Miami just delivered a major win for older homeowners: eligible residents 65 and up who homestead their primary residence will get a 100% rebate of the city’s portion of their property tax bill under a new Senior Citizen Tax Relief Program. The city rolled out the news on its official X account on Feb. 24, 2026, pitching the move as targeted relief for seniors squeezed by rising tax assessments.
Relief is on the way 💌 Eligible Miami seniors 65+ who homestead their primary residence will receive a 100% rebate of the City’s portion of property taxes through the Senior Citizen Tax Relief Program.
— City of Miami (@CityOfMiami) February 24, 2026
What the city announced
Per the City of Miami, the program will rebate the city’s ad valorem property-tax portion for homesteaded primary residences owned by qualifying seniors 65 and older. The social post, however, stopped short of laying out the fine print: there was no payment schedule, application window, or step-by-step process yet for how seniors will actually claim the money.
How the program got here
The rebate did not come out of nowhere. In June 2025, the City Commission signed off on a preliminary framework and instructed the city manager to crunch the numbers on possible full, half, and quarter refund options. That discussion unfolded as Miami’s taxable roll ballooned, with commissioners and staff pointing to an almost $9.7 billion jump in taxable value in a single year, context reported by Miami Today.
How big a dent this could make
A full city-level rebate is no token gesture. Officials peg this year’s municipal property-tax revenue at roughly $650 million, and homesteaded properties make up about 9 to 10 percent of that total, according to WLRN. That is real money that would otherwise flow toward core services such as police, fire and public works, so the city will be threading the needle between relief for seniors and the day-to-day costs of keeping Miami running.
How seniors can prepare
For now, the splashy headline is out, but the how-to details are not. Eligible homeowners should keep an eye on official city channels for specifics on enrollment, documentation and timing. For questions and general assistance, the City of Miami lists contact options, including dialing 311, on its housing pages, where residents can track program updates and find phone numbers, per the City of Miami…