Florida EEOC filing deadline
Florida is a 300-day federal jurisdiction for Title VII bases. The 300-day extension under 42 U.S.C. §2000e-5(e)(1) rule applies, with dual-filing mechanics under 29 CFR §1601.13.
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Details
State FEPA
State filing window
Runs independently of the federal 180/300 clock. Some states impose a tighter internal deadline; others (CA 3-year, IL/OH 730-day post-amendment) extend well past the federal window.
Worksharing posture
Worksharing agreement in effect. Filing with either the EEOC or the state agency typically constitutes filing with both.
Federal circuit
Florida is in the 11th Circuit. Federal appellate treatment of Morgan (2002) continuing-violation doctrine and constructive-discharge doctrine varies by circuit and is reviewed quarterly.
Where Florida state law goes beyond federal
Title VII covers race, color, religion, sex, and national origin. ADA adds disability; ADEA adds age 40+; GINA adds genetic information. Many state FEPAs cover additional bases that federal law does not — those gaps are real grounds even when the federal claim is closed.
Shared with federal · 7
- RaceTitle VII
- ColorTitle VII
- ReligionTitle VII
- SexTitle VII
- National originTitle VII
- Age (40+)ADEA
- DisabilityADA
State-only bases · 2
- Marital status
- Pregnancy
These bases are covered only by state law in this jurisdiction. Federal Title VII / ADA / ADEA / GINA do not reach them — but state-court remedies under the state FEPA statute may still be available.
State-specific notes
- FCRA state filing deadline is 365 days from alleged violation (Fla. Stat. §760.11(1)) — verify cite. FCHR has 180 days to investigate before charging party may file civil action; if FCHR makes no determination within 180 days, charging party may proceed to court (Fla. Stat. §760.11(8)) — verify.
FAQ
What is the EEOC charge filing deadline in Florida?
300 days from the most recent discriminatory act under 42 U.S.C. §2000e-5(e)(1). Florida has a designated Fair Employment Practices Agency (Florida Commission on Human Relations (FCHR)) enforcing a same-basis state anti-discrimination law, which triggers the 300-day extension under 29 CFR §1601.13.
Does Florida have a state-level discrimination agency?
Yes — Florida Commission on Human Relations (FCHR) (https://fchr.myflorida.com/). Operating statute: Fla. Stat. ch. 760 (Florida Civil Rights Act of 1992 / FCRA, §760.01 et seq.). Covered protected bases include race, color, religion, sex, national_origin, age, disability, marital_status, pregnancy.
Which federal circuit does Florida sit in?
Florida is in the 11th Circuit. Federal appeals from district courts in Florida go to that Circuit. Continuing-violation doctrine treatment under Morgan (2002) varies by circuit; consult an employment-law attorney before relying on circuit-specific applications.
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