# Pinellas County Property Taxes Explained

> How Pinellas County property taxes work, what homeowners actually pay, and how exemptions like Save Our Homes can reduce your bill. Local agent insight.

**Canonical URL**: https://stpetehomeguide.com/questions/property-taxes-pinellas-county-explained
**Author**: Luke Salm
**Published**: 2026-05-21
**Updated**: 2026-05-21
**Intent**: seller
**Keywords**: Pinellas County property taxes, property tax rate Pinellas County, Save Our Homes exemption Florida, homestead exemption St. Petersburg, Florida property tax cap, Pinellas County millage rate, property tax St. Pete home value


Pinellas County property taxes are calculated by applying a millage rate — set each year by multiple taxing authorities — to your property's assessed value after exemptions. For a typical St. Pete homeowner with a homestead exemption, the effective rate runs between 0.9% and 1.1% of assessed value, though new buyers often see higher first-year bills because the Save Our Homes cap resets at sale.

Understanding how the system actually works can mean thousands of dollars in annual savings or, if you're selling, a much smoother negotiation with buyers who want to know what they're really walking into.

## How the Millage Rate Is Set

Florida property taxes are not one rate — they're a stack of levies from several different taxing authorities, all added together to produce your total millage. For a property inside the City of St. Petersburg, your annual tax bill includes:

- **Pinellas County general fund**
- **City of St. Petersburg municipal millage**
- **Pinellas County School Board** (two separate levies: required local effort and discretionary)
- **St. Johns Water Management District**
- **Juvenile Welfare Board**
- **Pinellas Suncoast Transit Authority (PSTA)**

Combined, these layers typically produce a total millage in the range of **19 to 22 mills** for most St. Pete addresses, according to the Pinellas County Property Appraiser's 2025 Truth in Millage (TRIM) data. One mill equals $1 of tax per $1,000 of taxable value. So at 20 mills on a $300,000 taxable value, you pay $6,000.

Unincorporated Pinellas County addresses — parts of Largo, Seminole, and communities without their own municipal government — carry a different (often slightly lower) total because there's no city millage layer.

## How Assessed Value Works in Florida

The Pinellas County Property Appraiser (PCPA) assesses every property annually at **just value** — essentially market value as of January 1. But what you're actually taxed on is the **assessed value**, which for homesteaded properties is capped by Save Our Homes.

Here's where it gets important for buyers and sellers alike:

**Just Value** → Full market value determination by the PCPA.  
**Assessed Value** → Just value minus any Save Our Homes cap adjustment.  
**Taxable Value** → Assessed value minus exemptions (homestead, senior, etc.).  
**Tax Bill** → Taxable value × total millage rate ÷ 1,000.

Per the Pinellas County Property Appraiser's 2025 annual report, the countywide total just value of all property exceeded **$130 billion**, reflecting the sharp run-up in home prices since 2020. The gap between just value and assessed value — the collective Save Our Homes savings — was estimated at over **$18 billion** countywide.

## Save Our Homes: The Biggest Tax Break Most Sellers Don't Talk About

Save Our Homes (SOH) is the reason a longtime neighbor in [Old Northeast](/neighborhoods/old-northeast) can pay $3,200 a year on a home that a new buyer purchasing the same house would pay $6,500 on. The cap limits annual assessed-value increases for homesteaded properties to **3% or the CPI rate, whichever is lower**.

In high-appreciation years like 2021–2023, when St. Pete home values were jumping 12% to 18% annually, homesteaded owners barely felt a tax increase. New buyers absorbed the full assessed-value reset.

I've seen this play out on listings in [Snell Isle](/neighborhoods/snell-isle) and [Shore Acres](/neighborhoods/shore-acres) — sellers sometimes forget to warn buyers that their current tax bill looks unusually low. When the buyer's lender runs an escrow analysis at the real post-sale assessed value, the monthly payment projection can jump $300 to $500 above what the listing showed. That's a deal-killer surprise nobody needs.

**The practical takeaway:** If you're a buyer, never use the seller's current tax bill as your estimate. Ask your agent (or I'll pull it for you) to calculate the likely first-year bill based on your purchase price.

## Homestead Exemption: How to File and What It's Worth

Florida's homestead exemption is two layers:

1. **First $25,000** — Exempt from all property taxes, including school taxes.
2. **Second $25,000 (on value between $50,000 and $75,000)** — Exempt from non-school taxes only.

For a home with a taxable value of $400,000, that combined $50,000 exemption (roughly $25,000 effective against all taxes) saves most St. Pete homeowners **$500 to $650 per year**, per PCPA estimates.

**How to file:** Submit your homestead application to the Pinellas County Property Appraiser's office by **March 1** of the year you want the exemption to take effect. You can file online at pcpao.gov, in person at 315 Court Street, Clearwater, or at any of the PCPA's satellite offices. Miss the March 1 deadline and you lose the exemption for that full tax year.

**Additional exemptions worth checking:**
- **Senior low-income exemption:** Up to $50,000 additional exemption for homeowners 65+ who meet income thresholds (adjusted gross income under approximately $35,167 for 2025, indexed annually).
- **Disabled veteran exemption:** Can reduce the bill by thousands or eliminate it entirely for 100% service-connected disabilities.
- **Widow/widower exemption:** $500 additional exemption — small but easy to claim.

## Portability: Moving Your Tax Savings to a New Home

One of the most underused tools in Tampa Bay real estate is **Portability** — Florida's provision that lets you take your accumulated Save Our Homes benefit with you when you move to a new Florida homestead.

Here's how it works: If your current home has a just value of $600,000 but an assessed value of $420,000 due to SOH, you've built up $180,000 in portability benefit. When you buy a new Florida homestead, you can transfer up to $500,000 of that accumulated difference and apply it to reduce your new home's assessed value.

The rules:
- You must establish the new homestead **within three years** of selling or abandoning the old one.
- You file a portability application (Form DR-501T) with the county property appraiser when you apply for homestead on the new property.
- The benefit is **portable statewide** — you can move from St. Pete to Tampa, Wesley Chapel, or anywhere in Florida.

I've worked with sellers in [Historic Kenwood](/neighborhoods/historic-kenwood) who were surprised to learn their portability benefit made a move-up purchase in Pinellas or Pasco significantly more affordable than the raw purchase price implied. It's a real conversation worth having before you list.

## What New Buyers in St. Pete Actually Pay

To make this concrete, here's a realistic tax estimate table for common St. Pete purchase prices in 2026, assuming a City of St. Petersburg address and standard homestead exemption, at an approximate 20-mill total rate:

| Purchase Price | Est. Taxable Value (after $50K exemption) | Est. Annual Tax Bill |
|---|---|---|
| $300,000 | $250,000 | ~$5,000 |
| $400,000 | $350,000 | ~$7,000 |
| $500,000 | $450,000 | ~$9,000 |
| $650,000 | $600,000 | ~$12,000 |
| $900,000 | $850,000 | ~$17,000 |

*Estimates based on 2025 TRIM millage data. Non-homesteaded (rental, investment) properties carry no cap and no standard exemption — effective rates run higher.*

Non-homesteaded investment properties — think short-term rentals in the 33701 or 33704 ZIP codes — are assessed at full just value every year with no SOH protection. That's a meaningful carrying cost difference that investors evaluating [cap rates in Pinellas County](/questions/cap-rates-pinellas-county) need to account for.

## The Bottom Line for St. Pete Homeowners

Pinellas County property taxes are genuinely manageable for established homeowners who've held their homes through the appreciation cycle. The Save Our Homes cap, homestead exemption, and portability provisions together form a tax-protection system that rewards long-term Florida residency.

But for new buyers — and for sellers trying to price transparently — the reset dynamic matters. A buyer stepping into a Snell Isle home at $850,000 needs to budget for a real tax bill, not inherit the seller's decade-old assessed value in their head.

If you want to know what your specific address is actually worth in today's market — and what a realistic buyer's tax picture looks like — I'll pull 3 real MLS comps and text them to you within 24 hours, free, no pressure. [Reach out here](/contact) and I'll get you actual numbers, not algorithm estimates.

## Frequently asked questions

**Q: What is the property tax rate in Pinellas County?**

The effective property tax rate in Pinellas County averages around 0.9% to 1.1% of assessed value, depending on your municipality and school district millage. For a home assessed at $400,000 with a homestead exemption, expect a tax bill in the range of $3,500 to $4,800 annually. Unincorporated areas and cities like St. Petersburg, Clearwater, and Largo each carry slightly different millage totals.

**Q: How does the homestead exemption work in Pinellas County?**

Florida's homestead exemption removes the first $25,000 of assessed value from all taxes and an additional $25,000 from non-school taxes — for a combined savings of roughly $500 to $600 per year for most St. Pete homeowners. You must own the property, make it your primary residence, and file with the Pinellas County Property Appraiser by March 1 of the tax year. Late filers lose the exemption for that year.

**Q: What is Save Our Homes and how does it affect my tax bill?**

Save Our Homes (SOH) is a Florida constitutional amendment that caps annual increases in a homesteaded property's assessed value at 3% or the rate of inflation, whichever is lower. In practice, long-term St. Pete homeowners often have assessed values 20% to 40% below market value, producing significantly lower tax bills than new buyers of identical homes. The benefit does not transfer when you sell — the new owner is assessed at full market value.

**Q: What happens to property taxes when a Pinellas County home is sold?**

When a property sells, the Save Our Homes cap resets. The Pinellas County Property Appraiser re-assesses the property at or near the sale price, which can cause the tax bill to jump substantially for the buyer in the first full year of ownership. Buyers should always request a tax estimate based on the purchase price, not the seller's current bill, before closing.

**Q: Can I transfer my Save Our Homes benefit to a new home in Florida?**

Yes — Florida's Portability provision lets you transfer up to $500,000 of accumulated SOH benefit to a new Florida homestead. You must establish the new homestead within three years of abandoning the previous one and apply with the county property appraiser. Portability is one of the most underused tax tools in Tampa Bay and can meaningfully reduce your tax burden on an upgraded home.

**Q: Are there additional exemptions beyond the standard homestead in Pinellas County?**

Yes. Pinellas County offers additional exemptions for senior homeowners (income-qualified, up to $50,000 additional exemption), disabled veterans (up to full exemption), widows and widowers ($500 additional), and total and permanent disabilities. The Pinellas County Property Appraiser's office at 315 Court Street in Clearwater handles all applications.


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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.*
