March 21, 2025

Nearly 7 in 10 Florida Voters Would Choose Property Taxes Over a 12% State Sales Tax Rate, Poll Shows

Replacing Property Taxes With A Doubled State Sales Tax Rate is Unpopular Among Voters Across the Political Spectrum

STATEWIDE, Fla. - A new poll conducted on behalf of the nonpartisan Florida Policy Institute (FPI) found that 68% of Florida voters — a supermajority — support “keeping property taxes are they are” to fund local services if the alternative is a doubled state sales tax rate.

The poll also found that a majority of voters from across the political spectrum (77% of Democrats, 61% of Republicans, and 69% of Independents) support keeping the property tax instead of paying a 12% state sales tax rate.

A recent FPI report found that Florida lawmakers would have to increase the state’s general sales tax rate to 12%, which would be the nation’s highest, if they were to eliminate property taxes and replace them with higher consumption taxes. The think tank cautioned that eliminating property taxes — an idea that Gov. Ron DeSantis recently floated on X, formerly known as Twitter — would tie local lawmakers’ hands, leaving them struggling to fund police, fire, schools, and other crucial public services.

“The results of this poll are unsurprising,” said Sadaf Knight, CEO of FPI. "Florida's high cost of living remains a major issue, but replacing property taxes with higher sales taxes would disproportionately burden low- and middle-income families, hurt local communities, and make Florida’s inequitable tax system even worse. There are better ways to address Florida's affordability crisis. For example, lawmakers could enact a Working Floridians Tax Rebate, a state-level version of the Earned Income Tax Credit, and a property tax circuit breaker program to lower taxes for people paid low to moderate wages."

For the second year in a row, legislation has been introduced in Florida that would direct the state to issue a study on the impact of eliminating property taxes and replacing “property tax revenues through budget reductions, sales-based consumption taxes, and locally determined consumption taxes authorized by the Legislature.”

If lawmakers moved to eliminate property taxes, the proposal would ultimately have to go to Floridians for a vote to change the state constitution and receive over 60% of the vote. However, when asked about eliminating property taxes and replacing them with a doubled state sales tax rate, only 29% of Florida voters approved of the tax swap — a far cry from the necessary threshold to pass.

While there are different ways to amend the state constitution, the likely path would first involve state legislators submitting a joint resolution to eliminate property taxes. Then, if three-fifths of representatives and senators voted to pass the joint resolution, it would be placed on the ballot in an upcoming general election. Thereafter, 60% of Florida voters would have to approve the measure to successfully amend the state constitution.

The poll, conducted by Mason-Dixon Polling & Strategy Inc. of Jacksonville, Florida, surveyed 625 registered Florida voters by telephone from March 11-15, 2025.  The margin for error, according to standards customarily used by statisticians, is no more than ± 4 percentage points.

“We look forward to working with the Florida Legislature on common-sense solutions to making the state tax code fairer,” added Knight.

FPI is an independent, nonpartisan and nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing state policies and budgets that improve the economic mobility and quality of life for all Floridians.

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