Florida Public Records Law: Access, Requests, and Exemptions

Florida's public records law ranks among the most expansive open-government statutes in the United States, establishing a constitutional presumption that government records are accessible to any person. This page covers the statutory framework under Chapter 119, Florida Statutes, the mechanics of making and responding to requests, the classification of exemptions, and the contested boundaries that produce litigation and agency disputes. It applies to state agencies, county governments, municipalities, and other entities across Florida's government structure.


Definition and scope

Florida's public records law is codified at Chapter 119, Florida Statutes, and is reinforced by Article I, Section 24 of the Florida Constitution, which was adopted by voters in 1992. The constitutional provision elevates public records access above ordinary statutory status, requiring that any exemption from disclosure be established by a two-thirds vote of the Florida Legislature and contain a stated public necessity.

The law defines "public records" broadly as all documents, papers, letters, maps, books, tapes, photographs, films, sound recordings, data processing software, or other material — regardless of physical form or characteristics — made or received in connection with official business by any public agency (§119.011(12), Fla. Stat.). The definition encompasses electronic communications, text messages sent on personal devices when used for official business, and metadata attached to digital files.

Scope of coverage: This page addresses Florida state law exclusively. Federal records held by agencies such as the FBI, IRS, or U.S. Department of Defense are governed by the federal Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C. § 552) and fall outside the scope of Chapter 119. Records from private entities that do not perform a governmental function are likewise not covered. Municipal, county, and special district records — including those of Florida's county government structures — fall within Chapter 119's scope when those entities act in a governmental capacity.


Core mechanics or structure

Who may request records: Any person — regardless of citizenship, Florida residency, or stated purpose — may request public records under Chapter 119. Requesters are not required to identify themselves or explain the purpose of their request (§119.07(1)(c), Fla. Stat.).

Agency response obligations: Agencies must acknowledge and respond to requests promptly and in good faith. "Prompt" is not defined by a specific number of days in Chapter 119, which distinguishes Florida's law from states that impose 5- or 10-business-day deadlines. Courts have interpreted prompt to mean as soon as practicable under the circumstances of the request.

Fees: Agencies may charge copying fees. The statutory fee schedule sets 15 cents per one-sided copy and 20 cents per two-sided copy for documents up to letter or legal size (§119.07(4), Fla. Stat.). For extensive requests requiring more than 30 minutes of staff time to compile, agencies may charge a special service charge based on the actual cost of the personnel time. Agencies must provide a written fee estimate before charging a special service charge exceeding $25.

Format: Requesters may specify the format of production. Agencies must produce records in the requested format if the agency maintains records in that format (§119.01(2)(f), Fla. Stat.).

Enforcement: A person denied access may file a civil action in circuit court. Courts are authorized to award attorney's fees and costs to a prevailing plaintiff. Chapter 119 also provides criminal penalties: a public officer who violates the chapter commits a first-degree misdemeanor (§119.10(1)(b), Fla. Stat.).


Causal relationships or drivers

Florida's broad public records framework traces directly to the constitutional amendment adopted in 1992, which shifted the burden of justification to government rather than to the requester. This constitutional positioning drives several downstream structural outcomes.

Because exemptions require a two-thirds legislative supermajority, the number of statutory exemptions has grown incrementally rather than through broad executive discretion. The Florida Legislature has enacted over 1,000 individual exemptions identified across Chapter 119 and elsewhere in Florida Statutes, according to analysis published by the First Amendment Foundation, a Tallahassee-based nonprofit that tracks public records law in Florida.

Litigation frequency is high relative to other states. The absence of a defined response deadline creates disputes about what constitutes a "prompt" response, particularly for voluminous requests. The availability of mandatory attorney's fees for prevailing plaintiffs drives enforcement actions by media organizations, law firms, and individual requesters who would otherwise lack economic incentive to litigate.

The Florida Attorney General's Office publishes the Government-in-the-Sunshine Manual annually. This manual — produced since 1973 — functions as the primary practical reference for agency custodians and serves as persuasive authority in court proceedings, shaping how agencies interpret ambiguous provisions.


Classification boundaries

Exemptions from disclosure fall into two structural categories under Florida law:

Exempt records are specifically identified by statute as not subject to Chapter 119. These records may not be disclosed by an agency, regardless of a requester's identity.

Confidential records carry a higher classification. They are both exempt from public disclosure and prohibited from being released to anyone other than persons or entities specifically authorized by statute. The distinction matters operationally: an agency may exercise discretion to release an exempt record in some circumstances but has no discretion to release a confidential record.

Major categories of exempt or confidential records under Florida law include:

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement and other law enforcement agencies routinely invoke the active investigative exemption, which expires upon conclusion of an investigation unless another exemption applies.


Tradeoffs and tensions

The absence of a statutory response deadline creates a persistent structural tension. Requesters — particularly journalists covering the Florida executive branch — frequently allege that agencies delay responses strategically, while agencies contend that complex requests involving large volumes of records require time to review for exempt materials. Courts have applied inconsistent standards for what constitutes an unlawful delay.

A second major tension involves third-party privacy against the public's interest in government accountability. When records contain personal information about private individuals — not government employees — courts weigh whether the public interest in disclosure outweighs the privacy interest of the subject. Florida's constitution (Article I, Section 23) recognizes a right of privacy, creating potential conflict with Article I, Section 24's access guarantee.

The special service charge provision generates disputes about fee calculation. Agencies have broad discretion in determining what constitutes an "extensive" request. Requesters challenge fee estimates as pretextual barriers to access, while agencies assert that staff time costs are legitimate and unrecoverable otherwise.

Contractor records represent a contested boundary. Private contractors performing governmental functions on behalf of public agencies may be subject to Chapter 119 for records related to the governmental function, but the scope of this obligation is frequently disputed in circuit courts.


Common misconceptions

Misconception: Requests must be submitted in writing.
Chapter 119 does not require written requests. Oral requests are legally sufficient. Agencies may ask for written requests as a matter of administrative convenience but cannot deny access solely because a request was made verbally.

Misconception: Requesters must give a reason for their request.
No stated purpose is required under Florida law. Agencies are prohibited from conditioning access on explanation of the requester's interest.

Misconception: Email communications on personal devices are private.
Florida courts and the Attorney General's Government-in-the-Sunshine Manual have confirmed that text messages and emails exchanged on personal devices constitute public records when they relate to official business. The medium of communication does not determine the record's character.

Misconception: The "prompt" response standard means agencies have unlimited time.
While Chapter 119 does not specify a number of days, courts have found agencies in violation for delays measured in weeks or months on straightforward requests. Delay used as a de facto denial is actionable.

Misconception: All government-related records are public.
More than 1,000 statutory exemptions exist. Records may be exempt by virtue of content, subject identity, or the nature of the governmental function involved.


Checklist or steps (non-advisory)

The following sequence describes the procedural elements of a public records request under Chapter 119, Florida Statutes:

  1. Identify the custodial agency — the agency that created or received the record in connection with official business.
  2. Formulate the request — specify the records sought with sufficient particularity to allow the agency to locate them; broader requests may trigger special service charges.
  3. Submit the request — oral or written submission to the agency custodian; written requests create a paper trail for enforcement purposes.
  4. Receive acknowledgment — agencies are required to acknowledge receipt and provide a response within a reasonable time.
  5. Review the fee estimate — if a special service charge exceeding $25 is anticipated, the agency must provide a written estimate before proceeding.
  6. Inspect or receive copies — requesters may inspect records in person without charge for copies; copying fees apply if copies are requested.
  7. Review redactions — when agencies redact portions of a document, they must identify the specific statutory exemption authorizing each redaction.
  8. Challenge denial or delay — civil action in circuit court is available; prevailing requesters may recover attorney's fees under §119.12, Fla. Stat.

Reference table or matrix

Feature Chapter 119, Fla. Stat. Federal FOIA (5 U.S.C. § 552)
Who may request Any person Any person
Residency required No No
Purpose required No No
Written request required No No (recommended)
Response deadline "Prompt" (no set days) 20 business days (standard)
Fee for copies (paper) 15¢/one-sided page Up to 10¢/page
Special service charge Based on actual personnel cost Based on requester category
Constitutional basis Art. I, §24, Fla. Const. Statutory only
Exemption enactment threshold Two-thirds legislative vote required Simple majority
Enforcement mechanism Circuit court civil action U.S. District Court civil action
Attorney's fees for prevailing plaintiff Mandatory under §119.12 Discretionary
Criminal penalty for violation First-degree misdemeanor Not applicable (civil only)

References