Editorial photograph related to jobsite injury claims.

Florida Accident Guides

Florida Construction Accident Guide

OSHA standards, third-party liability, and product-liability analysis.

  • Florida statutory framework explained
  • Coverage layers identified
  • Free follow-up consultation

Understanding Construction Accident

OSHA standards, third-party liability, and product-liability analysis. The framework matters because Florida's rules differ from generic legal information online, and applying the right framework changes outcomes.

The Marin Law Offices represents jobsite injury claims claimants across Miami-Dade and Broward. This guide is published as free educational content. It does not replace a consultation, but it gives readers a clear picture of the Florida-specific framework so they can ask informed questions when they call.

Documentary photograph

What You Need to Know About Jobsite injury claims

Six concrete framework points.

  • Florida Statutory Anchor

    The specific Florida statute or federal regulation that controls the case framework.

  • Critical Deadlines

    Statute of limitations and notice requirements for this case type, including any 2023 changes.

  • Coverage Stack

    The insurance layers that typically apply, including PIP, BI, UM/UIM, MedPay, and umbrella.

  • Evidence Priorities

    What evidence matters most in this case type and how quickly it needs preservation.

  • Multi-Party Liability

    Who beyond the immediate defendant can be liable for this type of case.

  • Damages Categories

    What categories of damages are recoverable and how they are documented.

Common Jobsite injury claims Scenarios

Six scenarios this guide addresses.

Standard Cases

The most common configurations and how they typically proceed.

Catastrophic Cases

Surgical injury and long-recovery cases with expert damages workup.

Unidentified-Party Cases

Hit-and-run and unknown-defendant scenarios.

Fatal Cases

Wrongful death claims under the Florida Wrongful Death Act.

Multi-Party Cases

Configurations involving multiple at-fault parties or commercial defendants.

Disputed-Liability Cases

Where the initial fault picture is contested and documented evidence becomes decisive.

How the Case Moves

From first call to resolution.

  1. 1

    Free Consultation

    We learn what happened, identify available coverage, and outline the jobsite injury claims case plan.

  2. 2

    Evidence Preservation

    Scene photographs, witness statements, surveillance, and records preserved within days of intake.

  3. 3

    Documented Demand

    Medical workup tracked through maximum medical improvement, then a documented demand presented to the insurer.

  4. 4

    Suit if Needed

    Litigation when negotiation will not produce a fair recovery. Trial preparation runs alongside settlement work.

What Clients Say

★★★★★

5.0 from 50 Google reviews

★★★★★

“Donny has been a phenomenal person to work with during my legal representation. Very professional, supportive, honest, and will fight for your case.”
A

Adam

★★★★★

“What an amazing attorney. Always helpful, very attentive, very professional. I would recommend his firm to anyone needing a lawyer.”
D

Daniel

★★★★★

“Literally the best experience. 10/10 recommend!”
F

Frankeria

Representative Workflow

How a Construction Accident Case Gets Built

The Problem

A South Florida client with a jobsite injury situation receives a quick offer from the at-fault insurer that does not reflect the full available coverage or the long-term medical picture.

Our Approach

The firm preserves evidence within days of intake, identifies all available coverage layers under the Florida framework, and tracks the medical course through maximum medical improvement before presenting a documented demand.

The Outcome

Recovery proceeds against every available coverage layer with documented evidence in hand. The case reflects Florida's framework rather than the insurer's preferred framing.

  • Florida-specific

    Framework

  • All available

    Coverage layers

  • $0

    Up-front client cost

  • English & Spanish

    Languages

Documentary photograph of case-file work specific to jobsite injury claims.

Florida Construction Accident Guide Questions

What Florida statute controls jobsite injury claims? +
The applicable framework includes Florida-specific statutes governing negligence, comparative fault, and case-type-specific rules. The guide covers the major anchors. A consultation translates them to your specific situation, including any case-specific exceptions that apply.
What coverage usually applies to jobsite injury claims? +
Coverage analysis typically starts with PIP, then bodily injury liability of any at-fault party, then UM/UIM coverage on the injured person's own or household policy. Umbrella, commercial, and platform-specific coverage may also apply depending on the facts.
How long do I have to file? +
For most negligence-based injury claims, Florida's statute of limitations is two years from the date of injury for accidents on or after March 24, 2023. Government-entity and maritime claims often have shorter notice deadlines that can run in months.
What evidence should I preserve? +
Photographs, witness contact information, the police or incident report, medical records, and any insurance correspondence. Evidence preservation begins the moment of intake when you retain the firm, with formal spoliation letters to property owners or carriers as needed.
What if my jobsite injury case involves multiple defendants? +
Multi-party cases are routine. Each defendant's liability is evaluated independently. Multiple defendants often mean multiple insurance layers, which can substantially expand recovery compared to single-defendant cases.
Should I give a recorded statement? +
Not without legal advice. Adjusters at the at-fault insurer are collecting information to limit the claim. The firm provides necessary information through controlled channels later. Anything you say can be used against the claim, even if it seems harmless.
How long do I have to file? +
Florida's statute of limitations for most negligence-based injury claims is two years from the date of injury for accidents on or after March 24, 2023. Government-entity and maritime claims often have shorter notice deadlines that can run in months. Acting early protects every available option.
What if I was partially at fault? +
Florida applies modified comparative negligence. Your recovery is reduced by your share of fault and barred only if you are more than 50 percent at fault. Documented evidence typically reduces overstated fault arguments in negotiation.
Do you offer consultations in Spanish? +
Yes. The firm handles full case work in English and Spanish, including consultations, court appearances, and document review. Lead attorney Donny Marin is personally fluent in both languages, and case communication continues in your preferred language.
What if my situation does not match anything on this page exactly? +
That is normal. Every case has its own facts, and general educational content cannot anticipate every variation. The free consultation translates the general framework into a case-specific plan, including the deadlines that apply to your dates, the coverage layers that apply to your policies, and the evidence priorities that apply to your facts. The 20 to 45 minute conversation typically produces a clear written recap by email afterward.
What should I do before scheduling a consultation? +
Gather any documents you have: the police or incident report, photographs of the scene and injuries, any correspondence from the at-fault insurer, your own insurance declarations pages, and any medical records or bills you have received. If you do not have everything, the firm gathers the rest through formal channels once retained. Bringing what you have to the consultation makes the conversation more specific and more useful.
Blue-hour Miami cityscape used as a calm backdrop for the consultation call to action.

Free Consultation · English & Spanish

Questions About jobsite injury claims? Talk to Us.

A free, no-pressure call clarifies your case-specific situation. No obligation.