
Maximum Payout for Medical Negligence in Florida: The No-Cap Rule
For most Florida medical malpractice cases, there is no legal ceiling on recovery. Two Florida Supreme Court rulings removed the old caps, and juries may now award any amount the evidence supports. The one major exception is claims against public hospitals, which are capped by law.
How Florida Got Here
Florida did not always have a no-cap rule. The state passed damage caps in 2003; the Florida Supreme Court struck them down in two rulings a decade later. The timeline below shows the path from cap to no-cap, and the legislative threat that could reverse it.
The Three Types of Damages and How Each Is Capped
Florida law divides medical malpractice damages into three separate categories. The no-cap rule only applies to one of them; each category is treated differently.
- Medical bills (past and future)
- Lost wages
- Reduced earning capacity
- Life care plan costs
- Pain and suffering
- Mental anguish
- Loss of consortium
- Loss of enjoyment of life
- Intended to punish, not compensate
- Requires a pre-suit showing of gross negligence or intent
- Uncapped only for intentional harm to the claimant
In most medical malpractice cases, punitive damages are not on the table; the pre-suit evidentiary hurdle under Section 768.72 screens them out. The practical fight in a Florida medical malpractice case is over the first two buckets, and both of them are uncapped against private defendants.
The Real-World Ceiling: Insurance Policy Limits
The absence of a statutory cap does not mean every jury verdict is paid in full. In most Florida medical malpractice cases, the defendant’s insurance policy sets a practical ceiling. Most Florida physicians carry between $250,000 and $1 million per claim; most Florida hospitals carry between $5 million and $50 million per claim through layered primary and excess coverage.
When a verdict exceeds policy limits, the plaintiff cannot always collect the difference from the individual defendant’s personal assets. Two legal tools exist to convert an above-limits verdict into actual money.
“On the defense side, the phrase that kept valuation numbers down was ‘policy-limits case.’ That phrase does not mean the same thing in a no-cap environment that it meant fifteen years ago; the bad-faith setup is what makes the no-cap rule actually translate into collectible recovery.”
The 2026 Legislative Threat: SB 248
The Florida Legislature has tried to reinstate medical malpractice caps several times since Kalitan. The most active effort in the current cycle is Senate Bill 248. If it passes in its current amended form, the cap landscape would shift significantly.
What the No-Cap Rule Looks Like in Practice
The practical effect of the no-cap rule is most visible in the record verdicts awarded since Kalitan. Each case below would have been reduced by several million dollars or more under the old cap regime.
These are outliers, not typical outcomes. For a detailed breakdown of what Florida medical malpractice cases typically settle for, including averages by injury type and by judicial circuit, see our companion Florida medical malpractice average settlement analysis.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the maximum payout for medical negligence in Florida?
There is no statutory maximum against private hospitals and doctors. A jury may award any amount the evidence supports. The largest Florida verdict on record is $261 million. Claims against public hospitals are capped at $200,000 per person under Section 768.28.
Does Florida cap pain and suffering?
No, not in private-sector cases. Pain and suffering, mental anguish, and loss of consortium are fully recoverable in any amount a jury awards following the 2017 Kalitan ruling. Public hospital cases remain subject to the $200,000 per-person sovereign immunity cap.
Are medical bills and lost wages capped?
No. Economic damages (medical bills, lost wages, reduced earning capacity, future care costs) have never been capped in Florida medical malpractice cases. The old cap regime only reached non-economic damages; economic losses remain fully recoverable in any amount the evidence supports.
What is the cap against a public hospital in Florida?
Recovery against a public hospital, such as Jackson Memorial or UF Health Shands, is capped at $200,000 per person or $300,000 per incident under Section 768.28. The cap applies to all damages combined. Recovery above the cap requires a claims bill from the Florida Legislature, which is rare.
Can I recover above the defendant’s insurance policy?
Sometimes. If the insurance carrier refuses a reasonable within-limits settlement offer and a jury later awards more than the policy, Florida bad-faith law allows the plaintiff to pursue the carrier for the full excess amount. A properly structured pre-suit demand letter preserves this leverage.
Are punitive damages capped?
Yes, under Section 768.73. The default cap is three times compensatory damages or $500,000, whichever is greater. The cap rises to four times compensatory or $2 million for conduct motivated by unreasonable financial gain. There is no cap for conduct that was specifically intended to harm the claimant.
Is Florida planning to reinstate caps?
Senate Bill 248 has been under active consideration. It would reimpose a $500,000 cap against practitioners and $750,000 against non-practitioners. As of April 2026, SB 248 remains pending and has not passed. If caps pass, constitutional challenges would likely follow under the Kalitan precedent.
Why did the Florida Supreme Court strike down the caps?
The Court held that the caps arbitrarily reduce awards for the most severely injured plaintiffs, which violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Florida Constitution. The Court also rejected the Legislature’s claim that caps would reduce malpractice insurance premiums, finding the supporting evidence unpersuasive.
If you or a loved one suffered catastrophic harm from medical negligence in Florida, the Law Offices of Jorge L. Flores, P.A., can evaluate the ceiling on recovery in your case.
Every consultation is free, every conversation is confidential, and we do not collect a fee unless we recover compensation for you.
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