampa Bay specifically: St. Petersburg home values have appreciated significantly since the early 2010s. According to Pinellas County Property Appraiser records and Stellar MLS data, median sale prices in the county climbed roughly 80% between 2015 and 2024. A homeowner who bought in [Old Northeast](/neighborhoods/old-northeast) in 2010 at $350,000 could easily have a market value approaching $750,000 today — but their assessed value may still be anchored well below that thanks to Save Our Homes. That's a substantial taxable-value reduction, and it belongs to the homeowner, not the property.

Without portability, selling that home and buying another would reset the assessed value to full market value on day one — potentially adding $5,000 to $10,000 or more per year in property taxes overnight.

## How Portability Works: The Mechanics

Portability is governed by Florida Statute 193.155(8) and is sometimes called the "SOH benefit transfer." Here is how the math actually works:

**Step 1 — Calculate your SOH differential at the old homestead:**
SOH Differential = Just Value (market) minus Assessed Value

**Step 2 — Determine your transfer percentage:**
- If your new home's just value is **equal to or greater than** your old home's just value, you transfer 100% of the differential (up to the $500,000 cap).
- If your new home's just value is **less than** your old home's just value, the transfer is prorated: (New Just Value ÷ Old Just Value) × SOH Differential.

**Step 3 — Apply the transferred benefit:**
The transferred differential is subtracted from your new home's just value to arrive at the starting assessed value. You also stack your standard homestead exemption ($50,000 in Florida) on top.

### A Real-Numbers Example for Pinellas County

| | Old Home (Snell Isle) | New Home (Shore Acres) |
|---|---|---|
| Just Value | $850,000 | $620,000 |
| SOH Differential | $310,000 | — |
| Transfer % | — | 72.9% (620k ÷ 850k) |
| Transferred Benefit | — | $226,000 |
| Starting Assessed Value | — | $394,000 ($620k − $226k) |
| Homestead Exemption | — | −$50,000 |
| Taxable Value | — | ~$344,000 |

Without portability, that Shore Acres buyer would be taxed on $570,000 taxable value from year one. The transferred SOH benefit drops it to roughly $344,000 — a difference of $226,000 in taxable value. At Pinellas County's millage rate of approximately 19.6 mills (per 2024 TRIM notices), that's a savings of around $4,400 per year, every year.

## The Three-Year Window and Filing Deadline

This is the detail people miss — and it is costly. You have **three tax years** from the date you abandon your previous homestead (typically the sale date) to establish a new homestead and claim portability. If you sell your Old Northeast bungalow in 2026 and don't purchase another primary residence in Florida until 2030, you forfeit the SOH benefit entirely.

The application — Form DR-501T — must be filed with the Property Appraiser in the county where your **new** home is located. In Pinellas County, that's the Pinellas County Property Appraiser at pcpao.gov or in person at 315 Court Street, Clearwater. The filing deadline is **March 1** of the first year you want the new exemption to apply. File late and you lose the exemption for that year.

For buyers moving from Hillsborough into Pinellas, you file with Pinellas. Moving from [Shore Acres](/neighborhoods/shore-acres) to Wesley Chapel in Pasco County? File with the Pasco County Property Appraiser. The statewide transfer works in every direction.

## Common Portability Scenarios in Tampa Bay

**Downsizing in St. Pete:** This is one of the most common situations I see. A longtime homeowner in [Snell Isle](/neighborhoods/snell-isle) or [Historic Kenwood](/neighborhoods/historic-kenwood) who bought 15 years ago has a massive SOH differential. They want to sell the larger home and buy something smaller. Because the new home is cheaper, the transfer is prorated — but even a partial transfer can mean thousands per year in savings. Run the math before you assume portability isn't worth claiming.

**Moving to a higher-priced home:** If you're trading up — say, from a 33703 bungalow to a newer home in the 33701 downtown St. Pete market — your new just value likely equals or exceeds your old one. You capture 100% of the differential (up to $500,000). This is the cleanest scenario.

**Relocating within Tampa Bay:** Moving from Hillsborough County to Pinellas — or the reverse, say from St. Pete to Wesley Chapel along the new Pasco corridor — the process is identical. Florida portability is statewide, no county restrictions.

**Renting between homes:** If you sell your homestead and rent while you look for the next property, the three-year clock is running. Don't let it expire. I've seen sellers rent for two years thinking they have plenty of time, then lose the benefit when a purchase fell through at the deadline.

## What Portability Does NOT Do

It's worth being clear about the limits:

- Portability does **not** transfer to a rental property or second home — new homestead must be your primary Florida residence.
- It does **not** apply if you already lost your homestead exemption (e.g., you converted the old home to a rental before selling).
- It does **not** carry forward indefinitely — the three-year window is hard.
- It does **not** reduce your new home's **just value** for sale/purchase purposes. Lenders and the market still appraise at full market value; portability only affects the county's **assessed value** for tax purposes.
- The $500,000 cap is on the transferred differential, not on your savings. If your SOH differential is $650,000 (which is possible on a long-held waterfront property in [Snell Isle](/neighborhoods/snell-isle)), only $500,000 transfers.

For a deeper look at how the underlying homestead exemption works alongside portability, see [homestead-exemption-florida-explained](/questions/homestead-exemption-florida-explained) — portability and the exemption are separate benefits that stack together on your new home. And if you're weighing the timing of your sale around these tax considerations, [best time to sell your home in Tampa Bay in 2026](/questions/best-time-to-sell-house-tampa-bay-2026) has current market context.

## How Portability Affects Your Selling Decision in 2026

For sellers in Pinellas, Pasco, and Hillsborough who have lived in their homes for five or more years, the SOH differential is often the single biggest financial variable in the "should I sell now or wait" calculation — larger than transaction costs, sometimes larger than expected appreciation. Understanding your current differential before you list can significantly change the economics of your move.

According to Pinellas County Property Appraiser data, the average SOH differential for homesteaded properties in the county exceeded $90,000 as of the 2025 tax roll. In high-appreciation neighborhoods like Old Northeast or Snell Isle, differentials of $200,000 to $400,000 are common.

The math is straightforward once you know your numbers. The mistake I see is sellers not running it at all — or assuming their portability benefit automatically follows them without filing the paperwork.

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If you're thinking about selling your St. Pete home and want to understand what your property is worth *and* how your SOH differential factors into your next move, I'll pull 3 real MLS comps for your specific address and text them to you within 24 hours — free, no pressure. [Request your free home valuation here](/contact).

## Frequently asked questions

**Q: What is the maximum amount I can transfer through Florida portability?**

Florida law caps the portability benefit at $500,000. If your accumulated Save Our Homes differential exceeds that amount, only $500,000 transfers to your new homestead.

**Q: How long do I have to apply for portability after moving?**

You must apply for portability within three tax years of abandoning your previous homestead. Miss that window and the accumulated Save Our Homes benefit is gone permanently.

**Q: Can I use portability if I'm moving from Pinellas County to Hillsborough County?**

Yes. Florida portability works statewide — you can transfer your Save Our Homes differential from any Florida county to any other Florida county, including from Pinellas to Hillsborough or Pasco.

**Q: Does portability apply to condos or only single-family homes?**

Portability applies to any property that qualifies for a Florida homestead exemption — single-family homes, condos, townhouses, and manufactured homes all qualify as long as it is your primary residence.

**Q: What if my new home is cheaper than my old home?**

If your new home has a lower just value than your previous home, your transferred benefit is prorated. You carry over a proportional percentage of your SOH differential, not the full amount.

**Q: Where do I file the portability application in Pinellas County?**

File Form DR-501T with the Pinellas County Property Appraiser's office at 315 Court Street in Clearwater, or submit it online at pcpao.gov. The deadline is March 1 of the first year you want the new homestead to take effect.


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*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.*
