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Florida Nursing Home Abuse Settlement Calculator

Estimate compensation under Florida's Chapter 400 (Nursing Home Act), post-HB 837 comparative fault rules, and the §400.023 adult-child wrongful death exception

Last reviewed: April 2026

⚖ FLORIDA CHAPTER 400: No compensatory damage cap. Adult children CAN recover pain & suffering (§400.023(1) overrides §768.21(8)). HB 837 (2023) tightened some rules.

All consultations confidential. Family members of deceased residents can file — we specialize in elder advocacy.

$209 billion in real payouts analyzed · See what we found
Reviewed by Leonard Goldberg, Editor
Last updated May 15, 2026
See methodology →

Your Case Details

Answer a few questions to see your estimated range.

PTSD, depression, anxiety, complex trauma — formally diagnosed?

Larger institutions have more resources and higher settlements.

Estimated Settlement Range

$176,400 — $327,600

Abuse settlements vary widely by jurisdiction, institutional resources, and the documented impact. This is a benchmark range based on reported cases.

Type of Abuse: Sexual abuse / assault
+40%
Duration of Abuse: Months
+20%
Diagnosed Mental Health Impact: Diagnosed (depression, anxiety, PTSD — manageable)
0%
Physical Injuries: No physical injuries
0%
Who Was Responsible?: Individual (no institutional connection)
-40%
Confidential. We use industry data — not your specific case. Many cases settle privately under NDA.

Confidential Consultation Request

A survivor-focused attorney will reach out privately. No fees unless they win. We'll send a written case-review summary to your email.

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Editorially Reviewed — Content reviewed for accuracy using published legal research, government data, and verified court records. See our methodology

Reviewed by Leonard Goldberg, Editor · Last updated May 15, 2026

Florida's Chapter 400 Framework — Strong Plaintiff Rights Despite 2023 Tort Reform

Florida's Chapter 400, Part II (§§400.011–400.334) — the Nursing Home and Related Health Care Facilities Act — provides a robust private right of action for nursing home residents and their families. Unlike most medical negligence cases, Chapter 400 has no statutory cap on compensatory damages (confirmed by FL Supreme Court in Florida Convalescent Centers v. Somberg, 2003). Punitive damages are capped at the greater of 4× compensatory OR $1 million when motivated by unreasonable financial gain — but uncapped if specific intent to harm is shown.

Critically, §400.023(1) expressly overrides §768.21(8)'s wrongful death limitation — adult children of deceased nursing home residents can recover pain and suffering damages, unlike standard medical malpractice wrongful death cases where adult children are excluded. This is a major Florida advantage — most nursing home victims are elderly with adult children as survivors, and the ability to recover non-economic damages materially changes case values.

HB 837 (March 2023) tort reform significantly tightened civil litigation in Florida: (1) general negligence SOL reduced from 4 to 2 years (affects general negligence overlap with Chapter 400), (2) modified comparative negligence — plaintiff is barred from recovery if more than 50% at fault, (3) medical expense calculation changed (Fabre evidence admissible). HB 837 did NOT eliminate Chapter 400 protections but created new procedural hurdles and comparative-fault risks. Some provisions are being constitutionally challenged.

Florida Damage Structure

Florida's nursing home damage framework combines Chapter 400 protections with HB 837 constraints:

Damage CategoryCapStatute
Actual/compensatory damagesNo capFL §400.023 — No cap — confirmed Florida Convalescent Centers v. Somberg (2003)
Punitive damages (unreasonable financial gain)No capFL §400.0238 — Greater of 4× compensatory OR $1M — 50% goes to Quality of LTC Facility Improvement Trust Fund
Punitive (specific intent to harm)No capFL §400.0238 — Uncapped
Attorney fees in injunctive proceedings$25KFL §400.023 — Cap on fees in non-damage proceedings

Florida Nursing Home Causes of Action

Chapter 400 creates an exclusive-ish cause of action with several parallel theories:

Chapter 400 private right of action

FL §400.023

Exclusive statutory cause. Rights violations = evidence of negligence. Covers licensee, management companies, direct caregivers.

Wrongful death (§400.023(1) overrides §768.21(8))

FL §400.023(1)

Adult children of nursing home residents CAN recover pain & suffering — unlike standard med-mal wrongful death.

Common-law negligence (post-HB 837)

FL §768.0755 + HB 837 (2023)

Modified comparative fault: plaintiff barred if >50% at fault. 2-year SOL post-HB 837 (was 4).

Gross negligence for punitives

FL §400.0238

Unreasonable financial gain or specific intent to harm

Arbitration in Florida Nursing Home Cases

Florida courts generally enforce properly-executed nursing home arbitration agreements. Cannot be condition of admission (federal CMS rule + state law). Pre-dispute arbitration permitted. Capacity and signing-authority are the most common challenge grounds — many elderly residents lack capacity to contract at admission, and healthcare-agent-signed arbitrations face increasing scrutiny post-Harrod (CA 2024 decision influential but not binding in FL). HB 837 (2023) did not materially alter nursing home arbitration rules. Florida strategy: carefully review admission paperwork for capacity defects; if found, arbitration can be avoided.

Florida Regulatory Framework

Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA) is the primary nursing home licensing and survey authority. AHCA can seek ex parte injunctions for unlicensed activity. Survey results are public record and critical in civil litigation. Florida Department of Elder Affairs / Long-Term Care Ombudsman (§400.0071) advocates for residents' rights — investigation reports discoverable. Adult Protective Services (Chapter 415) mandatory reporting under Dept. of Children and Families. Criminal charges under §825.102 (abuse/neglect/exploitation of elderly) occasionally parallel civil cases.

Florida Nursing Home Landmark Settlements

Florida settlements typically reflect Chapter 400's uncapped compensatory damages:

Defendant / CaseAmountYearInjury
—$2.5M—Mentally impaired stroke victim impregnated by nurse assistant
—$2.1M—Stage 4 bedsore, Auburndale facility
—$1.8M—Fatal sepsis, 61-year-old resident
—$1.3M—Resident wandered and died from exposure
—$1.2M—Dementia patient, infected bedsores

Warning Signs Families Should Watch For

Knowing the warning signs helps families identify abuse early and preserve evidence:

  • Unexplained bruises, especially in patterns suggesting grabbing or restraint (fingertip marks on arms, wrist marks from restraints).
  • Pressure ulcers (bedsores) in any stage — they're preventable with proper care and indicate inadequate repositioning.
  • Rapid weight loss, dehydration (dry mucous membranes, confusion), or signs of malnutrition.
  • Multiple falls without documented fall-prevention interventions.
  • Over-sedation (chemical restraints) — resident too drowsy to interact or participate.
  • Unexplained infections, UTIs, or pneumonia (often from inadequate hygiene or repositioning).
  • Behavioral changes: new fear of specific staff, withdrawal, agitation, or regression.
  • Poor hygiene — dirty clothing, matted hair, unwashed appearance.
  • Missing personal belongings, unexplained financial transactions.
  • Staff avoiding questions, limiting family access, or discouraging unannounced visits.

Florida Nursing Home Abuse FAQs

Can I recover pain & suffering as an adult child in Florida?

YES for nursing home cases under Chapter 400. §400.023(1) explicitly overrides §768.21(8)'s wrongful death limitation — adult children of deceased nursing home residents CAN recover pain & suffering, unlike standard med-mal wrongful death where adult children are excluded. This is a major Florida advantage for families. Confirmed by FL appellate courts; not altered by HB 837 (2023).

How does HB 837 (2023) affect my nursing home case?

Three major changes: (1) General negligence SOL reduced from 4 to 2 years — affects concurrent negligence claims alongside Chapter 400. (2) Comparative fault: plaintiff barred from recovery if >50% at fault (modified comparative negligence). (3) Medical expense calculations changed (Fabre evidence admissible — defendants can argue actual paid amounts, not billed charges). Chapter 400 protections themselves remain intact.

What are the pre-suit requirements under §400.0233?

Mandatory 75-day pre-suit investigation period before filing. Plaintiff must serve notice + supporting documents on all potential defendants. SOL is tolled during pre-suit. Missing this requirement is typically fatal. Notice must include: description of the harm, identity of attempted witnesses, copies of relevant medical records, description of damages claimed.

Are punitive damages available in Florida nursing home cases?

Yes, under §400.0238. Capped at greater of 4× compensatory damages OR $1,000,000 when motivated by unreasonable financial gain. Uncapped when defendant had specific intent to harm (rare but powerful). 50% of any punitive award goes to the Quality of Long-Term Care Facility Improvement Trust Fund — not to plaintiff. This creates leverage but doesn't directly benefit individual plaintiffs.

What's the Florida Statute of Limitations for nursing home cases?

2 years from date of incident under §400.0236, with maximum 4 years from incident regardless of discovery (statute of repose). 6 years if fraud involved. 75-day pre-suit toll applies. Wrongful death: 2 years from date of death. Note: general negligence SOL was reduced from 4 to 2 years by HB 837 (2023) — affects any concurrent negligence claims.

Pending Florida Legal Issues

Active legal developments (as of April 2026):

  • HB 837 (2023) comparative fault 50% bar is being constitutional-challenged — FL Supreme Court pending as of 2024.
  • Whether HB 837 changed medical expense calculation rules apply to nursing home cases is unsettled.
  • Pre-suit investigation requirement (§400.0233) — 75-day toll, but procedural missteps often fatal.

Informational only — consult a licensed attorney.

Primary Sources

  • www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=0400-0499/0400/Sections/0400.023.html
  • www.flsenate.gov/Session/Bill/2023/837
  • seniorjustice.com/florida-statute-of-limitations-on-a-nursing-home-abuse-lawsuit

Other State Nursing Home Abuse Calculators

Texas

$250K non-econ cap (Ch. 74), 2003 tort reform

California

Elder Abuse Act (WIC §15600) enhanced damages

Illinois

Nursing Home Care Act (210 ILCS 45) — no caps

All States — Main Nursing Home Calculator

Nationwide ranges + warning signs + evidence guide

Related

Wrongful Death Calculator

For fatal nursing home cases

Damage Caps by State

State-by-state non-economic limits

Other Calculators for Florida

Each Florida calculator reflects state-specific laws (caps, statutes of limitations, comparative-negligence rules) and uses Florida verdict data where available.

Florida Car Accident Settlement Calculator →Florida Workers' Compensation Calculator →Florida Medical Malpractice Calculator →Florida Slip & Fall Settlement Calculator →Florida Dog Bite Settlement Calculator →Florida Wrongful Death Calculator →

Cities in Florida

Miami PI →

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The Claim Process

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Personal Injury FAQ

30+ plain-English answers.

Nursing Home Abuse Calculators by State

Nursing-home abuse settlement ranges and elder-law protections differ by state:

CaliforniaIllinoisTexas
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