Pasco County, Florida


Pasco County is a county located on the west central coast in the U.S. state of Florida. As of 2025, the population of the county was estimated to be 682,179, making it the tenth-most populous county in the state. Its county seat is Dade City, and its largest city is Zephyrhills. The county is named after United States senator Samuel Pasco.
Pasco County is included in the Tampa Bay Area and historically has been a bedroom community for the Tampa and St. Petersburg cities. It is 30 miles away from the city of Tampa. The county includes numerous parks and trails located along rivers, the Gulf of Mexico, lakes, and highway/railroad right-of-ways. Several nudist resorts are located in Pasco County. The county has become known as the "naturist capital of the United States", starting in 1941.
West Pasco includes retirement areas, commercial fishing, and suburbs of Tampa. The Suncoast Parkway as well as U.S. 19, U.S. 41, U.S. 98, U.S. 301, and Interstate 75 all pass through Pasco County. The county is directly west of Polk and Sumter counties, north of Hillsborough and Pinellas counties, and south of Hernando County.
Recent companies are creating major centers in the county, such as Moffit Cancer Center's Speros campus. They are expected to bring many jobs, changing the area.

History

Early history

Native settlement

The earliest known residents of Pasco County were the Timucuans Native American tribe who lived on the land in the early 1200s. Settlers in Florida brought diseases to the area though, wiping out the tribe. Other Native American tribes like the Calusa also lived along the Gulf of Mexico in Pasco County. The tribe had a deep-rooted connection between the land and its inhabitants.

Exploration

In the 1500s, Spanish explorers came into the Florida region, encountering with the Native American tribes. This started major cultural exchanges for the groups. Pasco County, at that point became a point of interest to the Spanish explorers because of its strategic coastal location.

Seminole conflict

The Creek Native tribe from Georgia and Alabama migrated to Florida with one tribe becoming known as the Seminoles in the region. The tribe fought with the British against American settlers during the First Seminole War and had constant fighting with the Spanish until the buying of Florida to the United States in 1819. The United States military had major conflict with the Native Americans in the Second Seminole War that included the destruction of Fort Dade, of which Dade City is named after.

Civil war

When Civil War broke out in 1861, Florida joined the Confederate States of America. Though Pasco County was too far to be changed by the war in much of the conflicts, men from Pasco County supported both sides of the conflict. The closest engagement of Pasco County soldiers was in Bayport, Hernando County, Florida.

Founding

Pasco County was founded on June 2, 1887, from the southern third of Hernando County. The legislation was passed by former Governor Edward A. Perry to divide the former Hernando County into three counties. The legislation also created Citrus County from the northern third of Hernando County. The county was named after Samuel Pasco, who had just been elected to the United States Senate, though he never visited the county.
Pasco County's early towns were Anclote, Blanton, Dade City, Earnestville, Fort Dade, Macon, Lacoochee, St. Leo, and San Antonio.
Dade City was named the temporary county seat with the same legislation to make Pasco County. It stayed temporary until March 14, 1889, when W.B. Lynch got a petition with 320 signatures to hold an election for the county seat. The board accepted the petition with the election for April 11, 1889. On April 16, 1889, Dade city won with 432 votes of the 765.
Citrus was an important industry when the county was formed in 1887. Though, in December 1894 and then again in February 1895, temperatures fell throughout the state, in an event called The Great Freeze. Many citrus growers lost their crops from the freeze in Pasco County.

20th Century changes

As early as 1914, residents of the western part of the county proposed forming a separate county or merging with Pinellas County, as Dade City was not centrally located in the county. Several large sawmills operated in the county in the early part of the 20th century. The issue was finally resolved in 1979 with the construction of identical government centers in both Dade City and New Port Richey, now called West Pasco Government Center and East Pasco Government Center.

Early train system

The SAL Tarpon Springs branch line from Tarpon Junction 14 miles west of Tampa to Elfers and thence to New Port Richey lost its passenger service and became listed as freight only between 1932 and 1938. The freight branch was truncated to Elfers in 1943. The tracks from Elfers and Chemical to Tarpon Springs had its last freight train on December 24, 1986, leaving the western half of the county without freight rail service.
The Atlantic Coast Line Railroad until 1957 ran the Southland through Trilby and Tarpon Springs, en route to St. Petersburg. The train was unusual for providing passenger service direct from Chicago, Cincinnati and Atlanta on a direct route through the western part of the Florida peninsula, bypassing Jacksonville. The Seaboard Coast Line until 1971 ran a local train through those towns from Jacksonville and Gainesville, bound for St. Petersburg. Prior to the 1967 merger for the SCL that service had been the western branch of the ACL's Champion from New York City. Until 1968 the SCL ran its Sunland from Washington, DC and Portsmouth, VA to Tampa.

Land boom

During the Florida land boom of the 1920s, New Port Richey became the winter home of silent screen star Thomas Meighan and golfer Gene Sarazen; Meighan attempted to bring other Hollywood figures to the city. The county has experienced significant population growth since the 1970s, growing by over 600%. The growth began along the Gulf coast but is now occurring most rapidly in areas north of Tampa.

Recent history

Pasco County has historically been a bedroom community for Tampa and St. Petersburg. Though, recent companies are constructing major centers in the county, such as Moffit Cancer Center's Speros campus, which is expected to bring over 11,000 jobs.

Geography

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Pasco County has a total area of, of which is land and is water. It is located on the Florida Nature Coast and the Tampa Bay Area, being 30 miles north from the city of Tampa, and 50 miles west from Orlando.

Topography and elevation

There are six named hills in Pasco County, with the highest hill being Nursery Hill, which rises, though the highest point in Pasco County is Clay Hill, which is 301 feet. Greer Hill, the third largest summit, has 66 homes and 120,000 square feet of office space on and around it.
Pasco County has an average elevation of. The western part of Pasco County is relatively flat, and has tidal flats on the coast. The lowest point of the county is. In the eastern areas there are hills, where elevations can reach between 100 and 300 feet above sea level. The rolling terrain appears especially around communities such as San Antonio and St. Leo.

Bodies of water

Rivers

The Anclote and Pithlachascotee rivers both run through Pasco County. The two rivers have been flood-prone, and were watched during Hurricane Idalia in 2023. The Anclote river also flooded during Hurricane Milton in 2024, where it crested at 26.57 feet high.

Lakes

There are 70 lakes in Pasco County, with a total of about of lake. Hancock Lake is the largest lake in the county, covering. There are three state parks nearby to Hancock Lake. The smallest lake, Little Moss Lake, in Pasco County only covers.

Anclote Key

is a barrier island, most of which is in Pasco County. The island is about three miles long and over a mile from the mainland. North of Anclote Key the North Anclote Bar is a sand bar that has emerged above water and become vegetated since the 1990s. Anclote Key and the North Anclote Bar, as well as the South Anclote Bar and Three Rooker Island in Pinellas County, are part of the Anclote Key Preserve State Park. Anclote Key is the northernmost barrier island on the west coast of the Florida peninsula. The side of Anclote Key facing the mainland is composed of mangrove forest and tidal marsh. The island is only accessible by boat.

Climate

The county has a humid subtropical climate and average temperatures in Dade City range from 59.2 °F in January to 82.1 °F in July and August while in Port Richey they range from 59.0 °F in January to 82.2 °F in August.

Demographics

Race and ethnicity

Racial and ethnic composition

Race / Ethnicity Pop 1980Pop 1990Pop 2000Pop 2010Pop 2020% 1980% 1990% 2000% 2010% 2020Percent change
White alone 184,022264,308310,066372,239392,37595.03%94.02%89.94%80.10%69.83%-10.27%
Black or African American alone 3,9605,3036,83319,01031,6012.05%1.89%1.98%4.09%5.62%+1.53%
Native American or Alaska Native alone 3627401,0491,2361,3880.19%0.26%0.30%0.27%0.25%-0.02%
Asian alone 3871,4043,1949,60916,4080.20%0.50%0.93%2.07%2.92%+0.85%
Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander alone xx95223308xx0.03%0.05%0.05%0.00%
Other race alone 206673196862,7710.11%0.02%0.09%0.15%0.49%+0.34%
Mixed race or Multiracial xx3,6067,15823,883xx1.05%1.54%4.25%+2.71%
Hispanic or Latino 4,7069,30919,60354,53693,1572.43%3.31%5.69%11.74%16.58%+4.84%
Total193,643281,131344,765464,697561,891 100.00%100.00%100.00%100.00%100.00%-