Florida Contract Law: Formation, Breach, and Enforcement

Florida contract law governs the creation, interpretation, and enforcement of binding agreements across residential, commercial, and public-sector transactions throughout the state. The Florida Statutes, Florida Rules of Civil Procedure, and a substantial body of appellate case law collectively define how contracts form, what constitutes a breach, and which remedies are available. This page covers the structural elements of contract formation, the legal standards for breach, and the enforcement mechanisms available through Florida courts — with scope boundaries distinguishing state-law claims from federal or multistate frameworks.


Definition and scope

A contract under Florida law is a legally enforceable agreement requiring four foundational elements: offer, acceptance, consideration, and mutual assent (a "meeting of the minds"). Florida courts also impose a fifth practical requirement — sufficient definiteness of terms — meaning a contract that omits essential terms such as price, subject matter, or duration may fail for indefiniteness even if both parties signed. This standard is drawn from the Florida Supreme Court's consistent application of common-law contract principles, codified in part through Florida Statutes Title XXXIX (Contracts and Obligations).

The Statute of Frauds, codified at Florida Statutes § 725.01, requires that specific categories of contracts be in writing and signed to be enforceable. Those categories include contracts for the sale of real property, agreements not performable within one year, promises to answer for another's debt, and contracts for the sale of goods at or above $500 (the latter governed by the Uniform Commercial Code as adopted in Florida under Chapter 672 of the Florida Statutes).

Scope and coverage limitations: This page addresses Florida state contract law applicable to private parties and commercial entities operating within Florida. It does not cover federal procurement contracts, admiralty contracts governed by federal maritime law, or collective bargaining agreements governed by the National Labor Relations Act. Contracts involving real property should also be read alongside Florida property law. Multistate contracts with choice-of-law clauses selecting another jurisdiction's law fall outside the direct scope of this page. For the broader legal and regulatory environment in which Florida contract disputes arise, see the Regulatory Context for the Florida Legal System.


How it works

Florida contract law operates through a sequential framework across three phases: formation, performance, and enforcement.

Formation phase — 4 required elements:

  1. Offer — A definite proposal by one party (the offeror) communicated to another, covering at minimum the parties, subject matter, and material terms.
  2. Acceptance — An unqualified agreement to the offer's exact terms. A conditional or modified acceptance functions as a counteroffer under Florida common law.
  3. Consideration — Each party must provide something of legal value — payment, a promise, a service, or a forbearance. Nominal consideration (e.g., $1) may satisfy this requirement in some contexts, but Florida courts scrutinize illusory consideration that gives one party unfettered discretion.
  4. Mutual assent — Both parties must manifest genuine agreement. Contracts procured through fraud, duress, undue influence, or mutual mistake may be voidable under Florida Statutes and case law from the Third and Fourth District Courts of Appeal.

Performance phase: Once formed, each party carries an obligation to perform or tender performance by the deadline or under the conditions stated. Florida recognizes the doctrine of substantial performance in construction and service contracts — courts may award damages rather than void a contract where a party performed nearly all obligations but fell short on minor terms.

Enforcement phase: Breach of contract claims in Florida are subject to the Florida statute of limitations. Written contracts carry a 5-year limitations period under Florida Statutes § 95.11(2)(b); oral contracts carry a 4-year period under § 95.11(3)(k). Filing occurs in either Florida Circuit Court (for claims exceeding $30,000) or County Court (for claims between $8,001 and $30,000), consistent with Florida circuit court jurisdiction.


Common scenarios

Florida contract disputes arise across several well-defined transaction categories:


Decision boundaries

The most consequential classification in Florida contract disputes involves distinguishing void contracts from voidable contracts:

Type Definition Legal Effect
Void No legal effect from inception — e.g., contracts for illegal acts, contracts lacking consideration Neither party can enforce; courts will not award damages
Voidable Valid unless rescinded by an aggrieved party — e.g., contracts procured by fraud, entered under duress, or signed by a minor The aggrieved party may affirm or rescind; third-party rights may vest before rescission
Unenforceable Valid between parties but barred from court enforcement — e.g., oral contracts that violate the Statute of Frauds No judicial remedy, but performance already rendered may create restitution claims

A second critical boundary separates material breach from minor breach. A material breach excuses the non-breaching party from further performance and entitles that party to sue for total contract damages. A minor (partial) breach entitles the non-breaching party to damages but does not excuse continued performance. Florida courts applying this test examine factors including the extent of non-performance, the likelihood of cure, and whether monetary compensation is adequate — following Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 241, which Florida appellate courts have repeatedly cited.

Remedies available under Florida law include expectation damages (the benefit of the bargain), reliance damages, restitution/unjust enrichment, specific performance (available for real property and unique goods), and injunctive relief. Punitive damages are generally not available for pure breach of contract claims absent a separate tort, consistent with the Florida Supreme Court's framework in cases interpreting Florida Statutes § 768.72.

For parties seeking resolution outside litigation, Florida alternative dispute resolution describes arbitration and mediation frameworks that frequently apply to commercial contract disputes under Florida Statutes Chapter 682.

The Florida legal system overview provides foundational context for how contract claims interact with Florida's broader civil court structure.


References

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