
Does My Florida Doctor Have Malpractice Insurance? A Patient’s Guide
Florida is one of the few states that does not require every practicing physician to carry medical malpractice insurance. Many Florida doctors do carry it; others practice “bare” under Florida Statute § 458.320. This page explains how to check whether your doctor is covered, what the required minimum amounts look like, and what it means for your case if the doctor who harmed you has no insurance.
Is Medical Malpractice Insurance Required in Florida?
Florida does not require every licensed physician to carry a malpractice insurance policy. Florida Statute § 458.320 does, however, require every Florida physician to demonstrate “financial responsibility” in one of several approved ways; buying an insurance policy is only one of them. Three points capture the rule.
- An insurance policy is not mandatory for every Florida physician; the statute permits alternatives such as an escrow account, an irrevocable letter of credit, or a written agreement to satisfy adverse judgments from personal assets.
- Minimum financial-responsibility amounts are set by statute. A physician with hospital privileges or who performs surgery at an ambulatory surgery center must meet at least $250,000 per claim and $750,000 in annual aggregate; all other licensed Florida physicians must meet at least $100,000 per claim and $300,000 in annual aggregate.
- Hospitals and surgery centers require actual policies as a condition of staff privileges, which is why the majority of practicing Florida physicians are insured even though the statute itself does not strictly require it.
How to Check If Your Florida Doctor Has Malpractice Insurance
Florida requires every licensed physician to report their financial responsibility status to the Florida Board of Medicine; that information is public and searchable. Three free tools let any patient verify a doctor’s coverage in a few minutes.
Florida’s Malpractice Insurance Rules and Minimum Amounts Under § 458.320
Florida does not mandate malpractice insurance in every case, but the statute does set minimum financial responsibility amounts that every insured Florida physician must meet. The numbers depend on where the doctor practices and what kind of work the doctor performs.
The minimum limits set by § 458.320 are not the ceiling on recovery; Florida has no enforceable cap on non-economic damages in private-sector cases. See our no-cap rule guide. However, the defendant’s actual insurance policy remains the practical ceiling on what can be collected in most cases; a $5 million case against a doctor with a $250,000 policy is, as a practical matter, a $250,000 case unless additional defendants or bad-faith leverage applies.
What “Going Bare” Means in Florida
Florida is one of the few states that permits a licensed physician to practice without malpractice insurance. Doctors who choose this path are said to be “going bare.” The law still requires them to agree to satisfy adverse judgments up to the statutory minimum amounts, but no actual insurance policy stands behind that promise.
The statute gives uninsured physicians several ways to demonstrate financial responsibility instead of buying an insurance policy. The most common alternatives are:
If Your Florida Doctor Has No Malpractice Insurance
The absence of a malpractice insurance policy does not extinguish your right to sue. It does, however, change how the case is prepared and who the most valuable defendants are. The Law Offices of Jorge L. Flores, P.A., handles uninsured-physician cases by identifying every additional party who bears legal responsibility, because a judgment against an individual doctor without insurance is often difficult to collect from personal assets alone.
- Your right to sue under Chapter 766
- The two-year statute of limitations
- The 90-day pre-suit investigation
- The expert affidavit requirement
- The damages you can claim
- No insurance carrier to negotiate with
- Recovery depends on the doctor’s personal assets
- Collection may require post-judgment proceedings
- Bankruptcy is a real risk after a large verdict
- Identifying additional defendants becomes critical
Other Parties Who May Be Liable
In a case against an uninsured doctor, the most important early work is the identification of every other party whose conduct contributed to the injury. Those parties carry their own insurance and are often the source of the recovery. The five categories below are examined in every intake at the Law Offices of Jorge L. Flores, P.A.
“The first question on every uninsured-doctor case is not how badly you were hurt; it is who else was legally responsible alongside the doctor. A clean case against the doctor alone is often a small case; the same case against the practice group or the hospital is often a much larger one.”
Frequently Asked Questions
Are Florida doctors required to carry malpractice insurance?
Not universally. Florida Statute § 458.320 requires physicians to demonstrate financial responsibility, but the statute allows several alternatives to a traditional insurance policy, including posting an irrevocable letter of credit, maintaining an escrow account, or agreeing to satisfy adverse judgments from personal assets (known as “going bare”). Hospitals and surgery centers almost always require actual insurance as a condition of staff privileges, which covers most Florida physicians who practice in those settings.
What are the minimum malpractice insurance amounts in Florida?
The statutory minimums under § 458.320 are $100,000 per claim and $300,000 in annual aggregate for a private-practice physician without hospital privileges or surgery-center work. For a physician with hospital privileges or who performs surgery at an ambulatory surgery center, the minimum is $250,000 per claim and $750,000 in annual aggregate. Actual policy limits carried by most Florida doctors are substantially higher, with $1 million per claim and $3 million aggregate common as an industry standard.
How do I find out if my Florida doctor has malpractice insurance?
The fastest way is the Florida Department of Health license lookup at flhealthsource.gov, which displays each licensed physician’s financial responsibility status. A second signal is the reception-area sign; uninsured physicians are required by § 458.320(5)(g) to post a specific statutory notice, and seeing that notice means your doctor has chosen to practice without insurance. The National Practitioner Data Bank is a third resource that attorneys use during pre-suit to verify prior malpractice payment history.
Can I sue a Florida doctor who has no malpractice insurance?
Yes. The absence of insurance does not affect your right to sue under Chapter 766 or your entitlement to the same damages that any insured-physician case would support. The practical difference is collection; without a carrier to pay a judgment, recovery depends on the doctor’s personal assets, any agreed-upon § 458.320 financial responsibility amount, and any co-defendants such as an employer, hospital, or other treating provider who carries separate coverage.
What is the reception-area sign at my doctor’s office?
Under § 458.320(5)(g), a Florida physician who chooses to practice without malpractice insurance must post a specific statutory notice prominently in the reception area or provide each patient with a written statement containing the same language. The notice begins “Under Florida law, physicians are generally required to carry medical malpractice insurance…” and states that the doctor has decided not to carry it. If you saw such a sign, your doctor is uninsured under the going-bare exemption.
What happens to my case if the doctor declares bankruptcy?
A Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 bankruptcy filing by an uninsured doctor can discharge personal liability for an unpaid malpractice judgment. The bankruptcy does not, however, discharge the liability of any co-defendant such as an employer, hospital, or practice group, and it does not reach any applicable insurance proceeds. Bankruptcy is one of the primary reasons an experienced Florida medical malpractice attorney works to identify every available defendant during pre-suit; a case resting entirely on a solo uninsured doctor is fragile for this reason.
Does the doctor’s insurance policy limit how much I can recover?
As a practical matter, yes in most cases. Florida has no statutory cap on non-economic damages in private-sector malpractice cases, but a judgment that exceeds the defendant’s policy limits is not automatically collectible from personal assets. Florida bad-faith doctrine creates one exception; when an insurance carrier refuses a reasonable within-limits settlement offer and a jury later awards more than the policy, the plaintiff can pursue the carrier for the full excess judgment.
Is a public hospital doctor covered by malpractice insurance?
Physicians employed by a public hospital or a state university medical school are generally covered by a state self-insurance program rather than a private insurance policy. Claims against these defendants are governed by the sovereign immunity statute § 768.28, which caps recovery at $200,000 per person and $300,000 per incident regardless of the severity of the injury. The cap on recovery is a critical threshold consideration before filing suit against a public-hospital defendant.
If you were harmed by a Florida doctor and are not sure whether they carry malpractice insurance, the Law Offices of Jorge L. Flores, P.A., can verify coverage and identify every defendant responsible for your injury.
Every consultation is free, every conversation is confidential, and we do not collect a fee unless we recover compensation for you.
Recent matters from the Law Offices of Jorge L. Flores, P.A. See our full Case Results page for additional matters.
