What You Need to Know About Florida’s New Flood Disclosure Rules (Oct 1 2025) in the Fort Lauderdale Area

by Scott Morreau

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What You Need to Know About Florida’s New Flood Disclosure Rules (Oct 1 2025) in the Fort Lauderdale Area

Have you heard about the new flood-disclosure rules that go into effect on October 1, 2025 — and what they could mean if you’re buying, selling, or renting property in the greater Fort Lauderdale/Wilton Manors market?

TL;DR: Starting October 1, Florida’s law will require much more transparent flood-history disclosures from sellers, condo developers, and for the first time, landlords. Here in our region — where flooding, tides, and extreme weather are part of the story — this change helps buyers, renters and owners make smarter decisions. I’ll walk you through what the law says, why it matters locally, and how you should get ready.

What the Law Requires

The law in question expands the previously existing flood-disclosure requirements for residential property. Under Florida Statute § 689.302, sellers of residential real estate must provide a separate flood-disclosure form to a prospective buyer at or before contract execution. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}

What’s new this October:

  • Sellers must now disclose if they have **knowledge of any flooding that damaged the property** during their ownership. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}
  • The scope of “assistance for flood damage” is broadened — not just federal, but any source of flood-related assistance. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}
  • Developers of residential condominiums must also disclose flood damage, claims, and assistance during their ownership. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}
  • For the first time, landlords of residential properties (lease terms of one year or longer) will be required to provide a separate written flood-disclosure to prospective tenants. :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}

“Flooding” is also defined broadly in the law to include

  • Overflow of inland or tidal waters
  • Unusually rapid accumulation of runoff or surface waters
  • Sustained periods of standing water resulting from rainfall :contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}

Failure to provide the required disclosure may lead to legal consequences, particularly if a tenant or buyer suffers a substantial loss due to undisclosed flooding. :contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}

Why This Matters for the Fort Lauderdale / Wilton Manors Region

Here in South Florida, properties are more exposed to flooding risks than many other regions. We’re coastal, with salt-water intrusion, king‐tide events, heavy rainfall, and infrastructure that’s working hard to keep pace. For real estate, that means flood history and risk are part of every major transaction.

Because of this new law:

  • Buyers will gain more reliable disclosure about past flooding, whether the owner knew about it, made claims, or received assistance. That can affect negotiations, insurance costs, financing, and long-term value.
  • Sellers must prep earlier — you’ll need to dig into your property’s history and be ready to answer flood questions clearly and accurately.
  • Landlords will now be required to add flood disclosures into their lease workflows — if you’re renting or investing, this alters your due-diligence and documentation.

In our local market, that could influence everything from pricing and marketing of waterfront homes, to inspections of older properties in lower-elevation areas, to tenants’ confidence in leasing. Being ahead of the game gives you a competitive advantage and keeps you compliant.

What Sellers Should Do to Prepare

If you’re planning to list a home or condo in the Fort Lauderdale area, here’s what I recommend doing now:

  1. Review your property’s flood history. What you know matters: Did you ever have flooding? Did you file insurance claims? Did you receive aid? These are now disclosure items.
  2. Check your documentation. Pull any insurance records, FEMA or state assistance records, repair receipts, inspections. Having these ready helps clarify your position.
  3. Work with your agent and attorney early. Your listing paperwork needs to reflect the new law. It’s smart to get ahead of it rather than scramble when an offer comes in.
  4. Highlight mitigation efforts. If you’ve elevated, installed pumps, improved drainage, or upgraded insurance coverage — those are positive talking points in a market where flood risk looms large.

What Landlords & Investors Need to Know

For rental properties, this change is especially important.

If you’re a landlord or investor in the Fort Lauderdale/Wilton Manors region:

  • You’ll now need to provide a specific flood-disclosure form to prospective tenants (for leases of one year or longer) before lease execution. :contentReference[oaicite:8]{index=8}
  • Your standard lease package may need updating — disclosure forms, language about flood risk and tenant awareness, and documentation of what you “know” about the unit’s flood history.
  • When you’re acquiring new properties, factor in flood-mitigation cost, insurance premiums, and how disclosure may impact rental marketability or tenant expectations.

In short: the more transparent you are up front, the smoother your lease and management cycle will be.

What Buyers & Renters Should Ask

If you’re buying or renting in our area, you now have an extra layer of clarity built into the law — but you should still be proactive.

Here are three questions to make part of your conversation with your agent or landlord:

  • “Has the seller/landlord provided the flood-disclosure form?” If yes, review it carefully — it will tell you if they know of flood damage, claims, or assistance.
  • “What is the property’s flood history?” Even if the form is clean, ask about drainage, elevation, prior repairs, and local flood controls. A clean disclosure is a good start, but it doesn’t tell the full story alone.
  • “What’s my flood-insurance and mitigation outlook?” A higher-risk property might mean higher flood insurance, more maintenance, or special concessions. Knowing that ahead of time matters.

Final Takeaway

If you’re active in the Fort Lauderdale area real-estate market — as a buyer, seller, or landlord — the flood-disclosure law taking effect October 1 unlocks more transparency and shifts how everyone must prepare. It isn’t about scaring people. It’s about giving everyone clear information so we can make smart, confident decisions.

I’m here to help you navigate this change — we’ll make sure your next move is informed, strategic, and grounded in what the law now requires for South Florida’s unique water-first market.

Would you like help reviewing a disclosure form, evaluating a property’s flood history, or mapping out the next steps on your transaction? Let’s connect.

TL;DR Summary

  • October 1, 2025 brings expanded flood-disclosure rules in Florida covering sellers, developers and landlords.
  • In Fort Lauderdale-area markets, flood risk is already a major factor — this law raises the bar for transparency.
  • Sellers and landlords should prepare now by reviewing history, documentation and paperwork.
  • Buyers and renters gain more clarity — but should still ask smart questions about flood history and insurance.

About Scott Morreau

Scott Morreau, PA is a top-rated Realtor® and Broker Associate with Real Broker, LLC, specializing in residential real estate in Fort Lauderdale, Wilton Manors, Oakland Park, Pompano Beach, Dania Beach, and the greater Broward County area. Licensed since 2001 and active in South Florida since 2006, Scott has closed over $52 million in Florida real estate, including $7.1 million in the past year alone.

Ranked among the top 500 agents in the region with 70+ five-star reviews, Scott is a trusted resource for luxury and waterfront homes, investment deals (including 1031 exchanges), relocation, and LGBTQ+ clients. He is known for concierge-level preparation, expert market insight, and a client-first approach he calls A Better Real Estate Experience.

📲 Call or text Scott at (954) 562-5111 or visit Scott Morreau PA - Top Realtor Wilton Manors & Fort Lauderdale Real Estate

 

 

 

Disclaimer

This blog post is for general informational purposes only and should not be relied upon as legal, financial, or real estate advice, nor does it guarantee outcomes. Markets and conditions change, and the data reflects specific time periods and may not represent current conditions. Real estate decisions should be based on individual circumstances, independent verification, and guidance from qualified professionals. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Information and data are deemed reliable and sourced from reputable outlets such as MLS data, government reports, or established media, but are not guaranteed and may not apply to all situations. Content may have been drafted or edited with AI assistance and may contain errors or omissions. Reading this post does not create a client or fiduciary relationship with Scott Morreau, P.A., REALTOR®, or Real Broker, LLC.

 

Scott Morreau

"My job is to find and attract mastery-based agents to the office, protect the culture, and make sure everyone is happy! "

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