Florida has no specific mold statute for rentals, but landlords must keep units habitable under Florida Statutes §83.51. A tenant can send written notice giving the landlord 7 days to fix a serious problem before withholding rent or terminating. Document everything in writing and with photos, and contact your county health department if it affects health.
If you rent in Florida and you have mold, the honest starting point is this: the law here is thinner than you might hope, but it is not nothing. There is no Florida statute written specifically about mold in rentals — no state mold limit, no dedicated landlord mold duty. What you have instead is the general requirement that a rental be kept habitable, plus a notice procedure that, used correctly, gives you real leverage. This guide is about using that path well, and being clear-eyed about where it ends.
What the law actually says (and doesn't)
Florida's residential landlord-tenant law lives in Chapter 83, Part II. The key provision is §83.51, which requires a landlord to comply with building, housing, and health codes and to maintain the structure in a condition fit to live in. Mold is not named, but a unit with a serious, ongoing moisture-and-mold problem can fall short of that habitability standard — especially when it stems from a leak or structural defect the landlord is responsible for.
What the law does not give you:
- A specific mold concentration limit a landlord must meet.
- A state agency that will come "test for mold" on request.
- An automatic right to break your lease or stop paying the moment you see mold.
So the realistic frame is: you have a habitability argument, and a procedure to enforce it. The strength of your position comes almost entirely from documentation and following the steps in order.
The 7-day notice route
Florida's enforcement mechanism for a tenant is in §83.56. When the landlord fails to maintain the unit as §83.51 requires, you generally:
- Give written notice. Put it in writing — specify the problem (the mold, where it is, and the moisture source if you know it) and state that the landlord has 7 days to fix it.
- Deliver it properly. Send it in a way you can prove (certified mail, or hand-delivery with a witness or photo). Keep a copy.
- Wait the 7 days. If the landlord does not "materially comply" within that window, the statute opens two doors: you may be able to terminate the lease, or in some circumstances withhold rent — but the rules around withholding are strict and easy to get wrong.
This is the part where people lose cases: they stop paying rent before sending proper written notice, or they never send it at all. The written 7-day notice is what converts a frustrating situation into a legal position. Do not skip it.
Because withholding rent carries eviction risk if done improperly, this is the point where talking to a tenant-rights or legal-aid organization is worth it before you act.
Documentation: your real leverage
Whatever path you take, the case is won or lost on documentation. Build the record from day one:
- Photos and video of the mold, dated, from the first day you notice it onward — so you can show it growing or persisting.
- Every communication in writing. If you talk to the landlord by phone, follow up with a text or email summarizing what was said ("confirming our call today — you said maintenance would come Tuesday"). A paper trail beats memory every time.
- The moisture source. Note any leak, roof problem, or AC issue, because a landlord-caused leak strengthens the habitability argument; condensation from a tenant's own habits weakens it.
- Receipts for anything you spend (a dehumidifier, a hotel night if the unit becomes unlivable).
- Health records, if anyone in the household sees a doctor for symptoms that began with the mold.
If you want a calm reference on which symptoms are documented versus internet myth, our mold exposure symptoms guide lays it out, and is bathroom mold dangerous covers who genuinely needs to be more cautious.
When to involve the health department (and its limits)
If the mold is affecting someone's health and the landlord will not act, your county health department (under the Florida Department of Health) is the next contact. Be realistic about what they do: they can investigate sanitary-code complaints and may inspect, but Florida does not have a state mold-specific enforcement program, and outcomes vary by county. They are a pressure point and a documenter, not a guaranteed fix.
For a lease dispute itself — withholding, termination, or a deposit fight — a legal-aid clinic or tenant-rights attorney is the better resource. Many offer free or low-cost initial advice.
Where this path ends — honestly
Renters are in a genuinely harder spot than homeowners on mold, and pretending otherwise does not help you. The realistic outcomes are usually: the landlord fixes it after written notice, you negotiate an early lease exit, or you escalate through the health department and legal aid. What this path is not is a quick route to a paid professional remediation that someone else covers — that fight runs through your landlord and possibly their insurer, not through hiring a contractor yourself.
If you do reach the point of needing an independent inspection to document the problem — for example, to support a habitability claim — you can find license-checked Florida professionals on MoldVerified, and you choose who calls. We never sell your number. Just know that assessment and remediation are separate services in Florida (the same firm generally cannot do both on the same property within 12 months), so an independent assessor is exactly the right starting point for documentation.
Sources: Florida Statutes §83.51 and §83.56 (Chapter 83, Part II); Florida Department of Health county offices. This is general information, not legal advice — talk to a Florida tenant-rights attorney about your specific situation.
Common questions
›Does Florida have a law about mold in rentals?
No. Florida has no statute that specifically sets mold limits or landlord mold duties for rentals. Tenant protection comes from the general habitability requirement in Florida Statutes §83.51 and the lease itself, which is a narrower path than a dedicated mold law would provide.
›Can I withhold rent for mold in Florida?
Possibly, but only if you follow the procedure exactly. Under §83.56, you generally must give the landlord written notice and at least 7 days to fix a material habitability problem before withholding rent or terminating the lease. Skipping the written notice step can cost you the protection.
›Who do I call about mold in my Florida apartment?
Start with written notice to your landlord. If health is affected and the landlord does not act, contact your county health department (under the Florida Department of Health). For lease disputes, a tenant-rights or legal-aid organization can advise. There is no state agency that 'inspects mold' on demand.
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