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This layer depicts the Future Land Use designation for all properties within unincorporated Orange County and those that have been annexed by a city but have not yet adopted a new Future Land Use designation. This layer is updated as amendments to the Comprehensive Policy Plan are processed in accordance with Chapter 163, Florida Statutes. It includes the current Future Land Use designation, the date of the Board of County Commissioners adoption hearing, the effective date for the amendment and amendment numbers.
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TwitterThis web application is designed to allow users to search an address in Orange County, FL and see what Commission District it is located in. The map contains the new Commission Districts for the 2026 election cycle, and the 2020 Census Designated Places for Orange County, Florida. These commission districts were approved in October 2025. The two new county commission districts are effective for the 2026 election cycle.Disclaimer“Data is provided 'as is' without any warranty or any representation of accuracy, timeliness, or completeness. The burden of determining accuracy, completeness, timeliness, merchantability and fitness for or the appropriateness for use rests solely on the requestor. The County makes no warranties, express or implied, as to the use of the Data. There are no implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. The requestor acknowledges and accepts the limits of the Data, including the fact that the Data is dynamic and is in a constant state of maintenance, correction, and update.”
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TwitterThe Florida Department of Revenue’s Property Tax Oversight(PTO) program collects parcel level Geographic Information System (GIS) data files every April from all of Florida’s 67 county property appraisers’ offices. This GIS data was exported from these file submissions in August 2025. The GIS parcel polygon features have been joined with thereal property roll (Name – Address – Legal, or NAL)file. No line work was adjusted between county boundaries.The polygon data set represents the information property appraisers gathered from the legal description on deeds, lot layout of recorded plats, declaration of condominium documents, recorded and unrecorded surveys.Individual parcel data is updated continually by each county property appraiser as needed. The GIS linework and related attributions for the statewide parcel map are updated annually by the Department every August. The dataset extends countywide and is attribute by Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS) code.DOR reference with FIPS county codes and attribution definitions - https://fgio.maps.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=ff7b985e139c4c7ba844500053e8e185If you discover the inadvertent release of a confidential record exempt from disclosure pursuant to Chapter 119, Florida Statutes, public records laws, immediately notify the Department of Revenue at 850-717-6570 and your local Florida Property Appraisers’ Office. Please contact the county property appraiser with any parcel specific questions: Florida Property Appraisers’ Offices:Alachua County Property Appraiser – https://www.acpafl.org/Baker County Property Appraiser – https://www.bakerpa.com/Bay County Property Appraiser – https://baypa.net/Bradford County Property Appraiser – https://www.bradfordappraiser.com/Brevard County Property Appraiser – https://www.bcpao.us/Broward County Property Appraiser – https://bcpa.net/Calhoun County Property Appraiser – https://calhounpa.net/Charlotte County Property Appraiser – https://www.ccappraiser.com/Citrus County Property Appraiser – https://www.citruspa.org/Clay County Property Appraiser – https://ccpao.com/Collier County Property Appraiser – https://www.collierappraiser.com/Columbia County Property Appraiser – https://columbia.floridapa.com/DeSoto County Property Appraiser – https://www.desotopa.com/Dixie County Property Appraiser – https://www.qpublic.net/fl/dixie/Duval County Property Appraiser – https://www.coj.net/departments/property-appraiser.aspxEscambia County Property Appraiser – https://www.escpa.org/Flagler County Property Appraiser – https://flaglerpa.com/Franklin County Property Appraiser – https://franklincountypa.net/Gadsden County Property Appraiser – https://gadsdenpa.com/Gilchrist County Property Appraiser – https://www.qpublic.net/fl/gilchrist/Glades County Property Appraiser – https://qpublic.net/fl/glades/Gulf County Property Appraiser – https://gulfpa.com/Hamilton County Property Appraiser – https://hamiltonpa.com/Hardee County Property Appraiser – https://hardeepa.com/Hendry County Property Appraiser – https://hendryprop.com/Hernando County Property Appraiser – https://hernandocountypa-florida.us/Highlands County Property Appraiser – https://www.hcpao.org/Hillsborough County Property Appraiser – https://www.hcpafl.org/Holmes County Property Appraiser – https://www.qpublic.net/fl/holmes/Indian River County Property Appraiser – https://www.ircpa.org/Jackson County Property Appraiser – https://www.qpublic.net/fl/jackson/Jefferson County Property Appraiser – https://jeffersonpa.net/Lafayette County Property Appraiser – https://www.lafayettepa.com/Lake County Property Appraiser – https://www.lakecopropappr.com/Lee County Property Appraiser – https://www.leepa.org/Leon County Property Appraiser – https://www.leonpa.gov/Levy County Property Appraiser – https://www.qpublic.net/fl/levy/Liberty County Property Appraiser – https://libertypa.org/Madison County Property Appraiser – https://madisonpa.com/Manatee County Property Appraiser – https://www.manateepao.gov/Marion County Property Appraiser – https://www.pa.marion.fl.us/Martin County Property Appraiser – https://www.pa.martin.fl.us/Miami-Dade County Property Appraiser – https://www.miamidade.gov/pa/Monroe County Property Appraiser – https://mcpafl.org/Nassau County Property Appraiser – https://ncpafl.com/Okaloosa County Property Appraiser – https://okaloosapa.com/Okeechobee County Property Appraiser – https://www.okeechobeepa.com/Orange County Property Appraiser – https://ocpaweb.ocpafl.org/Osceola County Property Appraiser – https://www.property-appraiser.org/Palm Beach County Property Appraiser – https://www.pbcgov.org/papa/index.htmPasco County Property Appraiser – https://pascopa.com/Pinellas County Property Appraiser – https://www.pcpao.org/Polk County Property Appraiser – https://www.polkpa.org/Putnam County Property Appraiser – https://pa.putnam-fl.com/Santa Rosa County Property Appraiser – https://srcpa.gov/Sarasota County Property Appraiser – https://www.sc-pa.com/Seminole County Property Appraiser – https://www.scpafl.org/St. Johns County Property Appraiser – https://www.sjcpa.gov/St. Lucie County Property Appraiser – https://www.paslc.gov/Sumter County Property Appraiser – https://www.sumterpa.com/Suwannee County Property Appraiser – https://suwannee.floridapa.com/Taylor County Property Appraiser – https://qpublic.net/fl/taylor/Union County Property Appraiser – https://union.floridapa.com/Volusia County Property Appraiser – https://vcpa.vcgov.org/Wakulla County Property Appraiser – https://mywakullapa.com/Walton County Property Appraiser – https://waltonpa.com/Washington County Property Appraiser – https://www.qpublic.net/fl/washington/Florida Department of Revenue Property Tax Oversight https://floridarevenue.com/property/Pages/Home.aspx
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A Community Development District (CDD) is a local, special purpose government authorized by Chapter 190 of the Florida Statutes as amended and is an alternative method for managing and financing infrastructure required to support community development.
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This dataset (2012-2020) is a compilation of the Land Use/Land Cover datasets created by the 5 Water Management Districts in Florida based on imagery -- North West Florida Water Management District (NWFWMD) 2019, Suwannee River Water Management District (SRWMD) 2019-2020, St. John's River Water Management District (SJRWMD) 2013-2016, 2013 (Dec 2012 – Mar 2013) - Duval, Bradford, 2014 (Dec 2013 – Mar 2014) - Alachua, Baker, Clay, Flagler, Lake, Marion, Nassau, Osceola, Polk, Putnam, St. John’s, 2015 (Dec 2014 – Mar 2015) - Brevard, Indian River, Okeechobee, Seminole, Volusia, 2016 (Dec 2015 – Mar 2016) - Orange, South West Florida Water Management District (SWFWMD) 2020 and South Florida Water Management District (SFWMD) 2017-2019. Codes are derived from the Florida Land Use, Cover, and Forms Classification System (FLUCCS-DOT 1999) but may have been altered to accommodate region differences.
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TwitterThe FDOT GIS Maximum Speed Limits provides spatial information Maximum Speed Limits on Florida Roadways. It is required for all designated roadways on the SHS and HPMS samples. This dataset is maintained by the Transportation Data & Analytics office (TDA). The source spatial data for this hosted feature layer was created on: 11/22/2025.For more details please review the FDOT RCI Handbook Download Data: Enter Guest as Username to download the source shapefile from here: https://ftp.fdot.gov/file/d/FTP/FDOT/co/planning/transtat/gis/shapefiles/maxspeed.zip
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TwitterThese data were created as part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Office for Coastal Management's efforts to create an online mapping viewer called the Sea Level Rise and Coastal Flooding Impacts Viewer. It depicts potential sea level rise and its associated impacts on the nation's coastal areas. The purpose of the mapping viewer is to provide coastal managers and scientists with a preliminary look at sea level rise and coastal flooding impacts. The viewer is a screening-level tool that uses nationally consistent data sets and analyses. Data and maps provided can be used at several scales to help gauge trends and prioritize actions for different scenarios. The Sea Level Rise and Coastal Flooding Impacts Viewer may be accessed at: https://coast.noaa.gov/slr. This metadata record describes the Florida Panhandle, East digital elevation model (DEM), which is a part of a series of DEMs produced for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Office for Coastal Management's Sea Level Rise and Coastal Flooding Impacts Viewer described above. This DEM includes the best available lidar known to exist at the time of DEM creation that met project specifications. This DEM includes data for Orange, Brevard, Osceola, Indian River, Okeechobee, St. Lucie, Seminole, Palm Beach and Martin Counties. The DEM was produced from the following lidar data sets: 1. 2018 Florida Peninsular FDEM - Orange 2. 2018 Florida Peninsular FDEM - Brevard 3. 2018 Florida Peninsular FDEM - Osceola 4. 2018 Florida Peninsular FDEM - Indian River 5. 2018 Florida Peninsular FDEM - Okeechobee 6. 2019 Florida Peninsular FDEM - St. Lucie 7. 2018 Florida Peninsular - Seminole 8. 2018 Florida Peninsular FDEM - Martin 9. 2017 Fort Drum Florida Lidar 10. 2017 Palm Beach County, Florida Lidar 11. 2017 Upper St Johns River Basin The DEM is referenced vertically to the North American Vertical Datum of 1988 (NAVD88) with vertical units of meters and horizontally to the North American Datum of 1983 (NAD83). The resolution of the DEM is approximately 3 meters.
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Orlando Planning Land Use
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Twitter(Note: This description is taken from a draft report entitled "Creation of a Database of Lakes in the St. Johns River Water Management District of Northeast Florida" by Palmer Kinser.Introduction“Lakes are among the District’s most valued resources. Their aesthetic appeal adds substantially to waterfront property values, which in turn generate tax revenues for local governments. Fish camps and other businesses, that provide lake visitors with supplies and services, benefit local economies directly. Commercial fishing on the District’s larger lakes produces some income, , but far greater economic benefits are produced from sport fishing. Some of the best bass fishing lakes in the world occur in the District. Trophy fishing, guide services and high-stakes fishing tournaments, which they support, also generate substantial revenues for local economies. In addition, the high quality of District lakes has allowed swimming, fishing, and boating to become among the most popular outdoor activities for many District residents and attracts many visitors. Others frequently take advantage of the abundant opportunities afforded for duck hunting, bird watching, photography, and other nature related activities.”(from likelihood of harm to lakes report).ObjectiveThe objective of this work was to create a consistent database of natural lake polygon features for the St. Johns River Water Management District. Other databases examined contained point features only, polygons representing a wide range of dates, water bodies not separated or coded adequately by feature type (i.e. no distinctions were made between lakes, rivers, excavations, etc.), or were incomplete. This new database will allow users to better characterize and measure the lakes resource of the District, allowing comparisons to be made and trends detected; thereby facilitating better protection and management of the resource.BackgroundPrior to creation of this database, the District had 2 waterbody databases. The first of these, the 2002 FDEP Primary Lake Location database, contained 3859 lake point features, state-wide, 1418 of which were in SJRWMD. Only named lakes were included. Data sources were the Geographic Names Information System (GNIS), USGS 1:24000 hydrography data, 1994 Digital orthophoto quarter quadrangles (DOQQs), and USGS digital raster graphics (DRGs). The second was the SJRWMD Hydrologic Network (Lake / Pond and Reservoir classes). This data base contained 42,002 lake / pond and reservoir features for the SJRWMD. Lakes with multiple pools of open water were often mapped as multiple features and many man-made features (borrow pits, reservoirs, etc.) were included. This dataset was developed from USGS map data of varying dates.MethodsPolygons in this new lakes dataset were derived from a "wet period" landcover map (SJRWMD, 1999), in which most lake levels were relatively high. Polygons from other dates, mostly 2009, were used for lakes in regionally dry locations or for lakes that were uncharacteristically wet in 1999, e.g. Alachua Sink. Our intension was to capture lakes in a basin-full condition; neither unusually high nor low. To build the data set, a selection was made of polygons coded as lakes (5200), marshy lakes (5250, enclosed saltwater ponds in salt marsh (5430), slough waters (5600), and emergent aquatic vegetation (6440). Some large, regionally significant or named man-made reservoirs were also included, as well as a small number of named excavations. All polygons were inspected and edited, where appropriate, to correct lake shores and merge adjacent lake basin features. Water polygons separated by marshes or other low-ground features were grouped and merged to form multipart features when clearly associated within a single lake basin. The initial set of lake names were captured from the Florida Primary Lake Location database. Labels were then moved where needed to insure that they fell within the water bodies referenced. Additional lake names were hand entered using data from USGS 7.5 minute quads, Google Maps, MapQuest, Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) county maps, and other sources. The final dataset contains 4892 polygons, many of which are multi-part.Operationally, lakes, as captured in this data base, are those features that were identified and mapped using the District’s landuse/landcover scheme in the 5200, 5250, 5430, 5600 classes referenced above; in addition to some areas mapped tin the 6440 class. Some additional features named as lakes, ponds, or reservoirs were also included, even when not currently appearing to be lakes. Some are now very marshy or even dry, but apparently held deeper pools of water in the past. A size limit of 1 acre or more was enforced, except for named features, 30 of which were smaller. The smallest lake was Fox Lake, a doline of 0.04 acres in Orange county. The largest lake, Lake George covered 43,212.8 acres.The lakes of the SJRWMD are a diverse set of features that may be classified in many ways. These include: by surrounding landforms or landcover, by successional stage (lacustrine to palustrine gradient), by hydrology (presence of inflows and/or outflows, groundwater linkages, permanence, etc.), by water quality (trophic state, water color, dissolved solids, etc.), and by origin. We chose to classify the lakes in this set by origin, based on the lake type concepts of Hutchinson (1957). These types are listed in the table below (Table 1). We added some additional types and modified the descriptions to better reflect Florida’s geological conditions (Table 2). Some types were readily identified, others are admittedly conjectural or were of mixed origins, making it difficult to pick a primary mechanism. Geological map layers, particularly total thickness of overburden above the Floridan aquifer system and thickness of the intermediate confining unit, were used to estimate the likelihood of sinkhole formation. Wind sculpting appears to be common and sometimes is a primary mechanism but can be difficult to judge from remotely sensed imagery. For these and others, the classification should be considered provisional. Many District lakes appear to have been formed by several processes, for instance, sinkholes may occur within lakes which lie between sand dunes. Here these would be classified as dune / karst. Mixtures of dunes, deflation and karst are common. Saltmarsh ponds vary in origin and were not further classified. In the northern coastal area they are generally small, circular in outline and appear to have been formed by the collapse and breakdown of a peat substrate, Hutchinson type 70. Further south along the coast additional ponds have been formed by the blockage of tidal creeks, a fluvial process, perhaps of Hutchinson’s Type 52, lateral lakes, in which sediments deposited by a main stream back up the waters of a tributary. In the area of the Cape Canaveral, many salt marsh ponds clearly occupy dune swales flooded by rising ocean levels. A complete listing of lake types and combinations is in Table 3. TypeSub-TypeSecondary TypeTectonic BasinsMarine BasinTectonic BasinsMarine BasinCompound dolineTectonic BasinsMarine BasinkarstTectonic BasinsMarine BasinPhytogenic damTectonic BasinsMarine BasinAbandoned channelTectonic BasinsMarine BasinKarstSolution LakesCompound dolineSolution LakesCompound dolineFluvialSolution LakesCompound dolinePhytogenicSolution LakesDolineSolution LakesDolineDeflationSolution LakesDolineDredgedSolution LakesDolineExcavatedSolution LakesDolineExcavationSolution LakesDolineFluvialSolution LakesKarstKarst / ExcavationSolution LakesKarstKarst / FluvialSolution LakesKarstDeflationSolution LakesKarstDeflation / excavationSolution LakesKarstExcavationSolution LakesKarstFluvialSolution LakesPoljeSolution LakesSpring poolSolution LakesSpring poolFluvialFluvialAbandoned channelFluvialFluvialFluvial Fluvial PhytogenicFluvial LeveeFluvial Oxbow lakeFluvial StrathFluvial StrathPhytogenicAeolianDeflationAeolianDeflationDuneAeolianDeflationExcavationAeolianDeflationKarstAeolianDuneAeolianDune DeflationAeolianDuneExcavationAeolianDuneAeolianDuneKarstShoreline lakesMaritime coastalKarst / ExcavationOrganic accumulationPhytogenic damSalt Marsh PondsMan madeExcavationMan madeDam
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NPDES Stormwater MS4 Permits - A Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System or MS4 is defined in Rule 62-624.200(8), F.A.C., as follows: Municipal separate storm sewer or MS4 means a conveyance or system of conveyances like roads with stormwater systems, municipal streets, catch basins, curbs, gutters, ditches, constructed channels, or storm drains: Owned or operated by a State, city, town, county, special district, association, or other public body (created by or pursuant to State Law) having jurisdiction over management and discharge of stormwater, or an Indian tribe or an authorized Indian tribal organization, that discharges to waters of the state; Designed or used for collecting or conveying stormwater; Which is not a combined sewer; and Which is not part of a Publicly Owned Treatment Works (POTW). POTW means any device or system used in the treatment of municipal sewage or industrial wastes of a liquid nature which is owned by a "State" or "municipality." This definition includes sewers, pipes, or other conveyances only if they convey wastewater to a POTW providing treatment.
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This layer depicts the Future Land Use designation for all properties within unincorporated Orange County and those that have been annexed by a city but have not yet adopted a new Future Land Use designation. This layer is updated as amendments to the Comprehensive Policy Plan are processed in accordance with Chapter 163, Florida Statutes. It includes the current Future Land Use designation, the date of the Board of County Commissioners adoption hearing, the effective date for the amendment and amendment numbers.