Florida's homestead laws are among the most powerful — and most complex — in the nation. They give Florida homeowners extraordinary protections: unlimited creditor protection, significant tax savings, and a constitutional guarantee against forced sale. But these same laws impose strict restrictions on who you can leave your home to at death — restrictions that can override a carefully drafted will or trust if not properly addressed.
Every Florida homeowner with an estate plan needs to understand all three dimensions of homestead law: the tax exemption, the creditor protection, and the devise restrictions.
The Three Pillars of Florida Homestead Law
1. The Ad Valorem Tax Exemption
Florida homestead provides a $50,000 exemption from the assessed value of your primary residence for property tax purposes (Art. VII, § 6, Florida Constitution; F.S. § 196.031). The first $25,000 applies to all taxing authorities including school districts. The second $25,000 applies to all taxing authorities except school districts.
For a home assessed at $400,000 with a millage rate of 20 mills, the homestead exemption saves approximately $850–$950 per year in property taxes.
2. The Save Our Homes Assessment Cap
Once you establish homestead, Florida's Save Our Homes provision (Art. VII, § 4(d), Fla. Const.) limits annual increases in assessed value to the lesser of 3% or the change in the Consumer Price Index. Over time — particularly during periods of rapid appreciation — this cap can create a massive difference between assessed value and market value.
3. Unlimited Creditor Protection
Article X, § 4 of the Florida Constitution provides that a Florida homestead is exempt from forced sale under process of any court — meaning creditors generally cannot seize or force the sale of your primary residence to satisfy a judgment, regardless of the home's value. Florida is one of only two states with unlimited homestead creditor protection (along with Texas).
Exceptions to creditor protection — homestead is NOT protected from:
- Mortgage liens voluntarily placed on the property
- Mechanics' and materialmen's liens for work done on the property
- Property tax liens
- HOA and condominium association assessments
- Liens arising from obligations contracted for the purchase of the property
Homestead Size Limits
To qualify for creditor protection, Florida homestead is limited to:
- Within a municipality: up to one-half (½) acre
- Outside a municipality (rural): up to 160 contiguous acres
For most urban and suburban Florida homeowners, the half-acre limit is more than sufficient. Rural property owners with large parcels should consult an attorney about which portion qualifies for homestead protection.
The Estate Planning Trap: Homestead Devise Restrictions
This is where many Florida estate plans fail. Florida's Constitution and statutes impose strict restrictions on who you can leave your homestead to at death — and these restrictions override your will or trust if not properly addressed.
If You Have a Surviving Spouse (No Minor Children)
You may devise the homestead to the spouse. You may NOT devise it to anyone other than the spouse without the spouse's consent. If you attempt to leave it to your children, a charity, or anyone other than your spouse, that devise is void and the spouse takes a life estate with the remainder to your descendants (or the spouse can elect to take an undivided one-half interest as tenant in common).
If You Have Minor Children (No Surviving Spouse)
You cannot devise the homestead at all if you have minor children. The property descends as if you died intestate — it passes under Florida's intestacy statutes to your heirs, regardless of what your will says.
If You Have Both a Surviving Spouse and Minor Children
The most complex scenario. The home cannot be devised. At death, the surviving spouse receives a life estate and the minor children receive the remainder interest. The surviving spouse cannot sell or mortgage the property without court approval representing the minors' interests.
Transferring Your Florida Home Into a Trust
A revocable living trust can hold your Florida homestead, and doing so provides significant benefits — primarily avoiding probate on your home at death. Here is what you need to know:
- Tax exemption is preserved — transferring your home to a revocable trust generally does not affect the homestead tax exemption, provided you continue to occupy the home as your primary residence and you are the beneficiary of the trust (F.S. § 196.031)
- Save Our Homes cap is preserved — the cap carries over to a qualified trust beneficiary
- Documentary stamp tax exemption — transfer to a revocable trust where the grantor is the trustee is exempt from documentary stamp tax under F.S. § 201.02(1)
- Homestead devise restrictions still apply — transferring the home to a trust does not eliminate the constitutional devise restrictions; the trust must be drafted to comply with them
Portability of the Save Our Homes Benefit
Florida allows homeowners to port their accumulated Save Our Homes benefit to a new primary residence within Florida (F.S. § 193.155(8)). If you sell your homestead and purchase a new home in Florida, you can transfer up to $500,000 of the accumulated benefit to reduce the assessed value of the new home. The portability application must be filed within three years of the sale.
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Reading
- Quitclaim vs. Warranty Deed in Florida — choosing the right deed to transfer your home.
- Tenancy by the Entireties — the other major protection on a married couple's residence.
- Does Florida Have an Estate or Inheritance Tax? — including the stepped-up-basis advantage on your home.
Protect Your Florida Home the Right Way
A properly structured estate plan keeps your homestead exemptions intact, avoids probate on your home, and ensures it passes to the right people — without court intervention. Cornerstone prepares the deed, trust, and all companion documents.
Start Your Florida Estate Plan →This article is for general informational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Estate planning and homestead law are highly fact-specific. Consult a licensed Florida attorney regarding your individual circumstances. Arthur Simpson, Esq. is licensed to practice law in the State of Florida.