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Florida No Income Tax on the First Coast: What High Earners Actually Keep

Susie TakaraSusie Takara
Apr 13, 2026 12 min read
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Florida No Income Tax on the First Coast: What High Earners Actually Keep

TL;DR

Florida’s no-income-tax advantage is real, especially for high earners moving from states like New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Massachusetts, or California. But on the First Coast, what you actually keep depends on where you buy. Jacksonville, Ponte Vedra, Nocatee, the Beaches, St. Augustine, and Clay County can carry very different housing costs, insurance exposure, HOA/CDD fees, flood considerations, and property-tax outcomes. The right question is not just “How much income tax do I save?” It is “How much of that advantage survives after the address-level cost of ownership?”

What Florida’s No-Income-Tax Policy Actually Means on the First Coast

Florida’s no-income-tax policy is one of the clearest financial reasons high earners look at the First Coast. If you are moving from a high-tax state, the difference can be meaningful. Wages, business income, bonuses, capital gains, retirement income, and liquidity events may all feel different when Florida is your legal tax home instead of a state with a high individual income tax.

But the benefit does not land in a spreadsheet. It lands in a specific house, in a specific county, with a specific insurance quote, property-tax estimate, HOA or CDD structure, and maintenance profile. A high earner buying inland in Jacksonville may keep more of the advantage than a high earner buying a coastal or master-planned property with higher carrying costs.

That is the part most state-tax calculators miss. Florida may have no individual income tax, but the First Coast is not one cost structure. San Marco, Mandarin, Atlantic Beach, Ponte Vedra Beach, Nocatee, St. Augustine, Fleming Island, and Orange Park all change the math in different ways.

This is not tax advice, and high earners should work with a CPA or tax advisor before changing residency. The purpose here is narrower: helping First Coast homebuyers understand how the local housing decision affects how much of the Florida tax advantage they actually keep.

The First Coast Cost Structure That Changes the Calculation

Most relocating high earners start with a simple comparison: what they paid in state income tax before versus what Florida does not collect. That is a useful starting point, but it is not enough for a home purchase.

On the First Coast, the real cost differences often show up in four places: property taxes, homeowners insurance, flood insurance, and community fees. Those costs vary by address, construction type, flood zone, roof age, county, and neighborhood structure.

Property taxes are local and address-specific

Florida’s property-tax system is not the same as a Northeast state income-tax system. The taxable value, homestead exemption, millage rate, non-ad valorem assessments, and any district fees all matter. After purchase, a home’s assessed value can reset, and the seller’s old tax bill may not be a reliable guide for the new owner.

Homestead can help eligible primary residents, and Save Our Homes can limit future assessment increases after the exemption applies. But buyers should still estimate taxes based on their purchase, not the seller’s historical tax bill.

Insurance can change the savings picture quickly

Homeowners insurance is one of the biggest surprises for buyers coming from outside Florida. A home near the beach, Intracoastal, St. Johns River, marsh, or low-lying area may quote differently than a similar-looking home farther inland. Roof age, construction type, wind mitigation, elevation, and flood zone can all change the number.

Flood insurance is separate from standard homeowners insurance. If a lender requires it, it becomes part of the monthly ownership cost. If it is not required, some buyers still choose to carry it based on the property’s risk, drainage, and comfort level.

HOA and CDD fees matter in planned communities

Master-planned communities can preserve time and offer strong amenities, but the monthly structure needs to be counted. HOA dues and CDD assessments may help fund common areas, amenity centers, roads, drainage, parks, and other infrastructure. Those costs vary by neighborhood, phase, and specific property.

Nocatee, SilverLeaf, World Golf Village, and other planned communities can still make sense for high earners, especially if the household uses the amenities. The mistake is comparing only the listing price while ignoring the full monthly structure.

Where the Tax Advantage Holds Most Cleanly

The no-income-tax advantage usually holds most cleanly when the buyer keeps the housing and insurance profile reasonable. That does not mean buying the cheapest home. It means choosing an address where the total carrying cost does not absorb too much of the state-tax savings.

Jacksonville proper can preserve more of the advantage

Inland Jacksonville neighborhoods can preserve more of the Florida tax benefit because the ownership structure may be simpler. Areas like San Marco, Riverside, Mandarin, Murray Hill, and parts of the Southside may offer established homes, central access, and fewer master-planned community fees than many newer St. Johns County options.

The trade-off is that Jacksonville is not one uniform market. Older homes may need more inspection attention. School fit varies sharply by address. Some neighborhoods are walkable and urban; others are more car-dependent. But for high earners who want to keep more of the tax advantage while staying close to Jacksonville job centers, inland Duval can make sense.

For a broader area comparison, this Jacksonville vs. Clay County vs. St. Johns County guide breaks down the larger cost and lifestyle differences.

Clay County can work when space matters more than prestige

Clay County can also preserve more of the advantage for buyers who want space, suburban routines, and a quieter daily pattern. Fleming Island, Orange Park, Oakleaf, Middleburg, and Green Cove Springs all create different trade-offs, but the general pattern is useful: more room, more car dependence, and often a different cost structure than coastal or high-demand St. Johns County addresses.

The trade-off is route and lifestyle. A home may cost less to carry, but the commute, school run, and errand pattern need to fit. Clay County can be financially smart for the right high earner, but only if the weekly drive pattern makes sense.

St. Augustine can preserve value if the address fits the routine

St. Augustine is not one cost profile. Historic neighborhoods, coastal properties, newer subdivisions, SilverLeaf, World Golf Village, and inland St. Augustine-area homes all behave differently. Some buyers choose St. Augustine because they want character, history, restaurants, beaches, or a slower daily pace. Others choose the area for newer construction and St. Johns County access without choosing Nocatee specifically.

The tax advantage may hold well when the home’s insurance, HOA/CDD structure, commute, and maintenance profile all fit. It can shrink when the buyer chooses a more expensive coastal or historic property without pricing in the age, insurance, parking, tourist traffic, or maintenance reality.

Where the Advantage Gets Absorbed Faster

The Florida tax benefit can still be meaningful in premium communities, but it may be less dramatic than the headline suggests. The more you pay for beach access, prestige, gated amenities, newer construction, waterfront access, or a high-demand school location, the more of the tax savings may be converted into housing cost.

Ponte Vedra Beach and the Beaches require honest math

Ponte Vedra Beach, Atlantic Beach, Neptune Beach, and Jacksonville Beach are some of the most lifestyle-driven parts of the First Coast. The appeal is obvious: coastal access, restaurants, golf, sand, water, and a daily rhythm that feels very different from inland suburbia.

But coastal living needs address-level math. Homeowners insurance, flood zone, wind mitigation, roof age, elevation, condo association health, HOA dues, and maintenance can all change what the buyer actually keeps. For a high earner, the tax savings may still be significant. The question is whether beach access is worth the amount of the savings being redirected into the coastal lifestyle.

If you are comparing coastal options, this St. Augustine Beach vs. Ponte Vedra Beach comparison can help frame the daily-life trade-offs.

Nocatee converts some savings into structure and convenience

Nocatee is a strong fit for many high-earning families because it offers newer homes, St. Johns County school demand, parks, trails, pools, events, Town Center errands, and a managed community environment. For households that use those features often, the added cost can feel connected to real daily value.

The caution is that Nocatee’s full monthly cost is not just the mortgage. HOA dues, CDD assessments, insurance, taxes, and any village-specific fees need to be reviewed by exact address. A household that uses the pools, trails, parks, and Town Center may see the structure as worth it. A household that rarely uses the amenities may feel like it redirected tax savings into a lifestyle it does not fully use.

For a deeper look at the mechanics, this guide to CDD fees in Northeast Florida explains how these assessments work and what buyers should verify.

Waterfront and luxury homes need a different budget

High earners often look at waterfront, golf, gated, beach-adjacent, or custom homes because the income-tax savings create room in the budget. That can be a perfectly rational choice. It just needs to be priced correctly.

Luxury ownership may include higher insurance, more complex maintenance, dock or seawall upkeep, larger roof and HVAC systems, association fees, landscaping, pool care, and storm preparation. The more specialized the property, the less useful a generic tax calculator becomes.

The CDD and HOA Layer Most Tax Calculators Miss

Most state-tax calculators do not know whether a home sits in a CDD community, a gated association, a condo building, a coastal flood zone, or an older neighborhood with higher maintenance risk. That is why they are useful for the income-tax line and weak for the housing decision.

CDD assessments are especially important in master-planned communities. They may appear on the tax bill as non-ad valorem assessments rather than as part of the ordinary ad valorem property tax. That distinction matters because a buyer may see the listing price, mortgage estimate, and HOA dues without fully understanding the total assessment structure tied to the property.

HOA dues also need context. A low HOA may cover very little. A higher HOA may include amenities, common areas, gates, landscaping, or exterior maintenance depending on the property type. Condo associations have a separate set of questions around reserves, insurance, building maintenance, and future assessments.

Where the Tax Advantage Matters Most by Income Profile

The no-income-tax advantage grows as income rises, but the address still matters. A very high earner may retain a strong net advantage even after buying a premium coastal or gated property. A high-but-not-ultra-high earner may find that a large share of the benefit gets absorbed by housing, insurance, and community fees if the purchase stretches too far.

Executives, business owners, and liquidity-event buyers

For very high earners, Florida’s tax structure can be a major planning factor. But the residency, income-source, business-entity, and former-state issues can be complex. A buyer in this category should coordinate with a CPA, tax attorney, or financial advisor before assuming the full benefit applies cleanly.

On the real estate side, the question often shifts from “Can I keep the tax advantage?” to “Where do I want to live now that the tax structure gives me more flexibility?” At that point, lifestyle fit matters as much as the financial math: beach, golf, schools, privacy, boating, walkability, airport access, or newer construction.

High-earning households balancing income, schools, and lifestyle

For many high-earning families, the tax advantage is real but not unlimited. Choosing between Ponte Vedra, Nocatee, San Marco, Mandarin, St. Augustine, Fleming Island, and the Beaches becomes a question of how much of the benefit they want to keep versus how much they are willing to spend on lifestyle.

If the family wants St. Johns County schools, newer homes, and amenities, Nocatee or nearby planned communities may make sense. If they want a better balance of central access and lower community costs, Jacksonville neighborhoods may preserve more of the advantage. If they want space and a quieter pace, Clay or Nassau may become more appealing.

Remote workers relocating from high-tax states

Remote workers can feel the Florida tax benefit quickly, but they also have the most location flexibility. That makes the housing decision more important, not less. If work no longer dictates the address, then lifestyle, insurance, schools, airport access, community structure, and total monthly cost should lead the decision.

A remote worker who buys coastal because “Florida should feel like the beach” may spend more of the tax savings than expected. A remote worker who chooses inland Jacksonville, St. Augustine, Clay County, or a lower-fee neighborhood may keep more of the benefit while still improving daily life.

What to Verify Before You Move for the Tax Advantage

For high earners, the Florida tax decision and the First Coast real estate decision should not happen in separate conversations. The tax move may be smart, but the property choice determines how much of the advantage stays available for savings, investment, travel, school, lifestyle, or business flexibility.

Before you choose a community, run the full version of the math. Not a national calculator. Not a listing estimate. The full local version.

  • Confirm tax residency rules with a CPA or tax advisor, especially if you still own property, operate a business, or earn income tied to another state.
  • Estimate property taxes using the county tools and the likely purchase price, not the seller’s current tax bill.
  • Get real insurance quotes for the exact address, including flood coverage if relevant.
  • Verify HOA and CDD obligations from official documents, tax bills, association budgets, and closing disclosures.
  • Review maintenance risks such as roof age, HVAC age, waterfront exposure, docks, pools, seawalls, condo reserves, or older-home systems.
  • Match the lifestyle premium to actual use before paying for beach access, golf, boating, master-planned amenities, or gated privacy.

The Bottom Line: Florida’s Tax Advantage Is Real, But the Address Decides the Net

Florida’s no-income-tax advantage is real. For high earners, it can meaningfully change long-term cash flow, investment flexibility, and relocation strategy. But on the First Coast, the address decides how much of that advantage survives the housing decision.

If you buy an inland Jacksonville home with controlled insurance and fewer community fees, you may keep more of the benefit. If you buy a beach, waterfront, gated, golf, or high-amenity property, you may still come out ahead, but more of the tax savings becomes lifestyle spending. Neither choice is wrong. The point is to make the trade-off deliberately.

The best First Coast move is not always the one that saves the most tax on paper. It is the one where the tax benefit, home, insurance, community fees, commute, schools, and lifestyle all fit the same plan.

For a broader comparison of St. Johns County lifestyle options, this guide to St. Johns County neighborhoods by daily life helps compare the communities that often attract high earners. And if you are weighing Nocatee against St. Augustine specifically, this Nocatee vs. St. Augustine comparison explains how life stage, routine, and HOA trade-offs affect the decision.

WRITTEN BY
Susie Takara
Susie Takara
Realtor

Susie Takara is a Northeast Florida REALTOR® with United Real Estate Gallery and has worked full-time in residential real estate since 2013. An Accredited Buyer’s Representative® and Certified Negotiation Expert, she specializes in helping buyers and sellers across Jacksonville and surrounding communities with clear communication, ethical representation, and local market insight.

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