Florida to Arizona is the Sun Belt relocation that confuses people because both states are warm-weather, low-tax jurisdictions — so the financial case is subtler than California or Illinois. But Florida transplants consistently report three dominant changes when they move to Phoenix: humidity, hurricanes, and property taxes. Florida’s property taxes are higher than Arizona’s in most counties. Florida’s hurricane risk (particularly for Tampa, Orlando, and South Florida residents) has no Arizona equivalent. And Florida’s infamous summer humidity — 90°F at 80% humidity for 6 months — is categorically different from Phoenix’s 110°F at 10% humidity, where “dry heat” is a real and meaningful distinction. This guide covers the financial comparison, the climate trade, and where Florida transplants settle in the East Valley.
“Tampa’s $7,000 homeowners insurance bill vs. $1,800 in Chandler. That single line item decided it.”
Florida vs Arizona: The Financial Case
Income Tax — Florida Has the Advantage
The income tax comparison runs contrary to what many people assume. Florida has no state income tax (0%). Arizona has a 2.5% flat income tax. Florida transplants are actually giving up an income tax advantage when they move to Arizona — not gaining one.
- Florida income tax: 0% (no state income tax)
- Arizona income tax: 2.5% flat rate
- On $150K income: Florida $0 vs Arizona $3,750 — Florida is $3,750/year better on income tax
- On $300K income: Florida $0 vs Arizona $7,500 — Florida is $7,500/year better on income tax
The income tax reality: Florida transplants give up income tax advantage moving to Arizona. The case for the move is built on property taxes, homeowners insurance, hurricane risk, and lifestyle quality — not income tax savings. For high-income remote workers, the income tax math can actually favor staying in Florida.
Property Tax — Arizona’s Primary Financial Advantage
Florida’s property tax system includes the Homestead Exemption and the Save Our Homes cap, which protects long-term primary residents from rapid assessment increases. But for new buyers — including Florida residents selling and buying a new home — effective rates are meaningfully higher than Arizona’s 0.60%:
| Florida County | Effective Rate (New Buyers) | Annual Tax ($600K Home) | AZ Savings/Year |
|---|---|---|---|
| Miami-Dade County | 1.0–1.3% | $6,000–$7,800 | $2,400–$4,200 |
| Broward County (Fort Lauderdale) | 1.1–1.4% | $6,600–$8,400 | $3,000–$4,800 |
| Palm Beach County | 1.0–1.3% | $6,000–$7,800 | $2,400–$4,200 |
| Hillsborough County (Tampa) | 0.9–1.2% | $5,400–$7,200 | $1,800–$3,600 |
| Orange County (Orlando) | 0.9–1.2% | $5,400–$7,200 | $1,800–$3,600 |
| Maricopa County AZ | 0.60% | $3,600 | — |
Note: Florida long-term homeowners with established Homestead caps may have lower effective rates than new buyers — but any Florida buyer who sells and repurchases resets to new-buyer effective rates and loses the Save Our Homes cap benefit on their prior property.
Homeowners Insurance — The Most Dramatic Difference
Florida’s homeowners insurance market has undergone a genuine crisis since 2020: multiple private carriers have exited the Florida market; Citizens Insurance (the state-run insurer of last resort) is overwhelmed; and premiums for coastal and near-coastal Florida properties have increased 50–200%+ over the 2020–2025 period.
- Miami: $5,000–$12,000+/year average homeowners insurance premium
- Tampa: $4,000–$10,000+/year
- Orlando (inland): $3,500–$7,000+/year — lower due to reduced hurricane exposure, but still significantly elevated vs national norms
- Phoenix East Valley: $1,200–$2,500/year — no hurricane risk, no wind pool, standard private market with no carrier exodus
The insurance crisis driver: For Florida homeowners who’ve experienced non-renewal notices from private carriers, mandatory Citizens Insurance assignment, separate wind-only policies requiring supplemental flood coverage, or combined insurance and flood premiums exceeding $10,000/year — the Arizona alternative is immediate and concrete. Phoenix East Valley homeowners insurance averages $1,200–$2,500/year for comparable home sizes, with no hurricane wind pool, no flood insurance requirement for most East Valley addresses (FEMA Zone X), and a stable private insurance market that has not undergone Florida’s carrier exodus.
Combined Annual Financial Comparison
The net financial picture varies significantly by Florida origin city. The income tax penalty is fixed; the savings in property tax and insurance vary by how much Florida insurance exposure the buyer is leaving behind:
- Tampa household ($250K income, $600K home): Income tax: AZ costs $6,250 more · Property tax savings: $3,000 · Insurance savings: ~$5,200 — Arizona approximately $1,950/year ahead, driven by insurance savings offsetting income tax loss
- Miami household ($250K income, $600K home): Income tax: AZ costs $6,250 more · Property tax savings: $3,600 · Insurance savings: ~$8,000+ — Arizona $5,000–$7,000+/year ahead for coastal Miami buyers where insurance is highest
- Orlando inland household ($250K income, $600K home): Income tax: AZ costs $6,250 more · Property tax savings: $2,400 · Insurance savings: ~$2,500–$4,000 — Net approximately break-even or slight Florida advantage for inland Orlando buyers with lower insurance exposure
The financial case is strongest for coastal and near-coastal Florida buyers where insurance savings are largest. For inland Florida buyers (Orlando suburban, Gainesville, Tallahassee), the math is closer — and Florida’s income tax advantage weighs more heavily in the comparison.
Hurricane Risk: The Factor Florida Transplants Don’t Miss
Florida’s hurricane risk is not theoretical for anyone who lived through the 2004 hurricane season (four major hurricanes), Hurricane Irma (2017 — direct Florida Keys devastation, Tampa area near-miss), Hurricane Ian (2022 — Fort Myers direct hit, one of the most destructive Atlantic hurricanes ever recorded), or Hurricane Milton (2024 — Tampa area direct impact).
The Annual Hurricane Cycle
- June 1 – November 30: official hurricane season — six months of active concern for all Florida residents
- Pre-storm preparation: plywood purchasing, shutter installation and removal, generator maintenance, evacuation route planning, flood insurance management and renewals
- Evacuation decisions: Tampa’s evacuation zones cover hundreds of thousands of residents — the decision to evacuate or shelter-in-place involves significant logistical and financial cost, often replicated multiple times per season
- Post-storm recovery: power outages lasting days to weeks, water intrusion damage, insurance claims processes that can take months to resolve and negotiate
Phoenix/Arizona: No hurricanes. No tornado corridor risk. Monsoon storms (June–September) produce intense but localized afternoon thunderstorms — high winds, heavy rain, and occasional hail — but without hurricane-scale catastrophic damage potential for most properties. The monsoon homeowner’s checklist is real (roof inspection, drainage, landscaping), but does not involve evacuation planning or multi-day power outages from direct hurricane impact.
For Florida residents who’ve genuinely lived through hurricane season as an annual event — the emotional and logistical weight of that cycle is something Phoenix transplants consistently describe as one of the most underestimated benefits of the move. The psychological burden of a 6-month hurricane season, compounded over years, is invisible until it’s gone.
Florida Heat vs Arizona Heat: The Humidity Question
Florida transplants ask: “Which is worse — Phoenix summer or Florida summer?” Among transplants who’ve experienced both, the answer is consistent enough to be a meaningful data point: Phoenix is more manageable despite significantly higher peak temperatures.
Florida Summer (Tampa / Orlando)
- July average: 90°F with 80–85% relative humidity
- Heat index: 100–115°F perceived temperature
- Outdoor activity: limited by humidity discomfort, not just temperature — the air feels heavy and unescapable even with air conditioning cycling on
- Rain: frequent afternoon showers, but humidity persists after rain events rather than clearing
Phoenix Summer
- July average: 105°F with 10–20% relative humidity
- Outdoors 10 AM to 5 PM: genuinely challenging and not recommended for sustained physical activity
- Before 8 AM and after 6 PM: manageable with acclimation — outdoor dining, walks, pool time are all realistic in the shoulder hours
- “Dry heat” is physiologically real: sweat evaporates instantly, providing body cooling that Florida’s humidity actively prevents
“Florida’s 90°F felt worse than Phoenix’s 105°F. The humidity never let my body cool down.”
The consistent Florida transplant report: Florida’s 90°F felt worse than Phoenix’s 105°F because the humidity prevented the body’s natural cooling mechanism. Not universal — heat tolerance is individual — but frequent enough among the Florida-to-Phoenix transplant population to be a reliable finding rather than an outlier.
Florida Cities to East Valley Community Map
| Florida Origin | East Valley Comparable | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Tampa / Clearwater suburb | Chandler / Gilbert master plans | Both: established professional family suburb, A+ schools, tech employment, $500K–$900K |
| Orlando suburbs (Windermere, Dr. Phillips) | Morrison Ranch Gilbert / Fulton Ranch Chandler | Both: family master plan with resort amenities, $600K–$1.1M |
| South Florida / Boca Raton | Scottsdale / North Scottsdale | Both: resort-adjacent lifestyle, affluent, $700K–$2M+ |
| Miami Beach / Coconut Grove | Old Town Scottsdale | Both: walkable entertainment/arts district, urban lifestyle, condo-primary |
| Naples / Sarasota (snowbird/retiree) | North Scottsdale / Encanterra 55+ | Both: resort and golf lifestyle, seasonal or permanent senior market |
| Jacksonville | Mesa / Queen Creek | Both: affordable growing metro, family community, $400K–$600K, value focus |
| Gainesville / Tallahassee | Tempe / Chandler | Both: university-adjacent professional community, $400K–$700K |
The primary Tampa suburb and Orlando suburban transplant destination. Morrison Ranch mirrors the professional suburb identity of Windermere or Dr. Phillips — master plan character, established streetscapes, A+ Gilbert USD schools, resort amenities. Power Ranch is the family-community equivalent of a Tampa suburban HOA community with exceptional outdoor programming: 26 miles of trails, 5 pools, active league sports calendars.
Tampa suburb buyers who want tech employment adjacency (Intel, PayPal, Microchip) land in Chandler. Hamilton HS’s academic reputation mirrors the A-rated high schools in professional Tampa corridors. Fulton Ranch directly mirrors the resort-amenity master plan lifestyle of Orlando’s Dr. Phillips communities — private lake, clubhouse, tennis, walking trails.
South Florida (Boca Raton, Palm Beach, Miami Beach) buyers land in Scottsdale. DC Ranch mirrors the affluent resort community identity of Boca Raton or Palm Beach Gardens — guard-gated options, walkable Market Street, country club adjacency. Old Town Scottsdale’s condo market absorbs Miami Beach buyers who want walkable entertainment and arts.
Jacksonville and value-focused Florida buyers find Queen Creek and East Mesa most familiar — large-lot master plans, newer construction, growing family communities with sub-$600K price points, and the East Valley’s fastest-expanding restaurant and retail corridors. Encanterra (Queen Creek) serves the Naples and Sarasota retiree market looking for Arizona’s resort golf lifestyle.
The Florida Insurance Migration: Why It’s Now a Move Driver
Florida’s property insurance crisis has become a genuine migration accelerant since 2020. The pattern is consistent across multiple Florida metros: private carriers non-renew policies, homeowners are assigned to Citizens Insurance (the state’s insurer of last resort), wind-only policies require supplemental flood coverage, and combined premiums now equal or exceed the annual property tax obligation for many coastal and near-coastal properties.
- Private carrier exits: Multiple major insurers have withdrawn from Florida’s residential market since 2020, reducing competition and concentrating risk in Citizens Insurance
- Citizens Insurance dynamics: Citizens premium increases are capped by state law but still increase annually; the state’s depopulation efforts push policies back to private carriers at higher rates when private capacity exists
- Flood insurance separate: Homeowners insurance in Florida frequently excludes flood coverage — requiring a separate NFIP or private flood policy that adds $1,000–$4,000+/year for coastal and near-coastal addresses
- Combined premium reality: Tampa coastal homeowners frequently report combined insurance (wind + flood) premiums of $8,000–$15,000+/year on $600K–$900K homes — a figure that was unimaginable before 2020
For these homeowners, the East Valley alternative is immediate and concrete: Phoenix East Valley homeowners insurance averages $1,200–$2,500/year for comparable home sizes, with no hurricane wind pool, no mandatory flood insurance for most East Valley addresses, and a stable private insurance market that has not undergone Florida’s carrier exodus.
What Florida Buyers Adjust To in Arizona
Frequently Asked Questions: Florida to Phoenix
Ryan Moxley is a REALTOR® with My Home Group (ADRE SA643872000), specializing in Florida-to-Arizona relocation across the Phoenix East Valley. Contact Ryan at (480) 227-9143 or moxleysellsaz@gmail.com.