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Florida Renting Rights Guide

Security deposit caps, eviction notice periods, rent control, and tenant protections in Florida — with a lease review checklist and dispute walkthrough.

Florida Tenant Rights at a Glance

Security Deposit Cap

No limit

Maximum landlord may collect

Rent Control

No

Nonpayment Notice

3 days

Before eviction filing

Lease Violation Notice

7 days

Cure or quit

Entry Notice

24 hours

Required for non-emergency entry

Late Fee Cap

The greater of $20 or 20% of the rental amount

Statutory limit on late fees

Official tenant rights (Florida): https://www.fdacs.gov/Consumer-Resources/Landlord-Tenant-Law-in-Florida
Legal aid (Florida): https://www.floridalawhelp.org/

How to Handle a Tenant Dispute in Florida

  1. 1

    Document the issue

    Photograph the problem (water damage, mold, broken appliances, lock damage). Save all written communication with the landlord. Date every record. Documentation is the foundation of any tenant rights claim.

    • Date-stamped photos of the issue
    • Written notice you've already sent
    • Lease agreement and rent receipts
    • Witness statements (neighbors, household members)
  2. 2

    Send written notice to your landlord

    Most tenant remedies require formal written notice before you can act. Send by certified mail with return receipt, or use a method specified in your lease. State the issue, request a specific fix, and give a reasonable deadline.

  3. 3

    Know your Florida rights

    Florida recognizes the implied warranty of habitability — your landlord must keep the unit livable (running water, heat, working locks, no major pest infestations). If they don't, you may have grounds for rent withholding, repair-and-deduct, or lease termination.

  4. 4

    Pursue the right remedy

    Florida allows "repair and deduct" — if the landlord fails to fix a habitability defect after written notice, you may pay for the repair yourself and deduct the cost from your next rent payment (subject to statutory caps). Florida statutorily prohibits landlord retaliation (raising rent, refusing to renew, or evicting) against tenants who exercise legal rights such as filing complaints or joining tenant unions.

  5. 5

    Get legal help if escalation is needed

    If self-resolution fails, contact a Florida legal aid organization for a free consultation. Most states have a statewide tenant hotline plus county-level legal services that handle eviction defense, security deposit recovery, and habitability lawsuits at no cost to low-income tenants.

    Florida legal aid resources

Lease Review Checklist

Lease Terms (Read Before Signing)

Bring 1 item from this list

Security Deposit Details

Bring 1 item from this list

Repair & Maintenance Responsibilities

Bring 1 item from this list

Landlord Entry & Privacy

Bring 1 item from this list

Termination & Eviction

Bring 1 item from this list

Compare with Nearby States

StateDeposit CapNonpayment NoticeRent ControlNo-Cause Eviction
FloridaNo limit3dNo
Alabama1 month's rent7dNo
GeorgiaTwo months' rent, as of July 1, 20243dNo
How much security deposit can a landlord charge?

Most US states cap security deposits at one or two months' rent, though limits vary widely: California caps at two months' rent (one month for furnished units, effective July 2024), New York at one month, while Texas, Florida, and several other states have no statutory cap and rely on what the lease and market will bear. The state pages on this site show each jurisdiction's deposit cap.

What is rent control and which states have it?

Rent control limits how much a landlord can raise rent over time, typically as an annual percentage cap (e.g., 5% + CPI). As of 2026, only a handful of US states allow rent control: California (AB 1482, statewide cap), Oregon (SB 608, statewide cap), New York (limited to specific buildings), New Jersey, Maryland, and Washington DC. Most states actively preempt municipal rent control, meaning cities cannot adopt local rent caps even if residents want them.

Can my landlord evict me without giving a reason?

On a month-to-month tenancy, many states allow landlords to terminate without cause by giving statutory notice (usually 30 or 60 days). 'Just-cause' eviction states (California, Oregon, New Jersey, parts of New York, Washington, and a few others) require the landlord to state a specific legal reason — nonpayment, lease violation, owner move-in, withdrawal from the rental market, etc. On a fixed-term lease, the landlord generally must wait until lease end unless there's a material breach.

What is the implied warranty of habitability?

Nearly every state recognizes an implied warranty that the rental unit will be livable — meaning weather-tight, with working plumbing, heat, hot water, electricity, and locks; free of major pest infestations; and structurally sound. If the landlord fails to maintain habitability after written notice, tenants in many states can withhold rent (in escrow), repair-and-deduct, or terminate the lease without penalty. Specific remedies vary by state.

How much notice does a landlord need to give for nonpayment of rent before eviction?

Most states require a written notice ranging from 3 days (Arizona, Texas, Washington) to 14 days (Massachusetts, Vermont) before the landlord can file an eviction case for unpaid rent. The notice is a 'pay or quit' demand — pay the full rent due, or vacate. Some states allow tenants to cure (pay) up until the eviction hearing. Check your state page for the specific notice period.

More Florida local info:

Data verified: 2026-05-13 (data year 2026). Landlord-tenant law changes — always confirm with the official Florida tenant rights resource or a licensed attorney before relying on these rules in a legal dispute. Sources: ipm_rights.

By Mubboo Editorial Team


Data sources

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