Florida District Courts of Appeal: Five Districts Explained
Florida's five District Courts of Appeal form the intermediate appellate tier between the trial courts and the Florida Supreme Court, handling the overwhelming majority of appeals filed across the state. Each district covers a defined geographic region, operates under a separate administrative structure, and issues binding precedent within its own territory. Understanding how these districts are organized, what authority they hold, and where their jurisdictional boundaries lie is essential for practitioners, litigants, and researchers navigating the Florida court system structure.
Definition and scope
The District Courts of Appeal were established by the Florida Legislature under Article V, Section 4 of the Florida Constitution (Florida Constitution, Art. V, §4). The legislature set the number of districts at five, each designated by number: the First through Fifth District Courts of Appeal. These courts exercise mandatory appellate jurisdiction over final orders issued by Florida circuit courts, and in certain circumstances over non-final orders authorized for interlocutory appeal under Florida Rule of Appellate Procedure 9.130. For the broader regulatory framework governing how these courts fit within state and federal authority, see Regulatory Context for the Florida Legal System.
Scope and coverage: This page addresses only Florida's state-level District Courts of Appeal. It does not cover federal courts in Florida, federal circuit appellate jurisdiction, or the United States Courts of Appeals. Cases arising under federal law and originating in the U.S. District Courts for the Northern, Middle, or Southern Districts of Florida fall outside this scope and are reviewed by the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals, not by any Florida district court.
How it works
Each District Court of Appeal operates as a panel court. Decisions are typically rendered by a 3-judge panel drawn from the full complement of judges assigned to that district, though en banc review by the full court is available in limited circumstances.
The five districts and their geographic coverage:
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First District Court of Appeal (1st DCA) — Headquartered in Tallahassee; covers the Florida Panhandle and a large swath of North Florida, including Alachua, Bay, Duval, Escambia, Leon, and surrounding counties. The 1st DCA also has exclusive jurisdiction over workers' compensation appeals and administrative agency orders issued by state agencies seated in Tallahassee, making it the busiest administrative law appellate venue in the state.
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Second District Court of Appeal (2nd DCA) — Headquartered in Lakeland; covers Central-West Florida, including Hillsborough, Pinellas, Sarasota, Manatee, and Polk counties. The 2nd DCA handles appeals from one of Florida's most populous circuit clusters.
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Third District Court of Appeal (3rd DCA) — Headquartered in Miami; covers Miami-Dade and Monroe counties. Its geographic footprint is the smallest of the five districts by county count, but Miami-Dade is Florida's most populous county, generating a correspondingly high volume of civil, criminal, and family law appeals.
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Fourth District Court of Appeal (4th DCA) — Headquartered in West Palm Beach; covers Palm Beach, Broward, and Martin counties, encompassing the densely populated southeast coast corridor north of Miami-Dade.
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Fifth District Court of Appeal (5th DCA) — Headquartered in Daytona Beach; covers a band of Central Florida counties including Orange, Osceola, Brevard, Volusia, and Seminole. Effective January 1, 2023, the Florida Legislature created the Sixth District Court of Appeal under Chapter 2022-163, Laws of Florida, splitting several counties previously under the 5th DCA into the new 6th DCA headquartered in Lakeland and absorbing the prior 2nd DCA jurisdiction. The transition reorganized county assignments; practitioners should verify current district alignment through the Florida Courts website.
Judges are appointed by the Governor from nominees submitted by a Judicial Nominating Commission and subsequently face merit-retention elections under Florida Constitution, Art. V, §10. The number of authorized judgeships per district varies; the Florida Legislature sets judicial complement through statute.
Common scenarios
The District Courts of Appeal encounter four recurring categories of disputes:
- Criminal appeals — Direct appeals from circuit court convictions after trial or from sentences imposed pursuant to Florida's criminal sentencing guidelines. The district court reviews whether trial court error was preserved and whether any error was harmless or reversible.
- Civil final judgments — Appeals from final judgments in tort, contract, and property disputes. The Florida civil appeals process governs timing, record preparation, and briefing requirements under Florida Rule of Appellate Procedure 9.110.
- Family law orders — Final judgments of dissolution, custody determinations, and support orders originating in circuit court family divisions are reviewed by the district court with jurisdiction over the county where the circuit sits. See Florida family law overview for additional context.
- Administrative agency orders — Particularly before the 1st DCA, orders from agencies such as the Florida Department of Children and Families, the Agency for Health Care Administration, and the Florida Public Service Commission are subject to district court review under Section 120.68, Florida Statutes (Florida Statutes §120.68).
Decision boundaries
District court decisions are binding precedent within that district's geographic boundaries. A decision by the 3rd DCA does not bind the 4th DCA, and conflicting interpretations between districts on the same question of law create a "district split" — a condition that triggers the Florida Supreme Court's discretionary jurisdiction under Florida Constitution, Art. V, §3(b)(1).
District court vs. Florida Supreme Court jurisdiction — key distinctions:
| Feature | District Court of Appeal | Florida Supreme Court |
|---|---|---|
| Jurisdiction type | Mandatory (most final orders) | Largely discretionary |
| Primary function | Error correction | Law development, district conflict resolution |
| Geographic binding effect | Within the district | Statewide |
| Review of agency orders | Yes (1st DCA primarily) | Limited |
| Death penalty appeals | No (direct to FSC) | Yes, mandatory |
District courts lack authority to declare a statute unconstitutional on its face — that determination must be certified to or decided by the Florida Supreme Court. However, a district court can hold a statute unconstitutional as applied in a specific factual context and certify the question of facial constitutionality upward.
Decisions from district courts may also reach the Florida Supreme Court through certified conflict, certified questions of great public importance, or express declarations that a statute is valid against a constitutional challenge, all governed by Florida Rule of Appellate Procedure 9.030.
For the broader landscape of how state law interacts with the full Florida legal system index, including the relationship between statutory and constitutional authority, the structural overview available through the site provides additional context on how district courts fit within Florida's multi-tiered judicial hierarchy. Practitioners navigating Florida legal precedent and case law must account for which district's body of decisions applies to the county where a matter is litigated.
References
- Florida Constitution, Article V (Judiciary)
- Florida Courts — District Courts of Appeal
- Florida Rules of Appellate Procedure (Florida Supreme Court)
- Florida Statutes §120.68 — Judicial Review of Agency Action
- Chapter 2022-163, Laws of Florida (Sixth DCA Creation)
- Florida Senate — Laws and Statutes