High-angle view of Tampa's urban districts and the Selmon Expressway, where proposed redistricting maps may shift voter precincts by April 2026.
An aerial view of the Selmon Expressway in Tampa, Florida on June 6, 2024. Credit: Gianfranco Vivi / Shutterstock

Hillsborough County is redrawing election maps, with changes set to go in effect by April. But first, officials want feedback on four redistricting proposals meant to address the addition of 20,000 residents in the past five years. 

Redistricting is the routine process of redrawing boundaries of a district and moving precincts to reflect population changes. A district is a defined area that determines which voters elect which representatives. A precinct is a subdivision within a district, often assigned a unique number and polling place to gather and manage voters. 

“Most people, even people that moved here and find the area attractive, do not realize how fast-growing we are,” Yassert Gonzalez—manager of economics, demographics and research at Plan Hillsborough—told Creative Loafing Tampa Bay. “Twenty-thousand people in five years is a ton of people.”

Redistricting happens every four years and is overseen by the Hillsborough County Planning Commission—and there’s a lot to discuss.

District 5, for instance, used to be a majority Black district. At one point, Gonzalez told CL, African-Americans made up 80% of that district’s registered voters. Today, they only represent 47%.

Data visualization of the 2026 Hillsborough County redistricting plan showing estimated median household income and racial/ethnic composition by precinct. The bar charts compare economic status and diversity metrics for Tampa-area precincts including 141, 151, 169, 207, 249, 250, 320, 342, and 345.
Tampa Monitor analysis of precinct demographic data related to Hillsborough County’s 2026 redistricting proposals. Credit: Tampa Monitor

Tampa community leaders like NAACP Hillsborough Branch President Yvette Lewis are worried about voting power and representation. Last month she told Bay News 9, “Growth is good, but it can be harmful to the people who already live there.”

Gonzalez told CL that the changes they propose are always very limited, and that while planners are sensitive to the history of a district, they make their recommendations based mainly on population.

Analysis by the Tampa Monitor updated on Feb. 16 shows that there are 14,313 registered voters in the nine precincts that could be affected by proposed changes. The most that would be affected by one of the alternatives is 6,048 (alternative one, detailed below along with three other options).

Alternative one (affects 6,073 voters)

  • Precinct 151 from District 6 to District 4
  • Precinct 169 from District 5 to District 6 
  • Precinct 342 from District 7 to District 5 

Alternative two (affects 2,061 voters)

  • Precinct 345 from District 7 to District 5

Alternative three (affects 3,245 voters)

  • Precinct 249 from District 7 to District 6
  • Precinct 250 from District 7 to District 6
  • Precinct 320 from District 6 to District 5

Alternative 4 (affects 5,020 voters)

  • Precinct 141 from District 6 to District 4
  • Precinct 207 from District 5 to District 6
  • Precinct 345 from District 7 to District 5
A detailed data table from the Tampa Monitor showing 2026 Hillsborough County redistricting precinct breakdowns. Includes statistics for voter totals, Democratic and Republican party lean, 2023 turnout percentages, estimated household income, and racial demographics for Districts 5, 6, and 7.
Tampa Monitor analysis of precinct data related to Hillsborough County’s 2026 redistricting proposals. Credit: Tampa Monitor

According to census data from 2022, six of the nine districts have a majority White registered voters. Just one, Precinct 207, is majority Black. Two precincts, 342 and 345, are majority Hispanic. 

By shifting precincts like the majority-Black Precinct 207 from District 5 to District 6, the redistricting alternatives raise concerns about the region’s future of electoral representation and politics.

Gonzalez emphasized that with 95% of the city’s population untouched, redistricting likely won’t make things worse when implemented.

He added that with Tampa’s growth, keeping the districts equal is essential—and routine. 

“That’s something that’s incumbent upon us, being blessed by all this growth: to monitor things, make sure that things don’t get out of whack,” Gonzalez said. “It’s very easy to lose that ‘one person, one vote’ principle when you have one district that’s really grabbing everything.”

Gonzalez is happy that 80 people have taken the commission’s redistricting alternative survey so far; he looks forward to further engagement from Tampa residents as the time to redistrict closes in. Residents can also access the survey in Spanish via Survey Monkey.

The commission’s next virtual community meeting date to discuss alternatives is Monday, Feb. 23 from noon-2 p.m. An in-person public hearing on the topic is set for Monday, March 9 at 7:30 p.m. at the Planning Commission Board Room, located inside the Frederick B. Karl County Center at 601 E Kennedy Blvd. in downtown Tampa.

Map of Tampa, Florida City Council Districts showing current boundaries as of September 2025. The "Status Quo" map displays four districts: District 4 (magenta), District 5 (green), District 6 (blue), and District 7 (beige). A population table indicates a total population of 415,373 with an 8.36% range as a percentage of the mean, exceeding the 5% threshold and triggering the need for redistricting alternatives in Hillsborough County.
A map showing Tampa’s current district lines, as of February 2026. Credit: Plan Hillsborough

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Jasmin Parrado is a spring 2026 intern and News Editor at the Crow's Nest with an interest in local and state politics as well as arts and life. When she isn’t digging into government topics, she indulges...