Florida is a two-party (all-party) consent state under FL §934.03. Recording any conversation — in person or by phone — without the consent of all parties is a third-degree felony punishable by up to 5 years in prison. This is one of the strictest recording consent laws in the nation.
Florida Statute §934.03 makes it illegal to intercept or record any oral, electronic, or wire communication without the consent of all parties. This two-party (all-party) consent requirement applies to in-person conversations, phone calls, video calls, and any other form of oral communication. The law applies regardless of whether you are a participant in the conversation. Recording a conversation without all-party consent is a third-degree felony, punishable by up to 5 years in prison and a $5,000 fine. Evidence obtained through illegal recording is inadmissible in court. This has significant implications for security cameras: any camera system that captures audio of conversations (doorbell cameras, outdoor microphones) must have the consent of all parties being recorded. Video-only recording without audio in public spaces is generally permissible. FL §810.145 separately addresses video voyeurism, prohibiting recording in private places. The strict recording law means Miami-Dade residents should be cautious with doorbell cameras (Ring, Nest) that have audio capabilities — recording a delivery person's conversation without consent could technically violate the statute.
Recording without all-party consent: third-degree felony, up to 5 years prison, $5,000 fine. Civil liability also applies — recorded party can sue for damages.
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