Florida has no statewide rent control or caps on rent increases in 2026, allowing landlords full discretion on hike amounts at lease end or renewal. Tenants receive protections through notice requirements and bans on retaliatory or discriminatory raises under Florida Statutes Chapter 83.
Notice Periods
Landlords must give 15 days’ written notice for month-to-month tenancies and 30-60 days for longer fixed-term leases before increases take effect. Mid-lease raises are prohibited unless the lease explicitly allows escalation clauses.
Mobile home parks face added scrutiny, with proposed HB 703 requiring justification for hikes and extended relocation aid.
No Limits on Amounts
Landlords can raise rents by any percentage (e.g., 40%+), tied to market rates, without caps or justification needed statewide. Local rent control remains preempted except in declared emergencies; 2026 changes reportedly favor landlords further.
Increases cannot retaliate against repair requests or habitability complaints within six months.
Prohibited Practices
Retaliatory hikes after tenant complaints violate §83.64; discriminatory increases breach Fair Housing laws. Frequency limited to once per 12 months for longer tenancies unless tied to violations or prior discounts.
Tenant Recourse
Review notices for proper delivery/timing; negotiate, pay under protest, or vacate during notice without penalty on month-to-month. Challenge via county court or tenant hotlines; collect twice the excess if unlawful per statute.
Lease Comparison
| Lease Type | Notice Required | Mid-Term Increase? | Special Rules |
|---|
SOURCES:
- https://www.steadily.com/blog/rent-increase-laws-regulations-florida
- https://www.hemlane.com/resources/florida-rent-control-laws/















