Property Records Directory
An independent reference for public Florida county property records. We organise the data into clean, linkable pages for subdivisions, streets, and individual parcels so you can read a record without navigating a government search form. This site is independent and not affiliated with any government agency.
What this site covers
This release covers 3 subdivisions in Hillsborough County, Florida, with 3,400 property pages, 145 street pages, and 7,961 qualified sales joined to those parcels.
Start here
- Hillsborough County, FL overview
- All included subdivisions
- Davis Islands — 1,466 parcels
- Port Tampa City — 1,463 parcels
- Apollo Beach Unit One, Part One — 471 parcels
What property records contain
For every parcel in the county, the public appraisal record includes:
- Identification — folio number, PIN, legal description, subdivision.
- Ownership — current owner name and mailing address.
- Location — site address, site city, ZIP.
- Use code — Florida Department of Revenue (DOR) classification (single family, condominium, vacant, commercial, etc.).
- Building characteristics — beds, baths, stories, units, buildings, heated area, year built (actual and effective).
- Land — acreage.
- Valuation — just value, land value, building value, extra-feature value, assessed value, taxable value.
- Sale history — every recorded deed with date, amount, qualification flag, type, seller, buyer, and book/page reference.
How the pages are organised
- Subdivision pages aggregate every parcel in a single platted subdivision — counts, value medians, qualified sales, top streets, and links to the highest-value properties.
- Street pages list every parcel on a single street inside a subdivision, with median values and recent qualified sales.
- Property pages show the full public record for a single parcel: owner, mailing address, valuation, building details, and complete sale history.
What county appraisal values mean
Just value is the appraiser's estimate of market value as of January 1 of the appraisal year. It is used to compute property taxes, not as a listing price. Assessed value applies Save Our Homes and other caps that can make it lower than just value. Taxable value further subtracts homestead and other exemptions before the millage rate is applied.
What qualified sales mean
The appraiser flags each recorded deed as qualified (Q) or
unqualified (U). Only qualified deeds are arm's-length
transactions used for valuation. Family transfers, foreclosure deeds, $100
deeds, and similar non-market transfers are recorded but excluded from
the qualified-sale totals on these pages.
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Common questions
What is on this site?
Public-records summaries for selected Florida county subdivisions, currently focused on Hillsborough County. Each subdivision has an overview page; each street within those subdivisions has a list of parcels; each parcel has its own property-record page.
What is a property appraisal record?
A public record kept by Florida counties for every parcel of land, including owner, mailing address, legal description, building characteristics, assessed and taxable values, and recorded deeds. These records are used to calculate property taxes.
What is a qualified sale?
A qualified sale is an arm's-length deed used by the county to set its county appraisal value. Family transfers, foreclosure deeds, and $100 deeds are recorded but excluded from qualified sale lists because they do not reflect market price.
Is this site affiliated with the county?
No. This site is an independent presentation of public records. It is not affiliated with any government agency.
Last updated . Data compiled from public Hillsborough County property records. This site is independent and not affiliated with any government agency.