Florida Regions — Home Services by Region
Nine distinct Florida regions, 67 cities, 2,611 vetted local pros.
Florida isn't one market. The Panhandle shares more culture and climate with coastal Alabama than it does with Miami. The Keys are closer to the Caribbean than to Jacksonville. Tampa and Orlando feel like different states. If you're relocating, the right way to plan is region-first: pick the region whose climate, cost profile, and culture fit, then narrow to cities inside it.
Each region page below rolls up all the cities we cover in that region, the top-rated home-service pros across the region, the most-used service categories, and a region-specific FAQ about the things that actually differ here — insurance cost, hurricane exposure, permit quirks, and more.
tropical Gulf Coast — the warmest winters on the peninsula, dry season November through April, intense afternoon storms June through October
tropical maritime — warm winters in the high 70s, summer highs around 90 with steady sea breezes, intense rainy season June through October
humid subtropical Gulf Coast — sea breezes, almost-daily summer storms, mild winters in the high 60s to low 70s daytime
humid subtropical inland — hottest summers in the state, daily afternoon thunderstorms, mild winters with occasional 30°F nights
humid subtropical with the mildest summers in Florida — Atlantic breezes keep highs near 90, winter nights frequently in the 40s
humid subtropical with cooler winters than peninsula Florida — winter lows can dip into the 30s, summer storms run June through September
warm subtropical Atlantic — mild winters, tropical summers, the peninsula's sweet spot for low humidity in shoulder seasons
subtropical Atlantic — drier than south Florida, summer storms cluster in afternoon, winter nights can hit the low 40s
tropical maritime — warm year-round, no real winter, intense hurricane and king-tide exposure
Explore Florida Keys →How we define Florida's regions
Florida has no officially chartered sub-regions the way some states do — "North Florida" and "South Florida" mean different things to different people. Our regions are drawn from the state's climate zones, Division of Emergency Management evacuation planning, and the way Floridians actually talk about where they live. If you're used to a different split (say, "Central Florida" meaning only the Orlando metro vs. including Ocala), use the city pages directly — the search bar and the all-cities hub work regardless of region assignment.