16 Best Places to Live In Florida

In this piece, we will take a look at the 16 best places to live in Florida. For more places, head on over to 5 Best Places to Live In Florida.

Who doesn't love Florida, the Sunshine State? When the rest of America is battling snowstorms and extreme winters, Floridians still get a chance to see the Sun regularly, and when snow does fall, it isn't heavy. This is due to the fact that Florida, along with Texas, forms the Southmost tip of the continental United States, with its highest elevation, Briton Hill, standing at a mere 395 feet tall. However, despite the fact that Florida doesn't have any mountains of its own, the region has still made its mark on the mountainous regions of the U.S. This is because the Appalachian Mountains, located far above Florida and in the Northeastern segment of the U.S., draw their name from some of the earliest known inhabitants of Florida, the Apalachee tribes. The mountains were called Apalachee by the Spanish who passed an Apalachee village on their way inside the U.S. in the sixteenth century, and the name has stuck since then.

Florida is also one of the oldest territories in the U.S., having been present in its current form since 1822. It was however a relatively late joiner to the Union itself and did not sign the original Articles of Confederation which were the first form of government of the newly formed United States of America in 1776. Florida was also not part of the group of 13 states that had declared independence and fought against the British to win American freedom. After the Revolution, the state, which initially belonged to the Spanish, was gradually taken over by the new U.S. government, until 1822 when the Spaniards finally ceded the entire area. Florida was admitted into the Union in 1845 - which was disappointing for former slaves who had often used the area as a refuge.

Since then, Florida has become an economic powerhouse. It is the fourth biggest state in the U.S. when it comes to economic output, with the size of the Florida gross domestic product (GDP) estimated to sit at a cool $1.4 trillion as of the third quarter of last year - making the Sunshine State lag behind only the biggest American powerhouses such as New York, Texas, and of course, California. In fact, a $1.4 trillion GDP makes Florida almost equal to Mexico in terms of economic output, with the latter's GDP estimate sitting at $1.42 trillion. In fact, the state's GDP is now bigger than its former colonizer, the Kingdom of Spain, which has a $1.38 trillion GDP. And since we're comparing economies, Florida also has a larger economy than the world's largest oil producer, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.