Fla. Stat. 28.246
Payment of court-related fines or other monetary penalties, fees, charges, and costs; partial payments; distribution of funds


(1)

The clerk of the circuit court shall report the following information to the Legislature and the Florida Clerks of Court Operations Corporation on a form, and using guidelines developed by the clerks of court, through their association and in consultation with the Office of the State Courts Administrator:The total amount of mandatory fees, service charges, and costs assessed; the total amount underassessed, if any, which is the amount less than the minimum amount required by law to be assessed; and the total amount collected.The total amount of discretionary fees, service charges, and costs assessed and the total amount collected.The total amount of mandatory fines and other monetary penalties assessed; the total amount underassessed, if any, which is the amount less than the minimum amount required by law to be assessed; and the total amount collected.The total amount of discretionary fines and other monetary penalties assessed and the total amount collected.

The clerk, in reporting to the Legislature and corporation, shall separately identify the monetary amount assessed and subsequently discharged or converted to community service, to a judgment or lien, or to time served. The form developed by the clerks shall include separate entries for recording the amount discharged and the amount converted. If a court waives, suspends, or reduces an assessment as authorized by law, the portion waived, suspended, or reduced may not be deemed assessed or underassessed for purposes of the reporting requirements of this section. The clerk also shall report a collection rate for mandatory and discretionary assessments. In calculating the rate, the clerk shall deduct amounts discharged or converted from the amount assessed. The clerk shall submit the report on an annual basis 90 days after the end of the county fiscal year. The clerks and the courts shall develop by October 1, 2012, the form and guidelines to govern the accurate and consistent reporting statewide of assessments as provided in this section. The clerk shall use the new reporting form and guidelines in submitting the report for the county fiscal year ending September 30, 2013, and for each year thereafter.

(a)

The total amount of mandatory fees, service charges, and costs assessed; the total amount underassessed, if any, which is the amount less than the minimum amount required by law to be assessed; and the total amount collected.

(b)

The total amount of discretionary fees, service charges, and costs assessed and the total amount collected.

(c)

The total amount of mandatory fines and other monetary penalties assessed; the total amount underassessed, if any, which is the amount less than the minimum amount required by law to be assessed; and the total amount collected.

(d)

The total amount of discretionary fines and other monetary penalties assessed and the total amount collected.

(2)

The clerk of the circuit court shall establish and maintain a system of accounts receivable for court-related fees, charges, and costs.

(3)

Court costs, fines, and other dispositional assessments shall be enforced by order of the courts, collected by the clerks of the circuit and county courts, and disbursed in accordance with authorizations and procedures as established by general law.

(4)(a)

Each clerk of the circuit court shall accept partial payments for each case type for court-related fees, service charges, court costs, and fines in accordance with the terms of an established payment plan developed by the clerk.An individual seeking to defer payment of fees, service charges, court costs, or fines imposed by operation of law or order of the court under any provision of general law shall apply to the clerk for enrollment in a payment plan. The clerk shall enter into a payment plan with an individual who the court determines is indigent for costs. It is the responsibility of an individual who is released from incarceration and has outstanding court obligations to contact the clerk within 30 days after release to pay fees, service charges, court costs, and fines in full, or to apply for enrollment in a payment plan.
A monthly payment amount, calculated based upon all fees and all anticipated fees, service charges, court costs, and fines, is presumed to correspond to the person’s ability to pay if the amount does not exceed the greater of:
Two percent of the person’s annual net income, as defined in s. 27.52(1), divided by 12; or
Twenty-five dollars.
Any amount required by the clerk as down payment to initially establish a payment plan shall be the lesser of 10 percent of the total amount owed or $100. The amount does not include the imposition of a service charge pursuant to s. 28.24(27)(b) or (c). The clerk shall establish all terms of a payment plan, and the court may review the reasonableness of the payment plan.

(4)(a)

Each clerk of the circuit court shall accept partial payments for each case type for court-related fees, service charges, court costs, and fines in accordance with the terms of an established payment plan developed by the clerk.

(b)

An individual seeking to defer payment of fees, service charges, court costs, or fines imposed by operation of law or order of the court under any provision of general law shall apply to the clerk for enrollment in a payment plan. The clerk shall enter into a payment plan with an individual who the court determines is indigent for costs. It is the responsibility of an individual who is released from incarceration and has outstanding court obligations to contact the clerk within 30 days after release to pay fees, service charges, court costs, and fines in full, or to apply for enrollment in a payment plan.A monthly payment amount, calculated based upon all fees and all anticipated fees, service charges, court costs, and fines, is presumed to correspond to the person’s ability to pay if the amount does not exceed the greater of:
Two percent of the person’s annual net income, as defined in s. 27.52(1), divided by 12; or
Twenty-five dollars.
Any amount required by the clerk as down payment to initially establish a payment plan shall be the lesser of 10 percent of the total amount owed or $100. The amount does not include the imposition of a service charge pursuant to s. 28.24(27)(b) or (c). The clerk shall establish all terms of a payment plan, and the court may review the reasonableness of the payment plan.
1. A monthly payment amount, calculated based upon all fees and all anticipated fees, service charges, court costs, and fines, is presumed to correspond to the person’s ability to pay if the amount does not exceed the greater of:a. Two percent of the person’s annual net income, as defined in s. 27.52(1), divided by 12; orb. Twenty-five dollars.
a. Two percent of the person’s annual net income, as defined in s. 27.52(1), divided by 12; or
b. Twenty-five dollars.
2. Any amount required by the clerk as down payment to initially establish a payment plan shall be the lesser of 10 percent of the total amount owed or $100. The amount does not include the imposition of a service charge pursuant to s. 28.24(27)(b) or (c). The clerk shall establish all terms of a payment plan, and the court may review the reasonableness of the payment plan.

(5)

When receiving partial payment of fees, service charges, court costs, and fines, clerks shall distribute funds according to the following order of priority:That portion of fees, service charges, court costs, and fines to be remitted to the state for deposit into the General Revenue Fund.That portion of fees, service charges, court costs, and fines required to be retained by the clerk of the court or deposited into the Clerks of the Court Trust Fund within the Department of Revenue.That portion of fees, service charges, court costs, and fines payable to state trust funds, allocated on a pro rata basis among the various authorized funds if the total collection amount is insufficient to fully fund all such funds as provided by law.That portion of fees, service charges, court costs, and fines payable to counties, municipalities, or other local entities, allocated on a pro rata basis among the various authorized recipients if the total collection amount is insufficient to fully fund all such recipients as provided by law.

To offset processing costs, clerks may impose either a per-month service charge pursuant to s. 28.24(27)(b) or a one-time administrative processing service charge at the inception of the payment plan pursuant to s. 28.24(27)(c).

(a)

That portion of fees, service charges, court costs, and fines to be remitted to the state for deposit into the General Revenue Fund.

(b)

That portion of fees, service charges, court costs, and fines required to be retained by the clerk of the court or deposited into the Clerks of the Court Trust Fund within the Department of Revenue.

(c)

That portion of fees, service charges, court costs, and fines payable to state trust funds, allocated on a pro rata basis among the various authorized funds if the total collection amount is insufficient to fully fund all such funds as provided by law.

(d)

That portion of fees, service charges, court costs, and fines payable to counties, municipalities, or other local entities, allocated on a pro rata basis among the various authorized recipients if the total collection amount is insufficient to fully fund all such recipients as provided by law.

(6)

A clerk of court shall pursue the collection of any fees, service charges, fines, court costs, and liens for the payment of attorney fees and costs pursuant to s. 938.29 which remain unpaid after 90 days by referring the account to a private attorney who is a member in good standing of The Florida Bar or collection agent who is registered and in good standing pursuant to chapter 559. In pursuing the collection of such unpaid financial obligations through a private attorney or collection agent, the clerk of the court must have attempted to collect the unpaid amount through a collection court, collections docket, or other collections process, if any, established by the court, find this to be cost-effective and follow any applicable procurement practices. The collection fee, including any reasonable attorney’s fee, paid to any attorney or collection agent retained by the clerk may be added to the balance owed in an amount not to exceed 40 percent of the amount owed at the time the account is referred to the attorney or agent for collection. The clerk shall give the private attorney or collection agent the application for the appointment of court-appointed counsel regardless of whether the court file is otherwise confidential from disclosure.

Source: Section 28.246 — Payment of court-related fines or other monetary penalties, fees, charges, and costs; partial payments; distribution of funds, https://www.­flsenate.­gov/Laws/Statutes/2024/0028.­246 (accessed Aug. 7, 2025).

28.01
Bond of circuit court clerks
28.001
Definitions
28.02
Bond of circuit court clerks
28.03
Obligation of sureties
28.04
Justification of sureties
28.05
Surety companies
28.06
Power of clerk to appoint deputies
28.07
Place of office
28.09
Clerk ad interim
28.12
Clerk of the board of county commissioners
28.13
Papers and electronic filings
28.14
Records, judgments, orders, and decrees prior to circuit courts
28.15
Records from superior courts
28.16
Certain records from prior county courts
28.24
Service charges
28.29
Recording of orders and judgments
28.30
Records
28.31
Notice to county commissioners of intent to destroy
28.32
Destruction of certain instruments
28.33
Investment of county funds by the clerk of the circuit court
28.34
Salary discrimination based on gender or race
28.35
Florida Clerks of Court Operations Corporation
28.36
Budget procedure
28.37
Fines, fees, service charges, and costs remitted to the state
28.42
Manual of filing fees, charges, costs, and fines
28.44
Clerk discontinuance of court-related functions
28.45
Provision of financial data to Executive Office of the Governor
28.47
Recording notification service
28.071
Clerk’s seal
28.101
Petitions and records of dissolution of marriage
28.211
Clerk to keep docket
28.212
Minutes of court proceedings
28.213
Disposal of physical evidence filed as exhibits
28.215
Pro se assistance
28.222
Clerk to be county recorder
28.223
Probate records
28.231
Service charges by clerks of courts
28.235
Advance payments by clerk of circuit court
28.241
Filing fees for trial and appellate proceedings
28.242
Service charges retained when case laid in wrong venue
28.243
Personal liability for accepting checks
28.244
Refunds
28.245
Transmittal of funds to Department of Revenue
28.246
Payment of court-related fines or other monetary penalties, fees, charges, and costs
28.345
State access to records
28.2221
Electronic access to official records
28.2222
Public records capital improvement plan
28.2225
Title fraud prevention through identity verification
28.2401
Service charges and filing fees in probate matters
28.2402
Cost recovery
28.2405
Comprehensive Case Information System
28.2457
Mandatory monetary assessments
28.22205
Electronic filing process

Current through Fall 2025

§ 28.246. Payment of court-related fines or other monetary penalties, fees, charges, & costs; partial payments; distribution of funds's source at flsenate​.gov