Florida — FL
Florida listings must comply with 7 protected classes under the federal Fair Housing Act. ListingKit scans every word before you publish.
Florida follows the federal Fair Housing Act. Check local ordinances for your specific market — many cities and counties have broader protections.
Federal — applies everywhere
These are the patterns that most frequently appear in Florida Fair Housing complaints and MLS submission rejections.
Familial status violations are especially common — avoid 'perfect for retirees,' '55+ community' language unless the property qualifies under HOPA
Age-related language implying a property is unsuitable for families with children
Neighborhood descriptions referencing demographics or lifestyle
Religious references: proximity to a specific house of worship as a selling point
Every kit is scanned across eight violation categories before it reaches you. Prohibited language is auto-corrected. A compliance certificate documents every scan.
Race, color, and national origin references
Religion and religious institution references
Familial status language (children, families, age preferences)
Disability and accessibility language
Sex and gender-coded room names
Source of income discrimination (Section 8, vouchers)
Coded language acting as proxies for protected classes
Age-related exclusionary language
Upload listing photos and get a Fair Housing compliant MLS description, social posts, and PDF flyer — every word scanned across all 7 protected classes that apply in Florida.
Try ListingKit FreeFlorida follows the federal Fair Housing Act, which protects seven classes: Race, Color, Religion, Sex, National Origin, Familial Status, and Disability. Always check local ordinances — many cities and counties add protections beyond state law.
Familial status violations are especially common — avoid 'perfect for retirees,' '55+ community' language unless the property qualifies under HOPA. Age-related language implying a property is unsuitable for families with children. Neighborhood descriptions referencing demographics or lifestyle. Religious references: proximity to a specific house of worship as a selling point. Run every listing description through a compliance checker before MLS submission.
Florida follows federal Fair Housing law, which protects seven classes. Individual cities and counties in Florida may have broader local protections — always verify applicable ordinances for the specific property location.
ListingKit scans every generated listing description, social media post, and marketing copy against all eight Fair Housing violation categories — covering federal law and common state extensions. When prohibited or risky language is detected, it is automatically corrected and flagged. Every kit includes a downloadable compliance certificate documenting the scan results.
Working in multiple states?
View Fair Housing guides for all 50 states →