Alachua County Tax Collector: Pay Taxes, Find Office Hours & Avoid Delinquent Fees
Use this refreshed Alachua County Tax Collector guide to pay property taxes online, find Gainesville branch hours, choose the right mailing address, understand Florida discount months, avoid April 1 delinquency, handle escrow questions, and know when you should contact the Property Appraiser instead of the Tax Collector.
Quick warning: property tax payment, driver license, vehicle tag, tourist development tax, birth certificate, concealed weapon license and local business tax services are not all the same portal. For property taxes, start from the official Alachua County Tax Collector property-tax page or the official tax bill search/payment portal.
What do you need from the Alachua County Tax Collector today?
The Alachua County Tax Collector collects real estate taxes, tangible personal property taxes and other taxes from the certified tax roll. Pay property taxes through the official Alachua County tax portal, visit one of the Gainesville public branches, or mail tax payments to Alachua County Tax Collector, P.O. Box 44310, Jacksonville, FL 32231. Public office hours are listed as Monday-Friday, 8:30 AM to 4:30 PM; phone service is listed as 8:30 AM to 5:00 PM. The main number is 352-374-5236.
When Is Your
Next Tax Deadline?
Select your state — see your exact deadline, live countdown, and whether you’re on time or already accruing penalties.
What the Alachua County Tax Collector Handles and What It Does Not Handle
The Tax Collector is the office that collects tax payments. It does not set your property value, approve homestead exemption, change your ownership record, or correct the legal description on the tax roll.
Property Tax Penalty & Interest Calculator
State-specific penalty rates • Interest accrual • Tax lien deadline • Cost-of-waiting breakdown
| Original Tax Amount | $0.00 |
| Initial Penalty— | $0.00 |
| Monthly Interest— | $0.00 |
| Fixed Fees— | $0.00 |
| Total Due | $0.00 |
Daily Accrual Rate
Interest and penalties are adding this much to your balance every single day
Tax Lien Warning
| If You Pay On | Days Late | Penalty | Interest | Total Owed | Extra Cost |
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The Alachua County Tax Collector handles property tax collection, tangible personal property tax collection, tax certificate processes, receipts, payment methods, local business tax services, vehicle registration, driver license services, concealed weapon license applications, birth certificate services, hunting and fishing license services and other agency work. But the reason most people visit this page is simpler: they have a property tax bill and need to pay it correctly.
Use the Tax Collector for payment
Use this office for tax bill search, online payment, in-person payment, tax payment mailing address, delinquent tax payment, receipts, installment payment and tax certificate questions.
Use the Property Appraiser for records
Use the Property Appraiser for value, ownership, mailing address, legal description, homestead exemption, agricultural classification and tangible property assessment questions.
Use the Clerk for tax deed sales
Tax certificates and tax deed sales are related but not the same. The Tax Collector handles tax certificates; the Clerk handles tax deed sale processes after certificate-related steps.
Micro-level rule for confused taxpayers
If your question is “How do I pay?” start with the Tax Collector. If your question is “Why is the value, exemption, owner name or address wrong?” start with the Property Appraiser. Paying the bill will not correct a property record mistake.
How to Pay Alachua County Property Taxes Online, by Mail or In Person
The fastest route is the official Alachua County tax bill search and payment portal. Search the correct account, verify the property, review the discount month and payment fee, then save your receipt.
Do not jump straight to payment just because the portal shows a familiar name. Alachua County has many Gainesville addresses, business accounts, rental properties, family trusts, estate accounts and mortgage-paid parcels. A good payment starts with the correct tax record.
Start from the official Tax Collector website
Use AlachuaCollector.com or the official tax bill search portal. Avoid ads, unofficial directory pages, old bookmarks and random “pay property tax” links.
Search by account, owner name or property address
Use the most exact information you have. If you recently bought property, also search by the previous owner’s name because tax bills can still reflect the tax roll owner.
Match the property before paying
Confirm the property address, account number, tax year, owner name, amount due and whether it is real estate tax or tangible personal property tax.
Check the payment method and fee
E-check, credit card, debit card, PayPal, mail and in-office payment may have different fee and timing consequences. Review the final payment screen before submitting.
Save proof immediately
Keep the receipt, confirmation number, canceled check, bank image or printed confirmation until the county record shows the account is paid.
Search / Pay Alachua County property tax
Use the official tax bill search and payment portal for real estate and tangible tax bill lookup.
Open Payment PortalProperty Taxes page
Use the official page for discounts, deadlines, installment plan, delinquent real estate taxes and tangible tax guidance.
Open Property Taxes PageAlachua County Tax Collector Office Hours, Open Today and Best Time to Call
Public office hours are listed as Monday-Friday, 8:30 AM to 4:30 PM, closed Saturday and Sunday. Phone service is listed as Monday-Friday, 8:30 AM to 5:00 PM.
The office page also encourages continued use of online and mail services for vehicle registrations and property tax payments. That matters because many property tax tasks do not require a branch visit. Online payment may be easier than parking, waiting, and discovering that your issue belongs with the Property Appraiser.
Public branch hours
Monday through Friday, 8:30 AM to 4:30 PM. Offices are listed as closed Saturday and Sunday.
Phone hours
Phone service is listed as available 8:30 AM to 5:00 PM, Monday through Friday. Main number: 352-374-5236.
Call before complex visits
Call first for delinquent tax, tangible tax, tax certificate, escrow, receipt or title-company questions. A quick call can prevent a wasted trip.
What to have ready before calling
- Property address or business location.
- Tax account number if available.
- Property owner name or business name.
- Tax year you are asking about.
- Payment confirmation number if you already paid.
- Mortgage company or title company details if relevant.
- Whether your issue is real estate tax or tangible personal property tax.
Alachua County Tax Collector Office Locations in Gainesville
The official office page lists three public branch locations in Gainesville: Downtown, Northwest and Southwest.
Downtown Public Branch
Main contact location
Northwest Public Branch
NW Gainesville office
Southwest Public Branch
SW Gainesville office
Which branch should you visit?
For simple property tax payment, online or mail payment may be easier. For complex tax questions, call first. For value, exemption, ownership, mailing address or legal description problems, start with the Alachua County Property Appraiser, not a Tax Collector branch.
Where to Mail Alachua County Property Tax Payments
Mail property tax payments to the official tax payment mailing address: Alachua County Tax Collector, P.O. Box 44310, Jacksonville, FL 32231.
This is one of the easiest places to make a costly mistake. The Tax Collector uses different mailing addresses for tax payments, regular auto tag payments, and title/overnight payments. Do not use the auto tag address for property tax payments.
Tax payments
Alachua County Tax Collector
P.O. Box 44310
Jacksonville, FL 32231
Use this for property tax payments by check or money order when mailing regular tax payments.
Title and overnight payments
Alachua County Tax Collector
5830 NW 34th Blvd
Gainesville, FL 32653
Use only when the official instructions match your payment type.
Regular auto tag payments
P.O. Box 44308
Jacksonville, FL 32231
This is separate from property tax payment mail. Do not mix them.
Mail payment checklist
- Make check or money order payable to John Power, Tax Collector.
- Use the correct mailing address for property tax payments.
- Write the property tax account number or parcel details on the payment when appropriate.
- Mail early if you want discount-month timing.
- Do not rely on postmark for delinquent tangible taxes unless the official page says it applies.
- Keep a copy of the check, money order receipt, envelope tracking or bank image.
Alachua County Property Tax Discounts, Due Date and April 1 Delinquent Date
Tax statements are normally mailed on or before November 1. The full amount is due by March 31, and taxes become delinquent April 1.
November: 4% discount
Best month to pay if your bill is correct and you want the largest early-payment discount.
December: 3% discount
Still a strong discount month, but do not wait if you have escrow or address questions.
January: 2% discount
Use January to confirm unresolved bills, especially if a mortgage company was supposed to pay.
February: 1% discount
Final discount month. Good time to fix no-bill or wrong-address problems before March.
March: no discount
Full amount is due by March 31. Waiting until late March increases risk if your account is not found or payment fails.
April 1: delinquent
Taxes become delinquent April 1. Added charges and tax certificate sale risk can follow.
What if you never received a tax bill?
Do not ignore the tax. Alachua County’s official guidance says property owners are responsible for knowing taxes are due and paying before delinquency. If you do not receive a bill in November, call the Tax Collector at 352-374-5236 and search the official tax roll.
Alachua County Installment Payment Plan: Who It Helps and Where People Get Tripped Up
Alachua County taxpayers may choose a quarterly installment plan when the prior year taxes exceeded $100 and the application is received by the official deadline.
The installment plan is useful if you prefer spreading the bill across the year instead of paying one larger amount after the November bill. But it is not something you casually decide in March after the bill is nearly due. You must apply on time and make the first installment by the required date.
Check eligibility
The prior year taxes must exceed $100. If your prior year tax was too low, the plan may not be available.
Apply by April 30
The official page states 2026 applications must be received no later than April 30, 2026. Late planning can close the door for that tax year.
Pay the first installment by June 30
Failure to make the first payment terminates eligibility for the rest of the year, and the taxpayer receives a regular bill in November.
Installment strategy tip
The plan can help with cash flow, but it does not fix a value dispute, exemption problem or wrong ownership record. If the bill itself looks wrong, handle the Property Appraiser issue separately.
Alachua County Property Appraiser vs Tax Collector: Which Office Fixes Your Problem?
Contact the Tax Collector for payments, deadlines, receipts and delinquent taxes. Contact the Property Appraiser for value, ownership, mailing address, legal description and exemptions.
Tax Collector handles
- Tax bill search and payment
- Payment methods and receipts
- Property tax mailing address
- Delinquent real estate taxes
- Tax certificate sale process
- Installment payment plan collection side
Property Appraiser handles
- Assessed value
- Ownership and mailing address
- Legal description
- Homestead exemption
- Agricultural classification
- Tangible personal property assessment
Micro-level example
If the bill is high because the payment is late, call the Tax Collector. If the bill is high because the assessed value, exemption or classification looks wrong, the Tax Collector cannot simply lower it. Start with the Property Appraiser and review appeal or TRIM notice deadlines.
Alachua County Tangible Personal Property Tax for Businesses and Rental Property
Tangible personal property tax applies to business assets such as furniture, fixtures, equipment and some assets connected to rental property or mobile home attachments.
The Property Appraiser assesses tangible personal property value based on owner-reported information. The Tax Collector collects the tangible tax bill. This split matters because business owners often call the payment office when the real issue is a filing or assessment problem.
January 1 value date
The condition and status of property on January 1 can matter for the tax year. Business owners should not wait until tax bill season to understand reporting duties.
April 1 filing deadline
The Property Appraiser calendar lists April 1 as the deadline for filing tangible personal property tax returns.
Unpaid tangible taxes
Unpaid tangible taxes become delinquent April 1. Fees, interest, collection costs, legal fees and warrant procedures can follow.
Business purchase warning
If you buy a business, rental property operation or equipment-heavy business, verify tangible taxes before closing. Alachua County guidance explains that tangible tax liens can survive sale or transfer of the tangible personal property.
Alachua County Delinquent Property Taxes, Tax Certificates and Tax Deed Confusion
Real estate taxes become delinquent April 1. A mandatory charge, advertising charge, tax certificate sale process and later tax deed issues can follow if taxes remain unpaid.
Many owners panic when they hear “tax sale.” In Florida, a tax certificate sale is not the same as immediately losing your home. A certificate holder pays the delinquent taxes and receives a lien-style certificate. To remove that lien, the owner must pay delinquent taxes plus interest, costs and charges to the Tax Collector. Later tax deed processes are handled separately through the Clerk side.
April 1 delinquency
Unpaid real estate taxes become delinquent April 1. Do not wait until after delinquency to ask about payment proof or escrow.
Advertising and certificate sale
Florida law requires advertising delinquent parcels before the certificate sale, and the sale must be held on or before June 1 each year.
Tax deed sales are different
Tax certificates are connected to delinquent taxes; tax deed sale processing involves the Clerk after certificate-related steps. Do not confuse the two.
What to do if your Alachua County tax bill is already delinquent
Search the official tax bill portal
Confirm the property, tax year, balance and delinquent status. Do not rely only on a mailed notice.
Call before guessing the payoff
Delinquent totals can include fees, interest, advertising charges and other costs. Confirm the current payoff with the Tax Collector.
Get proof after payment
Keep the receipt and confirm the county record updates. This is especially important if a title company, lender or buyer is involved.
Local-Style Tips That Official Pages Usually Do Not Explain Clearly
A helpful tax collector page should not only repeat phone numbers. It should prevent the exact mistakes that cost residents time, fees and stress.
Search before you call
The contact page itself suggests mortgage and title company callers search the property information first. You will ask better questions if you already know the account status.
Do not mail to the wrong box
Property tax payments, auto tag payments and title/overnight payments have different mailing addresses. One wrong address can cost you discount timing.
March is not a planning month
March is the final due month with no discount. If you discover escrow, address or exemption problems in late March, you are already late strategically.
Alachua County Tax Collector Map: Downtown Gainesville Branch
The Downtown Public Branch and main contact location are listed at 12 SE 1st Street, County Administration Building, Gainesville, FL 32601.
Official Alachua County Tax Collector Links and Trusted Resources
Use official links for payment, deadlines, office hours, property records, exemptions and tax certificate information. Avoid entering payment information on a page unless the county, tax year and account are correct.
Alachua County Tax Collector FAQ: Payments, Hours, Discounts, Mail, Escrow and Delinquent Taxes
These answers focus on the questions Alachua County residents usually have when they need to pay taxes or visit the Tax Collector office.
Best Way to Use the Alachua County Tax Collector Page
If you need to pay property taxes, start with the official Alachua County tax bill search portal, verify the account, choose the lowest-risk payment method and save the receipt. If you need office help, public branch hours are listed as Monday-Friday, 8:30 AM to 4:30 PM, and the main phone number is 352-374-5236.
If the bill looks wrong because of value, ownership, legal description, mailing address or exemption, do not expect the Tax Collector payment counter to fix it. Start with the Alachua County Property Appraiser. For delinquent taxes, act fast because April 1 delinquency can lead to added costs and tax certificate sale risk.
Editorial note and official-source warning
This is an independent TaxCollectors.org guide for Alachua County, Florida taxpayers. It is not the official Alachua County Tax Collector, Alachua County Property Appraiser, Clerk of Court, mortgage company, title company, legal adviser or tax adviser.
Before paying, mailing, visiting, relying on a deadline, bidding, redeeming, filing an exemption or disputing a value, verify current information directly through official Alachua County and Florida government sources. Fees, payment systems, holiday closures, appointment rules, mailing instructions and tax sale dates can change.
Official source shortcuts: Alachua County Tax Collector, Search / Pay Tax Bill, Property Taxes, Office Hours & Locations, and Alachua County Property Appraiser.