Florida Commercial Eviction Process: Summary Procedure, Notices, and Remedies

Step-by-step guide to commercial eviction in Florida, including the expedited summary procedure, 3-day notice, and landlord remedies.

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.

Florida commercial evictions benefit from the state's summary procedure statute (§ 51.011), which allows landlords to recover possession more quickly than through standard litigation. Combined with the lease-driven framework of Chapter 83, Part I, commercial landlords have powerful tools to address tenant defaults — but must follow proper procedure.

Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed attorney in Florida before commencing a commercial eviction. Information last verified: March 2026.

Notice Requirements

ReasonNotice TypeTimeline
Nonpayment of rent3-Day Notice3 days
Lease violationPer lease termsVaries (commonly 10–30 days)
End of termPer lease termsPer lease
Month-to-month termination15-day notice15 days

3-Day Notice for Nonpayment

The most common commercial eviction notice. Under § 83.20, the landlord must provide written notice demanding payment or surrender of possession within 3 days. The notice should:

  • State the exact amount of rent due.
  • Specify the consequences of non-compliance (eviction lawsuit).
  • Be properly served on the tenant.

Lease-Based Default Notices

For non-monetary defaults, the lease typically defines:

  • What constitutes a default.
  • The cure period (commonly 10–30 days).
  • Whether the default is curable or non-curable.

The Summary Procedure (§ 51.011)

Florida's summary procedure accelerates the eviction timeline compared to standard civil litigation:

Step 1: Serve the Required Notice

Serve the appropriate notice (3-day for nonpayment, lease-specific for other defaults).

Step 2: File the Eviction Complaint

After the notice period expires without compliance, file a complaint for eviction with the county court. The complaint is filed under the summary procedure statute.

Step 3: Tenant's Shortened Response Time

Under summary procedure, the tenant has only 5 days to file a responsive pleading (compared to 20 days in standard litigation). This significantly accelerates the process.

Step 4: Trial or Default Judgment

  • If the tenant does not respond, the landlord seeks a default judgment.
  • If the tenant responds, the court schedules a prompt hearing — typically within weeks rather than months.

Step 5: Final Judgment and Writ of Possession

If the court rules for the landlord, a Final Judgment is entered and a Writ of Possession is issued. The sheriff posts a 24-hour notice and then physically removes the tenant.

Landlord Remedies Beyond Eviction

Florida commercial leases commonly include:

  • Acceleration of rent — all remaining rent for the lease term becomes due.
  • Liquidated damages — a pre-agreed sum payable upon default.
  • Right to re-let — landlord re-leases the space and charges the original tenant for any shortfall.
  • Recovery of attorney fees and costs — per lease provisions.
  • Landlord's lien — Florida recognizes a statutory landlord's lien on the tenant's personal property for unpaid rent (§ 83.08).

Self-Help Eviction

Unlike residential evictions, where self-help is explicitly prohibited, the legality of self-help remedies for commercial properties in Florida is less clearly defined. Some leases include provisions permitting re-entry and lock changes upon default. However, exercising self-help without a court order is risky and can expose the landlord to liability. Court-ordered eviction is always the safest approach.

How Landager Helps

Landager tracks lease defaults, manages notice deadlines, and maintains a digital paper trail of all eviction-related communications — providing documentary evidence you need if the case goes to court.

Back to Florida Commercial Lease Laws Overview.

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