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Bankruptcy in Florida

Bankruptcy is federal law, but Florida controls the exemptions that decide what property you keep. This hub explains how Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 work, the automatic stay that stops collection, and why Florida filers use Florida's own exemptions — then links guides for each topic.

By Find Local Law Editorial Team · Last reviewed: May 26, 2026

Researched and drafted with AI assistance and verified against primary sources (statutes, Judicial Council forms, and official court websites). This is general information, not legal advice.

This is general information, not legal advice. Bankruptcy turns on your specific finances — talk to a Florida bankruptcy attorney about your situation.

Bankruptcy is governed by federal law (the U.S. Bankruptcy Code, Title 11), but Florida controls the exemptions that decide what property you can protect.

Where Florida cases are filed

Bankruptcy cases are filed in federal bankruptcy court, not state court. Florida has three federal bankruptcy districts — the Northern (flnb), Middle (flmb), and Southern (flsb) District of Florida (U.S. Courts — Florida districts). You file in the district where you live.

Chapter 7 vs. Chapter 13

The two most common consumer chapters are different paths:

The automatic stay

The moment you file, the automatic stay kicks in (11 U.S.C. § 362) — an immediate halt to most collection, including lawsuits, wage garnishment, repossession, and foreclosure.

Florida exemptions (the opt-out)

Federal law lets states “opt out” of the federal exemption list, and Florida did (Fla. Stat. § 222.20). So Florida filers use Florida’s exemptions — most notably the homestead exemption, which protects your home with no dollar cap on value (limited by acreage). Florida also exempts a motor vehicle, certain head-of-family wages, and a wildcard for personal property.

The guides

Pick your topic below. To get matched with a local Florida bankruptcy attorney, connect with a lawyer.

Guides

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