State guide

Florida Call Recording Laws& Disclosure Generator

All-Party Consent

Florida requires the consent of all parties before an oral communication is recorded. Generate a Florida-ready call recording consent script below — audio, short form, written notice and opt-in.

Generate Florida Disclosure

Consent type

all-party consent

Statute

Florida Statutes §934.03 (Security of Communications Act)

Civil penalty

Actual damages, punitive damages, and attorney's fees may be available.

Criminal penalty

Generally a third-degree felony.

The generator

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Tone

Florida

All-Party Consent

Florida requires the consent of all parties before an oral communication is recorded.

Last reviewed: 2026-05-14 · Unreviewed placeholder content

Audio script (IVR / call opening)

This call is being recorded for quality assurance and training purposes. By continuing this call, you consent to being recorded. If you do not consent, please notify the agent or hang up now.

Short form (live agent intro)

Before we continue — this call is being recorded for quality assurance and training purposes. Is that all right with you?

Written notice (email / contract)

Notice of Call Recording: Calls to and from [Business Name] may be recorded for quality assurance and training purposes. By continuing a call with us, you consent to that recording. Florida is an all-party consent state under Fla. Stat. §934.03.

Long-form opt-in

I consent to [Business Name] recording my phone calls for quality assurance and training purposes. I understand Florida requires all-party consent and that I may withdraw consent at any time.

This is guidance, not legal advice.

This generator produces templates from a knowledge base of call recording rules. It is not a substitute for qualified legal counsel and does not guarantee compliance with every law that may apply to your business. Consult an attorney for advice specific to your situation.

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In depth

Florida call recording law — a complete guide

What the rule is, the nuance behind it, the penalties, and how to record compliantly in Florida.

The rule in Florida

Florida requires the consent of all parties before an oral communication is recorded.

In practice, that makes Florida a all-party consent jurisdiction for the purpose of recording business calls. The safest approach is a clear disclosure at the very start of every call, before any substantive conversation begins.

Statute and penalties

The governing law is Florida Statutes §934.03 (Security of Communications Act). Civil exposure: Actual damages, punitive damages, and attorney's fees may be available. Criminal exposure: Generally a third-degree felony.

Disclose recording consistently and you keep yourself on the right side of Florida Statutes §934.03 (Security of Communications Act).

Cross-border calls

If you record a call between someone in Florida and someone in another jurisdiction, the safe rule is that the stricter law governs. The generator on this page applies that automatically — add the other party's location and it rebuilds the disclosure around whichever jurisdiction is stricter.

Best practices for recording in Florida

Disclose early and clearly, state the purpose of the recording, identify your business by name, and keep recordings only as long as you need them. Apply the same disclosure on every call so consent is consistent and defensible. When anything is high-stakes or ambiguous, have a qualified attorney review your disclosure.

Sources & citations

Last reviewed: 2026-05-14 · Unreviewed placeholder content — not legal advice