Summary
Construction lawsuits in Florida can stem from many different sources: defects, delays, payment disputes, safety violations, and more. While it’s tempting to crown a single “#1 cause,” the truth is that the industry is too complex and dynamic for such a simple answer. Still, one issue rises to the top again and again: construction defects. In this blog, I’ll explain why, cite what the industry says, and walk you through Florida’s unique Chapter 558 process.
Disclaimer: This blog is for informational purposes only and is not intended as legal advice. If you are facing a construction-related dispute, always consult with a qualified attorney for guidance specific to your situation.
Why There’s No Clear “#1 Cause” of Lawsuits
If you ask ten lawyers and ten contractors what causes the most lawsuits in construction, you’ll probably get twenty different answers. That’s because the construction world is a complicated stew of money, schedules, codes, materials, contracts, and human error. One year, payment disputes may dominate; another year, it might be workplace safety.
That said, construction defects consistently appear at or near the top of every list of legal headaches in the industry. Risk & Insurance, for example, ranks defect claims as one of the top litigation risks contractors face, right alongside worker safety issues (Source: Risk & Insurance, 2022). The law firm Jones Day has called defect litigation an “evergreen” challenge for builders, meaning it never goes away (Source: Jones Day Construction Litigation Report, 2023).
In Florida specifically, several legal publications note that defect litigation remains a leading driver of disputes, although there is no single authoritative ranking that declares it the undisputed #1 cause (Source: Florida Bar Journal, 2021).
Why Construction Defects Lead the Pack
Defects can arise from:
- Design flaws – Plans that don’t meet code or aren’t constructible.
- Workmanship errors – Mistakes in concrete, waterproofing, roofing, stucco, etc.
- Material failures – Products that don’t perform as advertised.
- Maintenance gaps – Buildings where routine upkeep isn’t done, leading to damage blamed on construction.
Florida is particularly defect-prone for three reasons:
- The coastal climate – Salt, humidity, and hurricanes are unforgiving.
- Aging building stock – Many condos built in the 1970s–90s are now showing their age.
- Rapid development – Fast construction cycles sometimes lead to quality shortcuts.
It’s the perfect recipe for disputes. And when problems show up years later, lawyers get called.
Chapter 558: Florida’s Pre-Lawsuit Process
In Florida, defect disputes are supposed to go through Chapter 558 of the Florida Statutes before hitting the courtroom. This is called the “pre-suit notice and right-to-cure” process. Here’s how it works:
- The property owner (or condo association) serves a notice of construction defects to the contractor, design professional, or supplier.
- The contractor has the right to inspect the alleged defects.
- The contractor can respond with an offer to repair, settle, or reject the claim.
- If no resolution is reached, then a lawsuit may follow.
The intent was to reduce lawsuits by encouraging settlement before trial. In practice, many say it just adds another procedural step without cutting down litigation much (Source: Florida Statutes Chapter 558; Florida Bar Journal, 2021).
Different Perspectives
Some attorneys argue that payment disputes or delays actually generate more claims than defects. That’s true in certain markets—especially in heavy civil or public projects where change orders and late payments run rampant. Others point to OSHA violations and worker injuries as massive sources of liability.
But here’s the difference: many of those disputes settle faster, while defect litigation tends to drag on for years. Defect cases involve layers of experts, destructive testing, insurance carriers, and finger-pointing between contractors, subs, architects, and suppliers. That’s why, while not always the “most numerous,” they remain the most feared and expensive lawsuits in Florida construction.
Bibliography
- Source: Risk & Insurance, “The Top Litigation Risks in Construction,” 2022.
- Source: Jones Day, “Construction Litigation Report,” 2023.
- Source: Florida Bar Journal, “The Ongoing Challenge of Defect Claims,” 2021.
- Source: Florida Statutes Chapter 558 (leg.state.fl.us).
- Source: American Bar Association, “Managing Construction Defect Litigation,” 2022.
For additional information you can access the following:
- Associated General Contractors of America – www.agc.org
- Florida Bar – www.floridabar.org
| Cause of Lawsuit | Typical Triggers | Florida Angle | Legal Framework / Notes | Common Parties Involved | Key Evidence Sought | Risk/Cost Profile (Low/Med/High) | Typical Resolution Path |
| Construction Defects (Design/Workmanship/Materials) | Water intrusion; concrete spalling; envelope failures; code noncompliance; latent defects | Coastal exposure, aging condos, milestone inspections and SIRS driving discovery | Ch. 558 pre-suit notice; statute of limitations/repose; condo statutes; building code | Owners/HOAs, GCs, subs, design professionals, manufacturers, insurers | Destructive testing, expert reports, plans/specs, photos, NOAs, inspection logs | High | Pre-suit Chapter 558 process → mediation/repair offer → litigation if unresolved |
| Payment / Nonpayment (Breach, Retainage, Final Pay) | Withheld progress payments; disputed retainage; change-order nonpayment | Frequent in boom/bust cycles and hurricane rebuilds | Florida lien law (construction liens); contract pay-when-paid clauses | GCs, subs, owners, lenders, sureties | Pay apps, lien releases, schedule of values, emails, contract terms | Medium | Demand letters → liens → mediation/arbitration → litigation |
| Delay / Disruption / Acceleration | Schedule overruns; owner changes; RFIs; unforeseen conditions; productivity loss | Hurricane season impacts; utilities/permits; condo access logistics | Liquidated damages; no-damage-for-delay clauses; Eichleay formulas in some cases | Owners, GCs, subs, schedulers, experts | Baselines/updates (CPM), daily reports, RFIs, weather logs | Medium to High | Negotiated COs → mediation → arbitration/litigation |
| Insurance Coverage Disputes | Denial based on workmanship exclusions; collapse definitions; water damage exclusions | Post-storm claims; interplay with property and CGL policies | Policy language; notice requirements; appraisal provisions; bad-faith statutes | Owners/HOAs, carriers, contractors, public adjusters | Policies, claim files, engineering reports, photos, timelines | Medium to High | Appraisal/mediation → coverage litigation |
| Change Orders / Scope Creep | Disputed scope; pricing markups; undocumented directives | Common in façade and concrete repair where hidden damage appears | Contract notice provisions; written-change-order clauses | Owners, GCs, subs, inspectors | CO logs, meeting minutes, emails, field directives | Medium | Negotiation → mediation → litigation/arbitration |
| Design Errors vs. Constructability Conflicts | Unbuildable details; coordination clashes; RFIs stall progress | High-rise envelope details; NOA mismatches; floodplain elevations | Standard of care for professionals; economic loss doctrines | Owners, A/E teams, GCs, BIM coordinators | Plans, clash-detection reports, RFI logs, addenda | Medium | Negotiation among A/E & GC → mediated settlement → suit if unresolved |
| Safety / OSHA Claims (Spillover Civil Liability) | Serious injuries; fall protection failures; trenching incidents | Roofing and high-rise work; scaffolding; hot South FL climate risks | OSHA regs; workers’ comp exclusivity; third-party liability angles | Injured workers, employers, subs, site safety firms | OSHA findings, safety manuals, JSAs, training records, videos | High (human and financial) | Agency investigation → comp/third‑party suits |
| Warranty / Punchlist / Latent Defects | Post-turnover failures; owner move-in complaints; stucco/roof leaks | Condo turnovers; developer-to-association transitions | Contractual warranty clauses; implied warranties; statutes of repose | Developers, HOAs, GCs, subs | Warranty logs, service tickets, punchlists, photos | Low to Medium (can escalate) | Notice to warrantor → repair/replacement → litigation if denied |
| Bond / Surety Claims | Performance default; nonpayment to subs/suppliers | Public work; hurricane rebuilds with tight schedules | Miller Act/Little Miller Act; bond forms and conditions precedent | Owners, GCs, sureties, subs, suppliers | Bond, notices, default letters, takeover agreements | Medium | Surety investigation → takeover/tender → litigation |
| Procurement / Bid Protests (Public) | Award disputes; responsiveness/responsibility challenges | Counties/municipalities, school boards, FDOT work | Local ordinances; Florida APA; protest deadlines | Bidders, agencies, evaluators | Bid tabs, scoring sheets, proposals, RFP addenda | Low to Medium | Administrative protest → hearing → appeal |
