Updated
Updated · freedomforallamericans.org · Jun 16
Florida Sets 1-Year FCRA Lawsuit Deadline Under HB 1407, With 18-Month Limit After Agency Silence
Updated
Updated · freedomforallamericans.org · Jun 16

Florida Sets 1-Year FCRA Lawsuit Deadline Under HB 1407, With 18-Month Limit After Agency Silence

1 articles · Updated · freedomforallamericans.org · Jun 16

Summary

  • July 1, 2026 marks the start of Florida’s new FCRA lawsuit clock: workers get 1 year from the earlier of an FCHR reasonable-cause finding or an EEOC right-to-sue notice, or 18 months after filing if neither agency acts within 180 days.
  • HB 1407 is meant to end disputes over when Florida state-law claims expire after appellate courts split on whether an EEOC right-to-sue letter also triggered the FCRA filing period.
  • 300 days remains the usual deadline to file an EEOC charge in Florida, while FCHR complaints must be filed within 365 days; federal lawsuits still generally must be filed within 90 days after receiving an EEOC notice.
  • 35 days can still decide a case after an FCHR no-cause finding, because workers must request an administrative hearing within that window or risk losing the claim.
  • Florida workers and employers now face a stricter compliance regime, with internal HR complaints or appeals not stopping agency clocks and written dual-filing confirmation becoming more important.

Insights

How will Florida's new law affect discrimination claims filed before its July 1, 2026 effective date?
With federal enforcement priorities shifting, are corporate DEI initiatives in Florida now at greater legal risk?