> timeline

Timeline

Chronological source-backed events for active, dead, and related proposals.

> monthly_runway

Monthly Ballot Runway

Monthly scale; future months are checkpoints to watch, not predictions.

Last verified 2026-04-28

Next watch New special session call, new HJR or SJR filing, committee agenda, or ballot record

Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov

> procedural_path

Procedural Dependency Map

Colors describe procedural status, not a policy recommendation.

  1. 2025-10-16

    Completed

    Filed

    HJR 203 entered the House record

    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.

  2. 2026-02-19

    Completed

    House

    House approval completed

    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.

  3. Future checkpoint

    Not reached

    Ballot

    Ballot listing not reached

    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

Full Timeline

  1. Special Session D bill-actions list showed no tracked property-tax elimination proposal

    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.

  2. Senate memo described Special Session D legislation

    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.

  3. CS/CS/HJR 203 died in Senate Appropriations

    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.

  4. CS/CS/HJR 203 was referred to Senate Appropriations

    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.

  5. CS/CS/HJR 203 passed the House

    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.

  6. HJR 203 was filed

    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.