St. Petersburg Property Tax Guide (2026)
Effective rates, millage breakdown, homestead and Save Our Homes savings, and what St. Petersburg homeowners actually pay in Pinellas County.
How St. Petersburg property tax is calculated
Pinellas County property tax is the sum of multiple millage rates — county, school district, city, and a handful of special districts — applied to your taxable value (just/market value minus exemptions). One mill equals $1 per $1,000 of taxable value.
Pinellas runs a touch below the statewide average effective rate. St. Petersburg specifically has a moderate municipal millage relative to peer cities, which keeps bills competitive even as home values climb.
| Taxing authority | Millage (per $1,000) |
|---|---|
| Pinellas County (countywide) | ~5.26 |
| Pinellas School District | ~6.39 |
| City of St. Petersburg | ~6.75 |
| SW FL Water Mgmt + other | ~0.30 |
Source: Pinellas County Property Appraiser TRIM notices, recent years. Rounded; exact mills vary year-to-year.
Worked example: median St. Petersburg home
For a $370,000 home at the 0.91% effective rate:
- · Non-homesteaded (investment, second home): roughly $3,367/year
- · Homesteaded primary residence: roughly $2,837/year after the $50,000 homestead exemption
- · Senior + low-income exemption stack: can reduce the bill by another $300-$700/year for qualifying owners 65+
Florida exemptions that matter in St. Petersburg
Up to $50,000 off taxable value on your primary residence. The first $25,000 applies to all property taxes; an additional $25,000 applies to non-school taxes between $50,000-$75,000 in value.
Annual taxable-value increases on a homesteaded property are capped at 3% or CPI, whichever is lower. After 5-10 years in St. Petersburg, this gap often saves longtime owners thousands.
Owners 65+ with limited income qualify for an additional county/city exemption (up to $50,000) on top of homestead. Pinellas County participates.
Honorably discharged veterans with service-connected disability get exemptions starting at $5,000; 100% disabled veterans are fully exempt on homesteaded property in Florida.
When and how to pay
Florida property tax bills are mailed November 1 and are due by March 31. Early-payment discounts:
- · November — 4% discount
- · December — 3% discount
- · January — 2% discount
- · February — 1% discount
- · March — full amount, no discount
- · April 1 — delinquent; interest plus a tax certificate sale follows
For installment payments (mid-year quarterly schedule), you must apply with the tax collector before May 1.
Official sources
- · Pinellas County Property Appraiser — assessed values, exemption applications, TRIM notices
- · Pinellas County Tax Collector — pay your bill, installment plans, delinquent accounts
- · Florida Department of Revenue, Property Tax Oversight — statewide rules