You followed your doctor’s instructions. You trusted the diagnosis. You went through the procedure. And now something is wrong that was not wrong before, and the provider is not giving you a straight answer about why.
At Your Insurance Attorney, our Florida medical malpractice lawyers investigate what happened, establish whether negligence caused your harm, and pursue the compensation your situation calls for.
Medical malpractice cases in Florida involve some of the strictest procedural requirements in the country, and the filing clock starts earlier than most people realize. We serve clients throughout Miami, Maitland, Atlanta, Colorado Springs, Wilmington, and Long Beach, in English and in Spanish.
Consultations are free and we work on contingency, meaning you pay nothing unless we recover on your case. Call (888) 570-5677 today.

A bad outcome is not automatically malpractice. Malpractice requires proof that the provider fell below the accepted standard of care and that failure directly caused your harm. Not every negative result indicates negligence, what the law looks for is a specific, identifiable failure.
This distinction matters because insurance companies and defense teams use it aggressively. Their first argument is almost always that what happened was an unfortunate risk, not a preventable error.
Establishing the difference requires an independent medical review and a corroborating opinion from a qualified professional, two things we work to obtain early in every case.
Common examples where the line between outcome and malpractice is crossed:
Call (888) 570-5677 for a free consultation with a Florida medical malpractice lawyer.
Two years from the date you discovered the injury — with an absolute four-year cap from the date of the alleged negligence. Under Florida Statute § 95.11(4)(b), this is the standard window. Missing it generally ends your right to pursue compensation regardless of how clear the negligence is.
Three situations that change this deadline:
The discovery rule — The two-year clock starts when you first connected your injury to a possible medical error, not necessarily when the error occurred. If you made that connection recently, you may still be within the filing window.
Fraud or concealment — If a provider actively concealed the malpractice, the window may extend to seven years from the date of the alleged act.
Minor claimants — Different rules may apply when the injured patient is a child.
One critical timing issue that most people miss: Florida requires a mandatory 90-day pre-suit investigation period before a lawsuit can be filed. That process alone adds several months to the timeline, which means acting well before the two-year deadline is not optional, it is necessary.
Before filing a medical malpractice lawsuit in Florida, you must complete a mandatory 90-day pre-suit process. Skip any part of it and a valid claim can be dismissed before it ever reaches a courtroom. This process is governed by Florida Statute § 766.106 and requires three specific steps:
Notice of Intent — A formal Notice of Intent to initiate litigation must be sent to every healthcare provider being named in the claim. This starts the 90-day clock.
Provider investigation period — The provider’s insurer has 90 days to investigate and respond. Some cases settle here. Others proceed to formal litigation.
Medical affidavit — Under Florida Statute § 766.102, a written corroborating opinion from a qualified medical professional confirming the provider deviated from the standard of care must be obtained before litigation begins.
This requirement exists to filter out claims without medical support and to encourage early resolution. It also means the pre-suit process is not a formality, it is a substantive legal hurdle that requires preparation, documentation, and the right medical expertise.
Our team manages this process on behalf of our clients from the first step.

If you are found more than 50% at fault, you may not be able to recover anything. Florida follows a modified comparative fault system under Florida Statute § 768.81, as amended in 2023. If your share of fault is 50% or below, your compensation is reduced proportionally by your percentage of responsibility.
In malpractice cases, comparative fault arguments typically arise when a provider claims the patient contributed to their own harm, by not disclosing relevant medical history, not following post-procedure instructions, or delaying care in a way that worsened the outcome.
These arguments are common and they are made strategically, often early in the process when a patient may not yet have legal representation.
This is one of the primary reasons why speaking with an attorney before giving any recorded statement to an insurer matters. How the facts are characterized in those early conversations can affect how fault is allocated throughout the entire case.
Medical expenses, lost income, pain and suffering, and long-term care costs are the core categories available in most Florida malpractice cases.
What applies to your situation depends on the severity of the harm, the impact on your ability to work, and your anticipated medical needs going forward:
Medical expenses — Past and future costs of treatment, surgery, rehabilitation, and ongoing care connected to the malpractice. Future medical needs are consistently underestimated in early settlement offers.
Lost wages and earning capacity — Income missed during recovery and reduced ability to earn going forward if the injury affects long-term employment.
Pain and suffering — Physical pain, emotional distress, mental anguish, and loss of enjoyment of life are recognized and compensable. These are the damages insurers most aggressively undervalue because they are harder to assign a number to.
Permanent disability or disfigurement — Long-term physical consequences that alter daily life and independence are part of the non-economic picture.
Wrongful death damages — If a loved one passed away due to medical negligence, surviving family members may pursue a separate wrongful death claim for loss of companionship and financial support.
One distinction that significantly affects claim value: Florida currently has no statutory cap on non-economic damages in most medical malpractice cases. Prior limits were struck down as unconstitutional by the Florida Supreme Court.
Pain and suffering damages are not artificially capped, which means the full human impact of the harm is compensable.
No. A consent form covers known risks, it does not authorize a provider to fall below the standard of care. If negligence occurred, the consent form does not close the door on a claim.
The consent process itself can also become a separate legal issue. If a provider failed to disclose a material risk before a procedure and you would have made a different decision had you known, a claim for lack of informed consent may exist alongside the malpractice claim. These are two distinct legal theories that can run together.
Yes, and this is not optional. Florida law requires a written corroborating opinion from a qualified medical professional confirming the provider deviated from the standard of care before a lawsuit can be filed.
This affidavit is a mandatory part of the pre-suit process under Florida Statute § 766.102. Your attorney works to identify the appropriate expert for your specific claim and obtains that opinion as part of case preparation.
Yes. Hospitals may be held liable for negligence by their staff members. Whether the provider was a hospital employee or an independent contractor affects how the claim is structured, but it does not prevent you from pursuing one against the facility. We evaluate both the individual provider and the institution when reviewing a case.
Most cases take two to four years or longer due to Florida’s procedural requirements and the complexity of medical evidence. Some cases settle during the mandatory 90-day pre-suit period. Others proceed to full litigation. The timeline depends on how the provider’s insurer responds, the complexity of the medical issues, and whether settlement is reached before trial.
At Your Insurance Attorney, we handle medical malpractice cases on a contingency fee basis. No upfront costs, no attorney fees unless we recover compensation for you. Your first consultation is free.
Yes. We serve clients throughout Florida and have offices in Maitland, Atlanta, Colorado Springs, Wilmington, and Long Beach. We handle medical malpractice cases across all locations we serve.

From the moment a medical incident is reported, the provider’s insurer begins building a defense. Your family should not be navigating that alone. At Your Insurance Attorney, we handle medical malpractice cases across Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, Colorado, and California, in English and in Spanish, with no cost to start and no fees unless we recover on your behalf.
Call (888) 570-5677. A free consultation is the clearest way to understand what your options actually look like.
2601 South Bayshore Drive 5th Floor
Miami, FL 33133
Ph: 888-570-5677
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We truly care about getting the best results for you. Our goal is to help you through powerful representation from start to finish. We work with clients all over the states of Florida, Georgia, Colorado, North Carolina, and Texas.