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Florida House backs property tax repeal. What Coral Springs residents should know

The Florida House recently approved House Joint Resolution 203, which would gradually eliminate non-school property taxes if ultimately approved by voters statewide in November. Next, the Senate must approve the measure.
The Florida House recently approved House Joint Resolution 203, which would gradually eliminate non-school property taxes if ultimately approved by voters statewide in November. Next, the Senate must approve the measure. mocner@miamiherald.com

Coral Springs homeowners could save about $2,400 a year if Florida lawmakers follow through on a proposal to eliminate most property taxes.

But before residents start planning what to do with that extra cash, city officials warn the debate in Tallahassee could reshape local services in ways that directly affect daily life.

On Feb. 19, the Florida House approved House Joint Resolution 203 in an 80-30 vote, largely along party lines. The measure would gradually eliminate non-school property taxes if ultimately approved by voters statewide in November.

First, it needs Senate approval.

Now the question for Coral Springs residents is no longer whether the idea is appealing, but what happens next — and how it could change the city they live in.

What it could mean for homeowners

According to projections shared by Broward County Property Appraiser Marty Kiar, Coral Springs has 25,871 homesteaded properties. A median homeowner could see savings of about $2,400 annually if non-school property taxes are eliminated.

In 2025, Coral Springs levied about $100 million from homeowners. Under current projections, the city could face a $26.7 million loss — about a 26.8% reduction in its budget.

For residents, that math creates a tradeoff: thousands saved at home, but potentially fewer city services.

What services could be affected?

While public safety funding for police and fire services is expected to be protected under proposals circulating in Tallahassee, nearly half of municipal budgets typically support other essential services.

In Coral Springs, that could include:

  • Parks and recreation programs
  • Library services
  • Road maintenance and infrastructure projects

If nearly a quarter of the city’s operating revenue disappears without a replacement funding source, officials may have to consider raising fees, increasing special assessments, reducing services or restructuring city operations.

That could mean higher permit fees, increased recreation program costs, delayed capital projects or scaled-back amenities.

What city leaders are saying

During the Feb. 18 commission meeting, Mayor Scott Brook urged caution, noting that the proposal is still evolving.

“There are several things up in the air,” Brook said, pointing out that the Florida House, Senate and governor have not agreed on a final plan.

City officials are closely monitoring developments, but no immediate changes are underway.

What has to happen before anything changes?

For Coral Springs residents, several steps remain before property taxes disappear:

  • The Florida Senate would need to pass its own version of the proposal
  • Lawmakers would need to reconcile differences between House and Senate versions
  • The proposal would then go before Florida voters in November
  • If voters approve it, the phase-out would begin over time

This story was written by a Coral Springs News reporter with the help of AI tools and edited by journalists in the Coral Springs News newsroom.

Luisa Yanez
Coral Springs News
Luisa Yanez is a reporter for the Coral Springs News, the Pembroke Pines News and the Miramar News. In her work, she will be using both traditional reporting and AI tools.