The Juvenile Expungement Process in Florida — Clearing a Record Before It Follows You
A juvenile record in Florida is not automatically a clean slate. Some records erase themselves at age 21; others linger for life unless you act. This guide explains the four ways a juvenile record can be cleared, who qualifies, and the exact steps to take.
Many Florida parents assume a child's arrest "disappears" the moment they turn 18. It does not. A juvenile record can surface on certain background checks, affect college admissions, professional licensing, military enlistment, and housing applications. The good news: Florida law gives young people more than one path to clear these records — and in many cases the law does it automatically. The key is knowing which route applies to you, and not missing the conditions that can take an option off the table forever.
First, the vocabulary. In Florida, expunction (often called "expungement") means the record is physically destroyed or returned, and a single confidential copy is held by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) under court order. Sealing means the record still exists but is made confidential and removed from public view. Most juvenile relief is true expunction. §§ 943.0585, 943.059, Fla. Stat.
Four ways to clear a Florida juvenile record
These are not steps in a sequence — they are alternative routes. Which one fits depends on the offense, the outcome of the case, and the person's age now. Start by finding the route that matches your situation.
Automatic expunction at age 21 (or 26)
FDLE destroys most juvenile criminal history records by operation of law when the person turns 21 — or 26 for those committed to a juvenile correctional facility or classified as a serious or habitual juvenile offender. No application, no fee. § 943.0515, Fla. Stat.
Automatic · No feeEarly juvenile expungement (ages 18–20)
A person at least 18 but under 21 can ask FDLE to expunge the record early — but only if they have stayed completely clean for the past 5 years and the state attorney approves. § 943.0515(1)(b), Fla. Stat.
By application · State attorney approvalJuvenile diversion expunction
If the minor successfully completed an authorized pre-arrest or post-arrest diversion program, FDLE will expunge the non-judicial arrest record. Available for misdemeanors and many felonies — but never forcible felonies or firearm/weapon felonies. § 943.0582, Fla. Stat.
By application · No court hearingCourt-ordered sealing or expungement
The standard petition process — used when a juvenile was treated as an adult, or when the other routes don't apply. Requires an FDLE Certificate of Eligibility and a judge's order. A person generally gets this relief only once in a lifetime. §§ 943.0585, 943.059, Fla. Stat.
By petition · Judge's order requiredCompare the four routes
| Route | Who it's for | Trigger | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Automatic § 943.0515 | Most juveniles with no adult forcible-felony charge | Turning 21 (or 26) | Free |
| Early (18–20) § 943.0515(1)(b) | 18–20-year-olds, 5 years clean | Application + state attorney approval | ~$75 FDLE fee |
| Diversion § 943.0582 | Anyone who finished an eligible diversion program | Application + state attorney certification | Application to FDLE — verify current fee |
| Court-ordered §§ 943.0585 / 943.059 | Cases handled in adult court; otherwise eligible | Certificate of Eligibility + court petition | ~$75 FDLE fee + filing costs |
Diversion expunction does not "use up" your one court-ordered expunction. A juvenile diversion expunction under § 943.0582 will not prevent you from later petitioning for a court-ordered sealing or expungement under § 943.059 or § 943.0585 if you are otherwise eligible. § 943.0582(4), Fla. Stat.
Automatic expunction at 21 — and the forcible-felony trap
For most young Floridians, the record clears itself. Under § 943.0515, Fla. Stat., FDLE retains a minor's criminal history record and then expunges it automatically when the person reaches age 21. There is one major exception to the timing: if the minor was classified as a serious or habitual juvenile offender, or was committed to a juvenile correctional facility or juvenile prison, the record is retained until age 26 before automatic expunction.
The forcible-felony trap. If, after turning 18, the person is charged with or convicted of a forcible felony while the juvenile record still exists, that juvenile record is merged into the adult criminal history record and kept permanently. The automatic clean slate is lost. Forcible felonies include offenses such as murder, sexual battery, robbery, carjacking, aggravated assault, and kidnapping. §§ 943.0515(2), 776.08, Fla. Stat.
One permanent disqualifier sits above all of this: a minor designated as a sexual offender after July 1, 2007 may not have the juvenile record expunged at all. § 943.0515(3), Fla. Stat.
Early juvenile expungement for 18-to-20-year-olds
If you can't wait until 21 — because a job, enlistment, or licensing application is on the line — you may be able to clear the record early. To qualify under § 943.0515(1)(b), Fla. Stat., you must:
- Be at least 18 but under 21 years of age at the time you apply.
- Have not been charged with, or found to have committed, any criminal offense within the 5 years before your application — and that includes the offense you're trying to expunge.
- Obtain the approval of the state attorney for each circuit where an offense on the record occurred.
- Apply to FDLE in the manner set by rule (FDLE issues the Certificate of Eligibility).
The 5-year clean window is measured backward from the application date and frequently reaches into the early teens. A single intervening citation or charge resets the clock. If you are denied early, you still keep the right to automatic expunction at 21. § 943.0515(1)(b), Fla. Stat.
Diversion expunction — the fastest clean slate
Florida encourages young people to complete diversion. As a reward, § 943.0582, Fla. Stat. lets a minor who successfully completes an authorized pre-arrest or post-arrest diversion program have the non-judicial arrest record expunged — without a court hearing. FDLE must grant it once the requirements are met.
Which offenses qualify
Florida expanded this relief well beyond first-time misdemeanors. Today it covers a diversion program based on an arrest for a misdemeanor offense, or a felony offense — with two firm exclusions: it is never available for a forcible felony (as defined in § 776.08) or a felony involving the manufacture, sale, purchase, transport, possession, or use of a firearm or weapon (as defined in § 790.001). § 943.0582, Fla. Stat.
To obtain it, the applicant must:
- Submit an application on the FDLE form (FDLE 40-025), signed by a parent or legal guardian — or by the applicant if they've reached the age of majority.
- Include a written statement from the state attorney certifying successful completion of that county's diversion program and that the qualifying conditions are met.
- Not have been otherwise charged with, or found to have committed, any criminal offense or comparable ordinance violation. § 943.0582(3), Fla. Stat.; Fla. Admin. Code R. 11C-7.009
Apply promptly. Diversion expunction is tied to completion of the program and earlier versions of the statute imposed a strict application deadline. Deadlines and forms change, so apply as soon as the program is complete and confirm the current application window and any fee directly with FDLE's Seal and Expunge Section before you rely on a date you read elsewhere.
Court-ordered sealing or expunction
When a juvenile case was handled in adult court, or the automatic and diversion routes don't fit, the standard petition process under §§ 943.0585 and 943.059, Fla. Stat. is the path. It is more involved, generally available only once in a lifetime, and is unavailable if the person was ever adjudicated guilty (as an adult) or adjudicated delinquent (as a juvenile) for the offense, or if the charge appears on the statutory list of offenses that can never be sealed or expunged. § 943.0584, Fla. Stat.
The FDLE Certificate of Eligibility process — step by step
-
Get and complete the FDLE application package
Obtain the Application for Certification of Eligibility from FDLE or the Clerk of Court. It must be completed accurately — errors are the most common cause of delay.
-
Have the state attorney or clerk certify the disposition
The state attorney (or clerk of court) completes a certified statement confirming the disposition of the case and your eligibility.
-
Submit fingerprints and the $75 fee
A certified set of fingerprints from a law enforcement agency goes in with the package, along with the $75 processing fee (fee waivers may apply in narrow circumstances).
-
FDLE issues the Certificate of Eligibility
FDLE reviews the package and, if you qualify, issues a Certificate of Eligibility. This certificate is not the relief itself — it is your permission slip to go to court.
-
File a petition and sworn statement with the court
File a petition to seal or expunge, with a supporting affidavit, in the court of proper jurisdiction. The state attorney has an opportunity to respond.
-
The judge signs the order; FDLE carries it out
Sealing and expunction are discretionary — even an eligible petitioner is not guaranteed an order. Once signed, the order is sent to FDLE and the relevant agencies, which seal or destroy the records accordingly.
Who cannot expunge a juvenile record
- Anyone designated a sexual offender under § 943.0435 after July 1, 2007.
- Court-ordered relief is barred where the person was adjudicated delinquent or adjudicated guilty of the offense, or where the charge is on the § 943.0584 ineligible list (which includes many serious and sexual offenses).
- Diversion expunction never reaches forcible felonies or firearm/weapon felonies.
- The automatic clean slate is lost if the person is charged with or convicted of a forcible felony as an adult, which merges the juvenile record into the permanent adult record.
What expunction actually lets you do
Once a juvenile record is sealed or expunged, the law lets the person — in most situations — lawfully deny that the arrest or charge ever happened. A minor who completed diversion and received an expunction may lawfully deny or fail to acknowledge participation in the program. § 985.126, Fla. Stat.
But the protection is not absolute. The record can still be accessed, and you must disclose it, in defined situations — for example, when applying for employment with a criminal justice agency, when you are a defendant in a criminal case, when seeking admission to The Florida Bar, or when applying for certain positions involving children, the elderly, or the disabled and with certain licensing or government agencies. § 943.0585, Fla. Stat.
Florida juvenile expungement FAQ
Does a juvenile record automatically disappear at 18?
What's the difference between sealing and expunction?
My child completed diversion. How soon can we apply?
Will an expunged record show up on a job background check?
Can I expunge more than one juvenile case?
This guide provides general information about Florida juvenile record law under Chapter 943, Florida Statutes, as of 2026. It is not legal advice and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Statutes, fees, forms, and deadlines change — verify current requirements with FDLE before you act. JusticeXpressFlorida.com is a document preparation service, not a law firm, and does not provide legal advice. Florida Bar Lawyer Referral: (800) 342-8011.