Hillsborough County Florida Government: Structure, Services, and Resources

Hillsborough County operates one of the largest county governments in Florida, serving a population that surpassed 1.5 million residents (U.S. Census Bureau, 2020 Decennial Census). The county seat is Tampa, and the governmental framework encompasses a Board of County Commissioners, a set of independently elected constitutional officers, and an extensive network of departments delivering public services. This page covers the structural organization of Hillsborough County government, the principal service categories residents and businesses encounter, and the decision boundaries that determine whether a matter falls under county, municipal, or state jurisdiction.


Definition and scope

Hillsborough County is a charter county under Florida law, operating pursuant to Florida Statutes Chapter 125 and the county's own home-rule charter adopted in 1983. The charter structure grants the county broader local legislative authority than non-charter counties, including the power to enact ordinances on subjects not preempted by the Florida Legislature.

The governing body is the Board of County Commissioners (BOCC), composed of 7 members — 4 elected from single-member districts and 3 elected at-large — each serving 4-year staggered terms. The BOCC sets policy, adopts the annual budget, and enacts county ordinances.

Five independently elected constitutional officers operate alongside the BOCC, each with distinct statutory duties:

  1. Clerk of the Circuit Court and Comptroller — maintains court records, processes fiscal transactions, and administers the Clerk's finance functions.
  2. Property Appraiser — determines the assessed value of all taxable real and personal property within the county.
  3. Tax Collector — collects property taxes, issues driver licenses, and processes vehicle registrations under delegation from the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles.
  4. Sheriff — operates the county jail, provides law enforcement in unincorporated areas, and serves civil process.
  5. Supervisor of Elections — administers voter registration and conducts all federal, state, and local elections held within the county.

These officers are not subordinate to the BOCC; their budgets are subject to BOCC appropriation, but their operational authority derives directly from the Florida Constitution and applicable statutes.


How it works

County government delivers services through a dual channel: the BOCC-administered departments and the five constitutional officers listed above. The County Administrator, appointed by the BOCC, manages day-to-day operations of all BOCC departments, including Public Works, Parks and Recreation, Planning and Zoning, Environmental Protection Commission, Fire Rescue, and Solid Waste Management.

Hillsborough County's Fiscal Year 2024 adopted budget totaled approximately $4.7 billion (Hillsborough County Office of Management and Budget, FY2024 Adopted Budget), funding operations across the general fund, special revenue funds, capital project funds, and enterprise funds covering utilities and solid waste.

The county operates under a unitary tax district for general county purposes; however, the unincorporated Municipal Service Taxing Unit (MSTU) imposes additional millage on properties outside incorporated municipalities (Tampa, Temple Terrace, Plant City) to fund services — primarily law enforcement and fire protection — that municipal governments otherwise provide to their own residents.

Land use regulation in unincorporated Hillsborough County flows through the Comprehensive Plan (required under Florida Statutes Chapter 163) and the Land Development Code. Rezoning applications, variance requests, and development agreements are processed by the Planning Commission, an advisory body making recommendations to the BOCC.


Common scenarios

Residents and professionals interact with Hillsborough County government most frequently in the following categories:


Decision boundaries

A critical distinction for residents and businesses is whether a property or activity falls within unincorporated Hillsborough County or within one of the county's 3 incorporated municipalities: Tampa, Temple Terrace, or Plant City. County zoning, code enforcement, and MSTU taxes apply only to unincorporated areas. Properties within city limits are subject to municipal ordinances, municipal fire and police services, and separate permitting processes.

A second boundary concerns the division between county authority and state preemption. The Florida Legislature has preempted a range of subjects from local regulation — firearms (Florida Statutes §790.33), certain telecommunications infrastructure, and agricultural operations under the Right to Farm Act. County ordinances conflicting with state preemption are void.

For comparison, charter counties such as Hillsborough differ from non-charter counties — of which Florida has 52 — primarily in that charter counties may exercise home-rule powers, adopt ethics codes beyond state minimums, and restructure internal government functions without special legislative authorization. Non-charter counties are limited to powers expressly granted by the Florida Legislature.

The county's geographic boundaries do not extend to matters of state licensing, state criminal prosecution, or federal regulatory compliance. The Florida county government structure framework establishes the baseline for all 67 Florida counties, while Hillsborough's charter adds a local governance layer on top of that foundation.

For a broader orientation to the full Florida government framework, the Florida Government Authority home page provides structured access to state agency profiles, constitutional provisions, and county-level references statewide.


Scope and coverage limitations

This page covers the governmental structure, primary services, and jurisdictional boundaries of Hillsborough County, Florida. It does not address the internal governance of the City of Tampa, Temple Terrace, or Plant City, which are independent municipal corporations. State-level agency operations — even those delivering services within Hillsborough County — are covered under their respective agency pages accessible through this site's Florida agency index. Federal programs operating within the county, including federal courts, immigration enforcement, and federally administered natural resources, are outside the scope of this page. This page does not constitute legal advice, and ordinance provisions cited should be verified against the official Hillsborough County Code of Ordinances before use in formal proceedings.


References