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2026 Florida Legislative Session Updates Affecting Professional Engineers

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Summary

FBPE Executive Director Zana Raybon summarizes outcomes from the 2026 Florida Legislative Session. CS/SB 800 (awaiting Governor's signature) would establish escalating fines for repeat unlicensed practice violations: $10,000 for 2nd offense, $15,000 for 3rd, $20,000 for 4th, and $25,000 for 5th and subsequent violations. CS/HB 803 would include engineers in the 'private provider' definition, authorizing them to approve building plans, perform inspections, and serve as authorized representatives for permitting. HB 607 died in committee.

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What changed

The 2026 Florida Legislative Session concluded with two bills affecting professional engineers awaiting the Governor's signature. CS/SB 800 proposes escalating the fine for unlicensed practice from $5,000 to $10,000-$25,000 depending on the number of prior violations. CS/HB 803 would expand engineers' scope by including them in the 'private provider' definition, authorizing plan approvals and inspections outside government jurisdiction.

Licensed engineers and engineering firms should monitor the Governor's action on pending bills, ensure all work is performed by properly licensed professionals, clearly define team member roles, and accurately represent qualifications. Engineers serving as private providers should remain mindful of professional responsibilities and liability exposure.

Penalties

CS/SB 800 would impose escalating fines for repeat unlicensed engineering violations: $10,000 (2nd), $15,000 (3rd), $20,000 (4th), $25,000 (5th+); current law provides $5,000 per count.

Archived snapshot

Apr 18, 2026

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BY ZANA RAYBON, FBPE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR & FEMC PRESIDENT

Now that the 2026 Florida Legislative Session has concluded, I want to share several updates that are important to the practice of engineering in Florida.

A number of bills passed during this year’s session, including CS/SB 800 (Unlicensed Activity) and CS/HB 803 (Building Permits and Inspections), are currently awaiting action by the Governor and have not yet been signed into law.

Although this session did not produce sweeping changes to Chapter 471, Florida Statutes, CS/SB 800 would reinforce the importance of licensure, strengthen enforcement, and refine disciplinary authority related to the practice of engineering. These proposed changes are consistent with the Board’s mission to protect the public by helping ensure that engineering services are performed competently and ethically.

CS/SB 800, the companion to CS/HB 839, would amend section 471.033, Florida Statutes, to establish an escalating fine schedule for repeat violations involving the unlicensed practice of engineering. Current law provides for a $5,000 fine for each count or separate offense. Under the bill, that fine would increase to $10,000 for a second violation, $15,000 for a third violation, $20,000 for a fourth violation, and $25,000 for a fifth and each subsequent violation.

This proposal reflects a continued effort to protect the public and uphold the value of professional licensure. Licensed engineers and firms should ensure that engineering services are performed only by properly licensed professionals, that each team member’s role is clearly defined, and that qualifications and services are represented accurately.

HB 607, which died in committee, would have made broader changes to professional licensing boards within the Department of Business and Professional Regulation. Among other things, it proposed renaming, removing, and redesignating certain boards, commissions, and councils; shifting licensing authority in some cases from individual boards to DBPR; and eliminating certain continuing education requirements.

CS/HB 803 and related construction legislation, including HB 405 (Commercial Construction Projects), would affect the broader permitting and development environment. Under HB 803, engineers would be expressly included in the definition of a “private provider.” Within the scope of their licenses, engineers would be authorized to approve building plans, perform building code inspections, and serve as duly authorized representatives in providing those services. The bill would also require local jurisdictions to reduce permit fees when an owner uses a private provider, reflecting the cost savings from plan reviews and inspections no longer performed by the jurisdiction.

Engineers serving in these roles should remain mindful of their professional responsibilities, their potential liability exposure, and the need to comply with all applicable standards and requirements.

As always, the Board will continue to monitor legislative and regulatory developments, including ongoing discussions related to professional licensing structure and oversight. Our focus remains unchanged: to protect the health, safety, and welfare of the public by ensuring that the practice of engineering in Florida meets the highest standards.

I encourage all licensees to remain informed, engaged, and committed to upholding the principles that define the engineering profession.

Named provisions

471.033, Florida Statutes

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
FBPE
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Engineers Construction firms
Industry sector
5413 Architecture & Engineering
Activity scope
Professional licensing Building inspections Permitting
Geographic scope
Florida US-FL

Taxonomy

Primary area
Professional Services
Operational domain
Regulatory Affairs
Topics
Real Estate Consumer Protection

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