Florida

School has started — can you still get a tax break on back-to-school shopping?

File photo from 2024 of a child getting school supplies at a Family Expo sponsored by The Children’s Trust.
File photo from 2024 of a child getting school supplies at a Family Expo sponsored by The Children’s Trust. Courtesy of The Children's Trust

School started a couple of weeks ago in South Florida. But have you finished your back-to-school shopping?

If you have more supplies to buy as you go down that teacher checklist, you can take advantage of a sales tax holiday in the state that runs through Aug. 31.

This year’s sales tax break covers the entire month of August. That means even tough classes started mid-month, you can still take advantage of buying stuff without the Florida sales tax.

MORE: Back to school 2025: Everything South Florida parents need, in one guide

Here’s what else to know about tax-free back-to-school shopping:

What are the dates for tax-free shopping in Florida?

Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa was greeted by children after practice as the Dolphins gave backpacks, supplies to students ahead of the 2024 school year at the Miami Dolphins training facility in Miami Gardens, FL, on Aug. 1, 2024.
Miami Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa was greeted by children after practice as the Dolphins gave backpacks, supplies to students ahead of the 2024 school year at the Miami Dolphins training facility in Miami Gardens, FL, on Aug. 1, 2024. PHOTO BY AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiherald.com

Instead of a mid-year January and August tax break on school supplies of about two weeks apiece, state legislators signed off on one full month to run for all of August. The school sales tax holiday is now designed to be an annual August event.

The tax break on select school items runs Friday, Aug. 1 through Sunday, Aug. 31. The sales tax holiday applies to goods purchased online during the month if the seller is registered to collect Florida sales tax.

Tax free school items

According to the Florida Department of Revenue, the following items are exempt from sales tax if they meet specified price limits and conditions:

Personal computers or related accessories purchased for noncommercial home or personal use with a sales price of $1,500 or less. These items can include:

  • Calculators.
  • Desktops and handhelds, laptops, tablets and tower computers.
  • Electronic book readers.
  • Keyboards, mice, modems, monitors, nonrecreational software and routers.

Computer-related items that aren’t included:

  • Cellphones.
  • Video game consoles and digital media receivers.
  • Furniture, systems, software and monitors that are designed primarily for recreational use.

Clothing, footwear and personal accessories with a sales price of $100 or less per item include:

  • Backpacks, handbags, fanny packs and diaper bags.
  • Shirts, pants, dresses, skirts, shorts and other apparel.
  • Shoes, boots, sandals and other footwear.
  • Belts, hats, gloves and scarves.

Excluded clothing and personal accessories include:

  • Briefcases, suitcases and other garment bags.

School supplies with a sales price of $50 or less per item include:

  • Binders, cellophane tape, compasses, composition books and construction paper.
  • Crayons, erasers, folders, glue, paste and legal pads.
  • Lunch boxes, markers, notebooks and notebook filler paper.
  • Pencils, pens, poster board and poster paper.
  • Protactors and rulers.
  • Scissors, staplers and staples used to secure paper products.

Learning aids and jigsaw puzzles having a sales price of $30 or less:

  • Flashcards, learning cards, stacking or nesting blocks or sets.
  • Interactive or electronics books and toys intended to teaching reading or math skills.
  • Matching or other memory games, puzzle books and search-and-find books.

The deal does not apply to the rental or repair of any of the qualifying items. The sales tax holiday also does not apply to sales in a theme park, entertainment complex, public lodging establishment or airport.

This story was originally published August 26, 2025 at 5:00 AM with the headline "School has started — can you still get a tax break on back-to-school shopping?."

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