How the Florida Sunshine Law works
Florida's Public Records Law (Chapter 119, Florida Statutes), known as the Sunshine Law, is one of the broadest and most actively litigated open records statutes in the country. Florida's constitution independently guarantees a right of access to public records, and the statutory law reinforces this with a strong presumption of openness. Any person may request records, and an oral request is legally sufficient, no writing is required, though it is advisable.
Florida does not impose a specific number of days for response but requires a "reasonable time," which courts have interpreted contextually. Fees may be charged only for actual duplication costs and, for extensive requests, staff time. Florida's enforcement mechanism is notably powerful: a requester who prevails in court is entitled to mandatory attorney's fees. The state has hundreds of statutory exemptions, making it simultaneously one of the most open and most complex public records systems in the country.
Prefer to file yourself? Visit the official Florida portal ↗
All Florida agencies (36)
Every Florida agency we file public records requests with. Click an agency to start a request.
General Government (36)
- Brevard County
- Broward County
- Charlotte County
- Citrus County
- City of Daytona Beach
- City of Deltona
- City of Ft. Lauderdale
- City of Ft. Myers
- City of Ft. Pierce
- City of Ft. Walton
- City of Jacksonville
- City of Lakeland
- City of Miami
- City of Naples
- City of Ocala
- City of Palm Bay
- City of Pensacola
- City of Punta Gorda
- City of St. Petersburg
- City of Tallahassee
- City of Tampa
- Collier County
- Duval County
- Escambia County
- Hillsborough County
- Lee County
- Leon County
- Marion County
- Miami-Dade County
- Okaloosa County
- Pasco County
- Pinellas County
- Polk County
- St. Johns County
- St. Lucie County
- Volusia County
