Florida voice AI call laws
Florida is an all-party (two-party) consent state for call recording, everyone on the call must be informed it's being recorded. No AI-specific call-disclosure statute has been identified here yet; the federal TCPA and FCC AI-voice rules still apply. Verify the current rule with counsel.
What makes Florida different
Florida is an all-party consent state layered under the federal TCPA, and it is frequently discussed in the context of state mini-TCPA telemarketing claims, which our TCPA cost guide notes can stack on top of federal claims. As of this writing, this tracker has not yet verified a citation for Florida's state telemarketing statute, so treat this page as covering the recording rule and the federal overlay, and confirm Florida telemarketing specifics with counsel before running outbound campaigns.
The consent rule
Everyone on the call must be informed it is being recorded. For an AI agent that records by default, that disclosure is not optional and not deferrable; it belongs in the first turn. Calls that reach Florida from one-party states inherit the stricter Florida rule as the safe default, the standard practice for cross-state traffic.
The AI-disclosure angle
No Florida-specific AI call-disclosure statute has been identified in our tracker yet, so the federal frame governs: the FCC's February 2024 ruling treats AI-generated and cloned voices as an artificial or prerecorded voice under the TCPA. For marketing calls, that generally means prior express written consent, clear identification, and a working opt-out.
Penalties
State wiretap violations can carry criminal as well as civil exposure, and federal TCPA damages run $500 per call, trebled to $1,500 when willful, with no cap. When state claims stack on federal ones, total exposure climbs well past the federal table. Our tracker carries no Florida-specific penalty figures as of this writing; verify with counsel.
How PyAI Trace maps to Florida
PyAI Trace helps you prove the policy you chose rather than guaranteeing a legal outcome. Its recording-disclosure check verifies the consent line was spoken on every Florida call, the TCPA rule pack checks identification and opt-out handling, and the tamper-evident audit hash gives you the per-call record a demand letter asks for first. On PyAI Omni agents, the consent_line field in the configure frame makes the disclosure part of the agent itself.
Florida AI Call Compliance Checklist
- Obtain all-party consent before recording any call
- Keep a tamper-evident audit trail of consent and disclosures per call
On top of Floridalaw, the federal TCPA and the FCC's 2024 ruling treating AI/cloned voices as an “artificial or prerecorded voice” apply to every call.
See the federal overlayPrimary sources
- Federal wiretap baseline, 18 U.S.C. § 2511
The federal one-party-consent baseline for recording communications.
- TCPA, 47 U.S.C. § 227; 47 CFR § 64.1200
The federal consent/robocall regime that applies in every state.
- FCC Declaratory Ruling (FCC 24-17, Feb 2024)
AI-generated and cloned voices are an 'artificial or prerecorded voice' under the TCPA.
Seed entry, pending counsel verification. Treat as a starting point, not a legal conclusion.