Florida homestead law is a constitutional protection that shields a person’s primary residence from most creditors during life and controls who can inherit it at death. For estate planning purposes, “homestead” is not just a property-tax discount — it is a separate body of law that can override your will, dictate how the home passes to a surviving spouse or minor child, and quietly defeat plans that work perfectly well for any other asset. If you own a home in Miami-Dade, Broward, or Palm Beach County, understanding how homestead interacts with your estate plan is one of the most important things you can do for your family.
What “Homestead” Actually Means in Florida
Florida law uses the word “homestead” to describe three different but related protections, and conflating them is where a lot of well-meaning plans go wrong. It helps to keep them separate in your mind.
- Creditor protection — Article X, Section 4 of the Florida Constitution exempts your homestead from forced sale by most creditors. This is the famously broad protection that draws people to Florida.
- Tax benefits — the homestead exemption under Article VII reduces your assessed value (up to $50,000 off, in two tiers) and caps annual assessment increases at 3% through the Save Our Homes provision.
- Inheritance restrictions — Article X, Section 4(c) limits how you can devise (leave by will) a homestead if you are survived by a spouse or a minor child.
The first two are what most homeowners think about. The third is the one that ambushes estate plans, because it can render a perfectly valid will provision void as a matter of law.
The size limits, briefly
The creditor protection is generous but not unlimited in area. Inside a municipality, homestead protection covers up to one-half acre; outside a municipality, up to 160 contiguous acres. There is no dollar cap on the protected value for an established Florida homestead, which is why the protection is so powerful — a fully paid-off South Florida home can be worth several million dollars and still sit beyond the reach of most judgment creditors.
How Homestead Creditor Protection Survives Death
A common misconception is that homestead protection evaporates when the owner dies. It generally does not. Under Florida case law — the Florida Supreme Court’s decision in Snyder v. Davis is the usual touchstone — the creditor exemption passes to the heirs, as long as the property qualifies as protected homestead and passes to someone who falls within the constitutional definition of “heir.”
This is genuinely valuable. It means that if you die owing money on credit cards, a medical debt, or a personal judgment, your protected homestead can flow to your children free of those claims — something that is not true of your bank accounts, brokerage assets, or a rental property. But the protection only attaches if the home actually qualifies and the person inheriting it qualifies. Leave the home to a friend, a charity, or a non-relative, and the creditor shield can disappear.
The Devise Restrictions That Override Your Will
Here is the part that surprises people most. If you are survived by a spouse or a minor child, Florida law restricts how you may leave your homestead — and a will provision that violates those restrictions is simply ineffective.
The rules break down like this:
- Minor child living? You cannot devise the homestead at all. Not to your spouse, not to a trust, not to anyone. It passes by operation of law, with a life estate to the surviving spouse and a remainder to the descendants (or, under a more modern option, an undivided one-half interest each, as we’ll cover below).
- Surviving spouse, no minor child? You may leave the homestead only to your spouse outright. If you try to leave it to children, a trust, or anyone else, the spouse takes a default interest instead.
- No spouse and no minor child? You are free to leave the homestead to whomever you choose. The devise restrictions simply don’t apply.
So a do-it-yourself will that says “I leave my home in equal shares to my three adult children” can fail entirely if there’s a surviving spouse — even if the spouse agrees with it. That kind of disconnect between intention and law is exactly what careful estate planning exists to prevent.
The default: life estate vs. the 50/50 election
When a homestead is improperly devised (or not devised at all) and there is a surviving spouse plus descendants, Florida Statutes section 732.401 gives the spouse a choice. The default outcome is a life estate for the surviving spouse with a vested remainder to the decedent’s descendants. But the spouse may instead elect, within a statutory window, to take an undivided one-half tenancy-in-common interest, with the other half going to the descendants.
Each option has real consequences. A life estate means the surviving spouse is responsible for property taxes, insurance, and ordinary upkeep, while the remainder beneficiaries — often adult stepchildren — wait in the wings with a vested interest. That arrangement breeds conflict in blended families. The 50/50 election can be cleaner, but it makes the spouse a co-owner with the children, which carries its own friction. Neither default is usually what anyone actually wanted, which is the whole point of planning ahead.
Planning Tools That Work — and the Ones That Backfire
Because homestead is its own legal universe, the techniques that solve problems for ordinary assets can create them here. A few that come up constantly in South Florida practice:
The enhanced life estate (Lady Bird) deed
An enhanced life estate deed — known as a “Lady Bird” deed — lets you keep full control of your home during life, including the right to sell or mortgage it without anyone’s consent, while naming a beneficiary who takes automatically at death. Done correctly, it avoids probate on the home, preserves the homestead tax exemption and Save Our Homes cap during your lifetime, and keeps Medicaid estate-recovery exposure low. It is one of the most useful tools available to a single Florida homeowner who wants the house to pass to specific people. It does not, however, let you sidestep the spousal devise restrictions if you’re married.
Revocable living trusts
You can hold homestead in a revocable trust without losing the tax exemption or the creditor protection, and many South Florida owners do exactly that to avoid probate. The trust still has to respect the devise restrictions, so the drafting must account for a spouse or minor child. Done right, a trust avoids a separate ancillary probate if you also own property in another state.
The spousal waiver
If you and your spouse genuinely want flexibility — common in second marriages where each spouse has their own children — Florida allows the spousal homestead rights to be waived. A properly drafted and executed waiver, often inside a prenuptial or postnuptial agreement, frees you to leave the homestead to your own children or a trust. Without it, the spouse’s rights control no matter what your will says.
What tends to backfire
- Adding a child to the deed. It feels simple, but it makes a gift, exposes the home to that child’s creditors and divorce, and can trigger a property-tax reassessment that erases years of Save Our Homes savings.
- Leaving homestead to a generic trust without homestead-aware language. A trust written for a single person can be void as a devise when a spouse survives.
- Assuming the will controls. For homestead, the constitution and statute come first; the will yields.
Special Situations for South Florida Families
Blended families and second marriages
Nowhere does homestead law cause more heartache than in blended families. A surviving spouse with a life estate and adult stepchildren holding the remainder is a recipe for years of tension over taxes, repairs, and eventual sale. Couples who plan ahead — with a clear-eyed conversation, a spousal waiver where appropriate, and a trust that names everyone’s interests — spare their families a fight in the probate division of the circuit court.
A child or beneficiary with disabilities
If someone you intend to provide for receives needs-based government benefits, leaving them an interest in the home can disqualify them from assistance. The usual answer is to route the inheritance through a properly drafted special needs trust rather than giving the asset outright. The same principle applies whether the family is in Florida or New York, and our network of attorneys coordinates these plans across state lines so a Florida home and an out-of-state beneficiary stay aligned.
Owners who split time between states
Snowbirds need to be careful: you can only claim one homestead exemption, and claiming Florida residency for homestead while also claiming a residency-based benefit in another state can lead to back taxes and penalties. Get the residency facts clean before relying on Florida’s protections.
Why a Will Alone Is Not Enough
Every adult should have a will — it names a personal representative, directs your other assets, and appoints guardians for minor children. But for the homestead specifically, the will is often the least important document in the file. The home passes through a combination of constitutional rule, statute, deed form, and beneficiary designation. A thoughtful plan coordinates all of those moving parts so the result matches your intent.
That coordination is the difference between a plan that holds up and one that unravels in court. Our firm builds homestead-aware estate plans for South Florida families through our Florida estate planning practice, and we work alongside colleagues who handle wills and last testaments in New York for clients whose families and assets straddle both states. If you want to understand how the pieces fit together, our overviews of wills and Florida probate are a good starting point.
Action Steps for Florida Homeowners
- Confirm your home actually qualifies as homestead — residency, ownership, and acreage all matter.
- Identify whether you have a surviving spouse or any minor children; that single fact determines which devise rules apply to you.
- Review how title is currently held and whether a Lady Bird deed, trust, or spousal waiver fits your goals.
- If a beneficiary receives public benefits, plan the inheritance through a special needs trust before, not after, you sign.
- Sit down with a Florida estate planning attorney who handles homestead routinely — schedule a consultation rather than guessing.
Florida’s homestead protections are among the strongest in the country, but they reward homeowners who plan with them in mind and quietly punish those who assume a basic will is enough. A short conversation now can keep the family home protected, out of unnecessary probate, and in the hands you intend.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I leave my Florida home to my children in my will if I'm married?
Usually not, if your spouse survives you. Florida’s constitutional devise restrictions generally require homestead to pass to a surviving spouse outright (and prohibit devising it at all if you have a minor child). A will provision leaving the home to children instead is typically void unless your spouse signed a valid waiver of homestead rights.
Does Florida homestead creditor protection continue after I die?
Yes, in most cases. Under Florida case law such as Snyder v. Davis, the creditor exemption passes to qualifying heirs, so a protected homestead can reach your children free of most of your debts. The protection can be lost, however, if the home passes to someone outside the constitutional definition of heir, like a friend or charity.
What is a Lady Bird deed and should I use one?
A Lady Bird (enhanced life estate) deed lets you keep full control of your home during life — including the right to sell or mortgage it — while naming a beneficiary who takes automatically at your death, avoiding probate. It preserves your homestead tax exemption and Save Our Homes cap. It’s an excellent tool for single owners, but it does not override spousal homestead rights if you’re married.
Will adding my child to the deed avoid probate on my home?
It can avoid probate, but it often causes bigger problems: it makes a taxable gift, exposes the home to your child’s creditors and divorce, and can trigger a property-tax reassessment that wipes out years of Save Our Homes savings. A Lady Bird deed or a properly drafted trust usually accomplishes the same goal more safely.
How does homestead affect a beneficiary who receives government benefits?
Leaving an interest in the home outright to someone on needs-based benefits like SSI or Medicaid can disqualify them. The standard solution is to direct that share into a properly drafted special needs trust so the beneficiary keeps both the inheritance and their benefits.


