House vehicle filed
HJR 203 entered the 2026 regular-session bill record.
> timeline
Chronological source-backed events for active, dead, and related proposals.
> monthly_runway
Monthly scale; future months are checkpoints to watch, not predictions.
HJR 203 entered the 2026 regular-session bill record.
CS/CS/HJR 203 passed the House and was referred to Senate Appropriations.
CS/CS/HJR 203 died in Senate Appropriations.
The reviewed bill-actions list did not show a tracked property-tax elimination proposal.
Current checkpointA future special-session call, HJR, or SJR would need official source support before this tracker marks a vehicle active.
A constitutional-amendment path would still require voter approval before any constitutional change.
> procedural_path
Colors describe procedural status, not a policy recommendation.
2025-10-16
CompletedFiled
The House property-tax proposal that became CS/CS/HJR 203 was filed for the 2026 regular session.
Dependency: This created the primary House vehicle tracked in the elimination debate.
2026-02-19
CompletedHouse
CS/CS/HJR 203 passed the Florida House by an 80-30 vote.
Dependency: A legislative constitutional amendment also needed Senate approval before any ballot step.
2026-03-13
Blocked/deadSenate
CS/CS/HJR 203 died in Senate Appropriations.
Dependency: This ended the regular-session path for that specific House proposal.
2026-04-28
WatchingVehicle
No tracked property-tax elimination proposal appeared on the April 28, 2026 Special Session D bill-actions list reviewed for this tracker.
Dependency: A new special session call, HJR, or SJR would be needed to reopen a legislative route.
Future checkpoint
Not reachedBallot
A legislative constitutional amendment would still need voter approval before it could change the Florida Constitution.
Dependency: The Department of State ballot step comes after a measure advances through the required constitutional-amendment path.
> timeline
The April 28 Senate bill-actions list reviewed for this tracker showed Special Session D activity on redistricting, AI, public records, medical freedom, and state reapportionment items.
This supports the current status label that no tracked property-tax elimination proposal was active on that reviewed list.
The Senate memo identified expected Special Session D legislation on redistricting, artificial intelligence, public records, and medical freedom.
The official memo did not describe a property-tax elimination vehicle among the listed Special Session D items.
The House-passed property-tax proposal did not advance through the Senate before the end of the regular session.
This ended the regular-session path for CS/CS/HJR 203.
After House passage, the Senate received the proposal and referred it to Appropriations.
Senate committee movement became the remaining regular-session path for that proposal.
The House passed CS/CS/HJR 203 by an 80-30 vote.
The proposal cleared one chamber but still needed Senate approval to reach the ballot.
The House property-tax proposal that became CS/CS/HJR 203 entered the 2026 regular-session bill record.
This created the primary House vehicle tracked in the 2026 elimination debate.