Florida Commercial Security Deposit Laws: Rules and Best Practices

Guide to Florida commercial security deposit laws including the absence of statutory rules, lease-driven terms, and negotiation best practices.

3 min read
Verified Mar 2026
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Legal Disclaimer

This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.

Unlike Florida's residential security deposit laws — which impose strict holding, notice, and return requirements under § 83.49 — commercial security deposits are governed entirely by the lease agreement. There are no statutory limits, no mandated accounts, no return timelines, and no notice requirements.

Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed attorney in Florida for guidance specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.

No Statutory Requirements

Florida law provides no specific statute governing commercial security deposits. This means:

  • No cap on the deposit amount.
  • No requirement to hold in a separate or interest-bearing account.
  • No statutory return deadline after lease termination.
  • No requirement to provide an itemized statement of deductions.
  • No forfeiture penalty for late return (unlike the residential statute).

Everything is negotiated and documented in the lease.

Common Practices

In practice, Florida commercial landlords typically require:

  • One to three months' rent as a security deposit for new tenants.
  • Up to six months' rent for higher-risk tenants (startups, businesses with limited credit history).
  • Letters of credit (LOCs) or corporate guarantees as alternatives for larger tenancies.

Permitted Deductions

Since there are no statutory restrictions, landlords can deduct from the deposit for any reason specified in the lease, typically including:

  1. Unpaid rent and NNN charges — including CAM reconciliation balances.
  2. Damage beyond normal wear — restoration to the condition required by the lease.
  3. Holdover rent — if the tenant remains past the lease expiration.
  4. Cleanup and removal costs — if the tenant leaves fixtures, signage, or debris.
  5. Outstanding obligations — unpaid insurance, taxes, or maintenance costs in NNN leases.

Best Practices

  1. Define every term in the lease — amount, permitted deductions, return timeline, and documentation requirements.
  2. Conduct move-in and move-out inspections — photographic and written documentation protects both parties.
  3. Set a specific return deadline — even though not required, a 30–60 day return window avoids disputes.
  4. Address CAM reconciliation timing — if the final reconciliation extends past the return date, retain a reserve.
  5. Consider graduated deposits — reduce the deposit over time as the tenant establishes a solid payment history.

Alternatives to Cash Deposits

AlternativeDescription
Letter of Credit (LOC)Bank guarantees payment; landlord draws if tenant defaults
Corporate GuarantyParent company guarantees the tenant's obligations
Surety BondThird-party insurer guarantees performance
Personal GuarantyIndividual guarantor (often the business owner)

How Landager Helps

Landager tracks commercial deposit balances, LOC expiration dates, and custom return deadlines across your portfolio — providing proactive alerts and audit-ready documentation.

Back to Florida Commercial Lease Laws Overview.

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