DeSantis Property Tax Plan Could Reshape Keys Funding, Trigger Concerns Over Public Safety, Schools and Local Services
Monroe County warns revenue loss could hit hurricane response, housing, and school funding as Key West faces unique property tax structure.
KEY WEST, Fla. — A sweeping property tax proposal backed by Gov. Ron DeSantis is raising new concerns across the Florida Keys, where officials warn the measure could significantly reduce funding for public safety, housing, and schools in a county already heavily reliant on property tax revenue to sustain essential services.
The proposal, expected to be considered during a special legislative session beginning Monday, would expand Florida’s homestead exemption and move toward eliminating property taxes on primary residences. It would also restrict how local governments can spend remaining property tax revenue, limiting expenditures to narrowly defined “core services.”
In a letter to legislators on Friday, Monroe County Mayor Michelle Lincoln said county leaders support tax relief for residents but cautioned that the plan could destabilize funding for legally required services in a region uniquely vulnerable to hurricanes and geographic isolation.
“Monroe County supports thoughtful discussions about tax relief, and the commission wants to provide tax relief to full-time residents, but any proposal must recognize the realities of providing legally mandated essential services in a geographically unique and hurricane-prone community,” Lincoln said in a letter sent to state lawmakers Friday.
“Our residents depend on public safety personnel, emergency response capabilities, constitutional offices, and numerous other services that are required by state law,” she said. “We believe any property tax reform should include a sustainable funding solution that allows counties to continue meeting those responsibilities.”
Key West’s Unique Housing and Tax Reality
Local officials say Key West in particular presents a dramatically different tax profile than much of Florida.
Only about 25% of residential property in Key West is homesteaded, according to county and municipal estimates, with the majority of properties classified as second, third, or even fourth homes.
Under DeSantis’ plan, the homestead exemption would increase from $50,000 a year to $250,000 a year, which would ease the burden on year-round residents in the Florida Keys
That could see Key West losing several hundred thousand dollars in adverted traces
The impact would be greater in Monroe County and would have a giant chilling effect throughout Florida where most homes would benefit from such tax cuts at the cost of public services.
As of yet, Tallahassee doesn’t seem to have the appetite — or votes — to completely eliminate homestead properties
If they did, such a loss to city tax rolls would mean about a $4m shortfall in the city budget — overall a fraction of Key West’s annual budget — but still a serious hit.
But despite concern from the dais and on the parts of Commisioners Haskell, Lee and Kaufman, City Manager Brian Barroso has assured commissioners and residents that his team is “crunching numbers” and is up to the task of meeting goals to come up with a budget that would address any state-wide loss of funding.
“That distinction is critical under the proposed plan, because while homesteaded properties would receive the largest tax relief, non-homesteaded properties would remain fully exposed to rate restrictions and shifting tax burdens,” Kaufman said on Sunday.
“I have advocated for lower property taxes in the City of Key West for many years and have consistently opposed unnecessary tax increases and budgets that increase the burden on residents. My record on that is very clear.”
Kaufman also said that he absolutely supports meaningful tax relief for full-time residents, seniors, and working families who are struggling with rising housing costs, insurance costs, and inflation.
“At the same time, we have to responsibly pay for the essential services our residents rely on every day, including police, fire rescue, emergency response, infrastructure, and hurricane preparedness.”
Kaufman pointed to one important difference in Key West.
“The City of Key West has strong financial reserves and revenue sources that many other local governments and taxing authorities simply do not have,” he told Above the Fold. “That is why I have long argued that tax reductions and rollback rates were possible if we budgeted more responsibly, controlled spending, improved efficiency, and focused on long-term planning.”
Kaufman also said he was very concerned about enormous bond proposals and borrowing currently being pushed by current city management.
“Those long-term debt obligations ultimately impact taxpayers and future budgets,” he said
“Ironically, the same administration that previously argued tax reductions were not realistic is now saying rollback rates may be achievable in the upcoming budget. In my opinion, that demonstrates that lower taxes were always possible with better financial planning and stronger fiscal discipline.”
Kaufman said he believed the bigger issue is that the current administration has operated for years without a true long-term strategic plan for city services, infrastructure, staffing, capital projects, and future budget needs.
“We need a transparent strategic plan with clear priorities, measurable goals, and responsible budgeting so residents can have confidence that government is living within its means while still protecting essential services and quality of life.”
County officials warn that if homestead taxes are significantly reduced or eventually eliminated statewide, Monroe County could face substantial revenue losses despite its large share of non-resident-owned housing.
Potential Impact On County And Schools
Monroe County currently relies heavily on property tax revenue to fund core government operations.
Officials say approximately 91% of the county’s ad valorem tax levy supports public safety and constitutional offices, including the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office, Fire Rescue, Trauma Star air ambulance, emergency management, detention operations, and emergency communications.
Another 22% supports constitutional offices such as elections, property appraisal, tax collection, and court administration.
County leaders argue there is limited capacity to absorb major revenue reductions without affecting service levels.
The Monroe County School District could also face significant pressure under the proposed changes.
Education funding tied to local property taxes represents a major portion of school district budgets across Florida, and analysts say broad homestead exemptions could reduce available revenue even in counties with large numbers of non-homesteaded properties like Monroe.
Wider State Concerns Already Emerging
Monroe County is not alone in raising alarms.
Across Florida, several counties and school districts are warning that similar proposals could force major budget reductions.
Officials in Palm Beach County and Orange County have publicly indicated that significant reductions in property tax revenue could result in layoffs, program cuts, and potential school closures if funding gaps are not offset by the state.
The Florida Association of Counties estimates that the broader proposal could remove billions of dollars in local government revenue statewide, prompting concerns about long-term impacts on public education, emergency services, and infrastructure.
House Democratic Leader Fentrice Driskell described the proposal as a “complete takeover by the state government,” arguing that it would significantly shift control over local budgets to Tallahassee.
Local Control vs. Tax Relief
Supporters of the proposal, including DeSantis, argue that Florida homeowners have been burdened by rapidly rising property values and tax bills, and that meaningful relief is long overdue.
The governor has also proposed a state trust fund to assist local governments that experience revenue shortfalls, while insisting that essential services will remain protected.
But critics say the definition of “essential” services is too narrow and could leave out key programs that are especially important in coastal and disaster-prone counties like Monroe.
What It Means For The Keys
For Key West and the Lower Keys, the stakes are particularly high.
Beyond emergency services and constitutional functions, county officials say property tax revenue supports affordable housing initiatives, flood resilience projects, environmental protection programs, libraries, parks, code enforcement, and disaster recovery efforts.
With a large share of Key West housing serving non-resident owners, officials warn that shifting tax burdens or shrinking the overall base of local revenue could create ripple effects across both government operations and public services.
Monroe County commissioners are expected to formally review the proposal during their June 10 meeting at the Murray Nelson Government Center in Key Largo.
As the debate moves forward, officials say the central question remains whether statewide tax relief can be balanced with the financial realities of maintaining essential services in one of Florida’s most geographically unique and storm-exposed regions.
For the Florida Keys, where a single hurricane can reshape entire communities, that balance may prove especially difficult to strike.
Why Key West Is Different In This Debate
Only ~25% of residential property is homesteaded
Majority of homes are second, third, or fourth residences
Property tax base is heavily tied to non-resident ownership
County already spends ~91% of property taxes on public safety and constitutional offices
School funding and county operations both heavily dependent on property tax revenue
What Officials Say Could Be At Risk
Sheriff’s Office and Fire Rescue operations
Trauma Star air ambulance service
Emergency management and disaster response
Monroe County School District funding
Affordable housing programs
Flood resilience and environmental protection projects
Libraries, parks, and public facilities
Court and elections administration
“Monroe County supports thoughtful discussions about tax relief, and the commission wants to provide tax relief to full-time residents, but any proposal must recognize the realities of providing legally mandated essential services in a geographically unique and hurricane-prone community,” said Lincoln.


