Free Florida legal information for every Floridian, regardless of income
Consumer Rights & Small Claims

πŸ’Έ Bad Check Recovery in Florida

Someone paid you with a check that bounced. Florida law can get you back the money β€” and sometimes triple it β€” but only if you do one step in the right order first.

⚑ The short version

  • You may recover up to three times the check amount (treble damages), but never less than $50, plus your bank fees, court costs, and reasonable attorney fees. (Fla. Stat. Β§ 68.065)
  • You must send a written demand letter first β€” by certified mail, using the exact statutory language β€” and give the writer 30 days to pay before you can claim the triple damages.
  • Writing a worthless check can also be a crime: a misdemeanor under $150 and a third-degree felony at $150 or more. (Fla. Stat. Β§ 832.05)
  • Many Florida State Attorneys run a free Worthless Check Program that pursues the writer for you β€” no lawyer required.
Fla. Stat. Β§ 68.065

The civil remedy

Lets the person holding a bad check sue for triple the amount owed, after a proper 30-day written demand.

Fla. Stat. Β§ 832.05

The crime

Makes issuing or passing a worthless check with intent to defraud a misdemeanor or β€” at $150+ β€” a felony.

Fla. Stat. Β§ 832.07

Intent & the notice

Sets the presumption of fraud and the dishonor-notice procedure that drives the whole recovery process.

🧭 What "bad check recovery" actually means

A "bad check" is a check (or draft, debit-card order, or electronic payment) that the bank refuses to pay β€” usually because the account has insufficient funds, has been closed, or never existed, or because the person stopped payment to cheat you. Florida gives you two separate paths when this happens to you, and you can use one or both:

The civil path is about getting your money. It is powerful because it can multiply what you collect by three. The criminal path is about holding a dishonest check-writer accountable; it can also produce restitution, but you don't control it β€” the State Attorney does. Most everyday disputes (a customer's check bounces, a tenant's deposit check is no good) are resolved through the civil path, often in small claims court.

πŸͺœ The recovery path, step by step

  1. Confirm the check really was dishonored β€” and why

    Get the reason from your bank or the returned-check notice: insufficient funds, account closed, no account, or stop-payment. Keep the original check (or an image), the deposit slip, and any bank fee receipts. The reason matters: an honest dispute behind a stop-payment is different from one made "with intent to defraud."

  2. Send the statutory demand letter

    This is the step people skip β€” and skipping it is what costs them the triple damages. Florida requires a written demand, delivered by certified or registered mail with a return receipt (or first-class mail with an affidavit of service), sent to the address on the check or the writer's last known address. It must contain the exact statutory language and give the writer 30 days to pay in full. A sample is below.

  3. Wait the full 30 days

    If the writer pays the face amount plus the allowed service charge and your bank fees within 30 days, you're made whole and the matter ends. If they don't, the door to treble damages opens.

  4. Choose your forum β€” and file

    For amounts up to $8,000 (as of 2026), Florida small claims court is the fast, low-cost option you can handle yourself. Larger amounts go to county or circuit court. In your suit you ask for the check amount, triple damages, court costs, attorney fees, and bank fees.

  5. Or refer it for criminal handling

    You can also turn the dishonored check over to your county's State Attorney Worthless Check Program. It's typically free to you, and the office pursues payment, fees, and possible prosecution against the writer.

⚠️ The mistake that throws away your triple damages

Treble damages under Β§ 68.065 are not automatic. You only earn the right to ask for them after you have sent the proper written demand and waited 30 days with no payment. Sue first, or send a casual "please pay me" email instead of the statutory certified-mail demand, and a court can limit you to the face value of the check alone. The letter is cheap; the mistake is expensive. Send the letter, keep the green certified-mail receipt, and calendar the 30 days.

πŸ’° What you can recover

ItemAmountNotes
Face value of the check100% of what you were owedAlways recoverable.
Service charge$25 (check ≀ $50)
$30 ($50.01–$300)
$40 (over $300)
or 5% of the check β€” whichever is greater
You may charge this when you make written demand.
Bank fees you actually paidYour actual returned-item feesKeep the receipts.
Triple (treble) damages3Γ— the amount owed, never less than $50Only after a proper 30-day demand goes unpaid.
Court costs & attorney feesReasonable amountsThe writer is liable for these in your civil action.

You generally choose either the service charge or the treble-damages route for a given check, not a stacked combination of both β€” your demand letter sets this up. A quick consult or your county clerk's small-claims self-help desk can confirm how to frame the numbers for your specific check.

βœ‰οΈ The demand letter (statutory template)

Florida prescribes the wording of this notice. Send it by certified mail, return receipt requested. Fill in every blank with your own facts:

You are hereby notified that a check numbered [check #], in the face amount of $[amount], issued by you on [date], drawn upon [bank name], and payable to [your name], has been dishonored.

Pursuant to Florida law, you have 30 days from receipt of this notice to tender payment of the full amount of the check plus a service charge of $25 if the face value does not exceed $50, $30 if it exceeds $50 but not $300, $40 if it exceeds $300, or 5 percent of the face amount, whichever is greater β€” the total amount due being $[total].

Unless this amount is paid in full within the time specified, the holder of the check may turn it over to the state attorney for criminal prosecution. You may also be liable in a civil action for triple the amount of the check, but in no case less than $50, together with the amount of the check, a service charge, court costs, reasonable attorney fees, and bank fees.

Match the statutory language closely β€” courts expect it. If you're unsure, your State Attorney's Worthless Check Program will often provide the form, or you can adapt the version published with Fla. Stat. Β§ 832.07.

βš–οΈ Civil vs. criminal: which path?

Civil (Β§ 68.065)Criminal (Β§ 832.05)
GoalGet your money β€” possibly tripledPunish fraud; possible restitution
Who runs itYou (or your attorney)The State Attorney
WhereSmall claims / county / circuit courtCriminal court
OutcomeMoney judgment up to 3Γ— plus feesMisdemeanor (<$150) or felony ($150+); jail/probation/restitution possible
You must proveDishonor + proper demand unpaidIntent to defraud / knowledge of insufficient funds

πŸ›οΈ The free option most people miss

Nearly every Florida State Attorney's Office runs a Worthless Check Diversion / Enforcement Program. You submit the bad check and your demand-notice paperwork; the office pursues the writer for the face amount, fees, and program costs β€” and the writer can be diverted into a payment-and-education program instead of prosecution. It usually costs the victim nothing. Search "[your county] State Attorney worthless check program" to find the intake form.

🚫 When recovery won't work (or gets harder)

βœ“ Strong cases

  • Insufficient funds or closed account, with no honest dispute
  • You sent the proper certified-mail demand and waited 30 days
  • You kept the check, bank notices, and fee receipts
  • The writer received value (goods or services) for the check

βœ— Weak or blocked cases

  • Post-dated checks the writer asked you to hold
  • You knew the funds were short when you took the check
  • A stop-payment over a legitimate dispute (not fraud)
  • You skipped the statutory demand letter
  • You waited too long β€” civil claims have a deadline (generally several years on a written instrument; act promptly)

❓ Frequently asked questions

The check was small β€” is it even worth pursuing?

Often yes. Even on a small check, the law guarantees damages of at least $50, and you can add the service charge and your bank fees. The certified-mail demand letter alone prompts many people to pay simply to avoid triple damages and a criminal referral.

Can I file in small claims court myself?

Yes. Florida small claims court handles disputes up to $8,000 (as of 2026) and is designed to be used without a lawyer. Your county clerk's office has the forms and a self-help desk. Bring the check, your demand letter, the certified-mail receipt, and your fee documentation.

What if the writer closed the bank account?

A closed account actually helps your case β€” it points toward intent to defraud or knowledge of no funds, which strengthens both the civil claim and any criminal referral. Note it in your records and on your State Attorney intake form.

Will the person who wrote the check go to jail?

It depends on the amount and the State Attorney's discretion. Under $150 it's a first-degree misdemeanor; $150 or more is a third-degree felony. Many first-time writers are routed into a diversion program β€” paying restitution and completing a class β€” rather than being prosecuted. Jail is possible but is not the typical outcome for a single small check.

Does paying me back make the criminal charge disappear?

Not automatically. Florida law says that in a worthless-check prosecution, after-the-fact payment is not by itself a defense or a ground to dismiss the charge. As a practical matter, restitution often resolves matters through diversion β€” but that's the prosecutor's call, not a right.

How long do I have to act?

Don't wait. Civil claims on a written instrument generally must be filed within several years, and criminal referrals are far more effective while the trail is fresh. Send your demand letter promptly, keep your 30-day clock, and file or refer soon after.

This article is general legal information about Florida law, not legal advice, and does not create an attorney–client relationship. Statutes and dollar amounts change. For advice about your specific check, consult a licensed Florida attorney or your county clerk's small-claims self-help resources.