Post-Judgment Interest Rates in Florida
A judgment is not the finish line. It is the starting gate for recovery—and for accumulation. The moment the clerk enters a Florida money judgment, the debt begins to grow. Post-judgment interest transforms a static award into a dynamic obligation, one that increases as the debtor delays payment. For creditors who secured judgment after months of litigation and cost, that accumulated interest is not a windfall. It is compensation for the value of money withheld and the continued cost of enforcement. Yet the rules governing how interest accrues, when rates change, and where interest stops are layered with statutory nuance and procedural traps. Miss the details, and what should be a predictable calculation becomes a disputed line item in a collection dispute. Interest does not care whether the debtor is silent or defiant. It accrues by operation of law, not by choice. But capturing it requires precision at every stage: knowing which rate applies, when the clock starts, how payments are credited, and what happens when judgments cross state or federal lines. The difference between understanding these mechanics and relying on assumption is often measured in thousands of dollars left on the table. The Statutory Framework: Florida's Post-Judgment Interest Rate Florida Statutes § 55.03 sets the post-judgment interest framework for Florida state court judgments. The Chief Financial Officer determines and publishes the statutory rate on a quarterly basis, using the discount rate of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York as part of the statutory formula. The applicable rate is not static. For Florida judgments entered on or after January 1, 2011, the rate in effect when the judgment is obtained applies through the end of that calendar year, and the rate adjusts annually on January 1 of each following year until the judgment is paid. Older judgments may be governed by prior fixed-rate rules, which makes the judgment date critical. This is not compounding interest in the traditional sense. Florida law generally provides for simple interest on most state court judgments unless a contract, statute, or judgment provision clearly supplies a different rule. That distinction matters: simple interest accrues on the unpaid judgment balance, not on accumulated unpaid interest. A $100,000 judgment at 4% annual simple interest generates $4,000 per year while that principal remains unpaid—not $4,000 in year one and $4,160 in year two. Exceptions require careful drafting and careful review. If the underlying obligation—a loan agreement, lease, or merchant cash advance—contained a compounding interest provision, and the judgment expressly incorporates a valid post-judgment interest term, the contractual language may affect the calculation. But absent clear language carried into the judgment itself, a Florida state judgment should not be treated as automatically compounding. When the Clock Starts and When It Stops Post-judgment interest begins accruing the day the final judgment is entered by the clerk, not merely the day the order is signed by the judge or served on the debtor. In Florida, "entry" is a ministerial act: the clerk stamps and files the signed order, and the date stamp is the trigger. Any delay between signing and filing can affect the accrual timeline, and courts generally calculate post-judgment interest from the judgment's entry date. The clock runs continuously until the judgment is paid, settled, or otherwise satisfied in full. Partial payments do not pause accrual—they reduce the outstanding balance as credited, which in turn affects the daily interest charge going forward. A common misconception is that making a payment "stops the clock" for a grace period. It does not. Every unpaid dollar continues to generate its daily share of statutory interest. Once the judgment is fully paid or otherwise resolved, the judgment-holder should file the appropriate satisfaction of judgment so the court and public record reflect that the debt has been satisfied. Interest should not be used as leverage after full satisfaction, but until full payment or enforceable resolution occurs, the passage of time is not neutral. The longer negotiations extend, the larger the total payoff calculation may become. Federal Judgments and the Divergent Rate Federal judgments follow a different rule. Under 28 U.S.C. § 1961, post-judgment interest on federal court judgments accrues at a rate equal to the weekly average one-year constant maturity Treasury yield, calculated and published by the Administrative Office of the United States Courts. This rate changes weekly, and the applicable rate is the one in effect on the date of judgment entry. Federal post-judgment interest is computed daily and compounded annually under the federal statute. The federal rate often diverges from Florida's statutory rate—sometimes higher, sometimes lower—but a creditor who obtains judgment in federal court sitting in Florida generally cannot elect to apply the state rate simply because the underlying claim arose under Florida law. Absent a judgment that expressly incorporates a valid contractual post-judgment interest provision, the federal rate governs from entry through satisfaction, including in diversity cases. When a federal judgment is recorded as a lien in Florida county records, it carries the federal interest rate with it. This distinction matters in enforcement: the judgment-holder must track the correct rate, apply it consistently, and be prepared to defend the calculation if challenged in supplementary proceedings or garnishment disputes. Domesticating Out-of-State Judgments Florida's Uniform Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Act, codified at Florida Statutes § 55.501 et seq., allows out-of-state judgments to be domesticated and enforced as if they were originally entered in Florida. But the domesticated judgment does not automatically convert to Florida's interest rate. Instead, the judgment continues to accrue interest at the rate specified by the law of the state that originally entered it. The interest rate from the originating jurisdiction controls, regardless of whether it is higher or lower than Florida's statutory rate. This creates a tracking burden. A judgment-holder enforcing a Georgia judgment in Florida must calculate interest under Georgia law, not Florida law, even though enforcement activity occurs in Florida courts. The alternative—attempting to re-litigate the underlying claim in Florida to obtain a Florida judgment with a Florida rate—is almost never worth the cost or delay and may be barred by preclusion principles. How Payments Are Credited and the Order of Application When a judgment debtor makes a partial payment, the safest course is to identify the application of that payment in a written agreement, court order, or detailed accounting. Absent a controlling agreement or order, payments are commonly credited first to accrued interest and then to the outstanding principal balance. That order protects the creditor's ongoing entitlement to interest: by satisfying accrued interest first, the payment does not artificially reduce the interest-bearing balance while leaving old interest unresolved. Consider a hypothetical: A creditor holds a $50,000 judgment entered three years ago. Accrued interest totals $6,000. The debtor tenders $10,000. Applying the payment to interest first satisfies the $6,000 in arrears and reduces principal by $4,000, leaving a balance of $46,000 on which new interest accrues daily. If the payment were applied entirely to principal, the judgment balance would drop to $40,000—but $6,000 in interest would remain unpaid, complicating enforcement and potentially creating a dispute over what is owed. Settlement agreements should specify the application order in writing. When payment plans are negotiated, clarity about whether each installment pays interest-first or principal-first prevents later conflict and ensures both sides understand the true payoff timeline. Interest and Post-Judgment Costs Post-judgment costs—fees for recording liens, process server charges, deposition expenses in supplementary proceedings, and other enforcement outlays—may be recoverable in Florida, but they do not automatically bear interest merely because they were incurred during enforcement. Florida Statutes § 55.03 applies to the judgment amount itself, not to every cost incurred after entry. To earn interest on post-judgment costs, the creditor generally must return to court and obtain a supplemental or amended judgment or order that incorporates those costs into the judgment balance. Once merged into an amended judgment, the costs become part of the interest-bearing total. Until then, they remain a separate line item, collectible if properly awarded, but not necessarily growing. This procedural step is often overlooked. Creditors who incur significant enforcement costs and assume those costs will automatically accrue interest alongside the original judgment may discover, sometimes years later, that they have been chasing a static cost figure while interest accrued only on the judgment amount. A targeted motion after major enforcement expenses are incurred can prevent that gap. For creditors navigating enforcement across multiple tools—wage garnishment, bank levies, lien foreclosure—understanding how interest accumulates and where it stops is foundational to maximizing recovery. The mechanics are not intuitive, and the statutes are not forgiving of assumption. Each enforcement action, each partial payment, and each procedural misstep carries financial consequence measured in both time and unpaid obligation. Effective creditors rights and debt collection strategy accounts for interest from the moment judgment is entered, not as an afterthought during settlement. The difference between recovering what the judgment says and recovering what the judgment has become is the mastery of post-judgment interest rules. Every day a judgment remains unpaid, its value can grow by operation of law—but only if the creditor tracks it correctly, applies payments in the right order, and pursues supplemental relief when enforcement costs mount. The debtor's delay is expensive. The creditor's precision makes it recoverable. Closing Remarks If your Florida judgment is accruing interest but enforcement has stalled, if a debtor is making partial payments without clear application terms, or if you are enforcing a federal or out-of-state judgment and need to confirm the correct interest calculation, the cost of waiting can increase daily. Marcadis Law Firm has spent nearly fifty years turning judgments into collections with the precision and relentless advocacy that Florida creditors depend on. Contact us today to ensure your post-judgment interest is calculated correctly and your enforcement strategy captures every dollar owed. Frequently Asked Questions Does post-judgment interest automatically appear on the judgment itself? No. The final judgment typically states the principal amount awarded, and post-judgment interest accrues by operation of Florida Statutes § 55.03 without being spelled out in the order. The judgment-holder must calculate the accrued interest separately when seeking enforcement or negotiating settlement. Some judgments include a sentence stating that post-judgment interest will accrue at the statutory rate, but even without that language, the statute applies automatically to money judgments. Can a debtor challenge the amount of post-judgment interest claimed? Yes. A debtor may file a motion challenging the interest calculation if the creditor applies the wrong rate, miscalculates the accrual period, or fails to credit payments properly. Courts will require the judgment-holder to provide a detailed accounting showing the principal balance, the applicable rate, the start date, all payments received, and the method of application. Creditors who maintain precise records from the date of entry avoid these disputes and are better positioned to prevail when challenged. What happens to post-judgment interest if the judgment is appealed? Post-judgment interest generally continues to accrue during the pendency of an appeal unless the judgment is reversed, modified, or stayed in a manner that affects enforcement and the ultimate interest calculation. If the judgment is affirmed on appeal, interest typically accrues on the affirmed amount from the date of original entry through the date of satisfaction, covering the appellate period. If the judgment is reversed or modified, the interest calculation adjusts according to the appellate mandate and the judgment ultimately entered. Does Florida allow post-judgment interest on attorney's fees awarded in the judgment? Yes. Attorney's fees and costs that are included in the final judgment as part of the total amount due bear post-judgment interest just like the underlying principal. Once the court taxes costs and awards fees, and those amounts are incorporated into the judgment, they become part of the interest-bearing total under Florida Statutes § 55.03. However, fees and costs incurred after judgment—such as fees for enforcement proceedings—do not bear interest unless and until they are added to the judgment through a supplemental order. If a debtor files for bankruptcy after a Florida judgment is entered, does post-judgment interest stop? Not always in the way creditors or debtors assume. A bankruptcy filing triggers the automatic stay, which halts most collection activity, but the treatment of post-petition interest is governed by the Bankruptcy Code. For many unsecured claims, post-petition interest is not allowed as part of the creditor's claim against the bankruptcy estate. However, oversecured claims, solvent-debtor cases, nondischargeable debts, and other bankruptcy-specific exceptions may change the result. Interest that accrued between the date of judgment entry and the bankruptcy filing remains part of the claim and may be recoverable depending on the chapter and treatment of the debt. For more context on related enforcement timelines, see Statute of Limitations on Debt Collection: When Florida Claims Expire. References - Florida Statutes § 55.03 – Judgment creditor to have interest (Verified) - Florida Statutes § 55.501 et seq. – Uniform Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Act (Verified) - 28 U.S.C. § 1961 – Interest on federal judgments (Verified) Read the full article











