Buyers in Florida now have seven business days to cancel a condominium purchase after signing and receiving the required documents. This expansion from the previous three-day window reflects Florida’s response to condominium safety concerns and enhanced disclosure requirements.
The seven-day period applies to resale contracts entered into on or after July 1, 2025.
Many buyers sign contracts without realizing when their cancellation clock actually starts. The trigger depends on both contract execution and document delivery. This distinction matters because missing or late disclosures may affect when the rescission window begins under the revised CR-7 Rev condo rider.
Florida’s condominium purchase contracts include a standardized rider that addresses buyer cancellation rights. The CR-7 Rev condo rider reflects updates that took effect in 2025. These changes directly affect how much time buyers have to walk away from a resale purchase.
Previously, Florida condominium buyers had three days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays) to cancel after signing and receiving association documents. The revised rider extends this to seven business days. This provides meaningful additional review time for buyers facing complex disclosure packages.
This expansion acknowledges the complexity of modern condominium disclosures. Buyers now receive documentation about structural assessments, reserve funding, and building conditions. Seven business days allows more opportunity to consult with professionals before committing.
Recent condominium legislation in Florida emphasized transparency about building safety. Following structural concerns at aging condominiums statewide, lawmakers required more detailed inspections and reserve studies. The extended rescission period gives buyers time to digest these critical documents.
The Florida Condominium Act under Chapter 718 outlines disclosure requirements for condominium sales. The expanded rescission period aligns with these enhanced disclosure mandates. Buyers receive more information and more time to act on it.
The cancellation clock starts when the buyer signs and receives the required disclosure documents. Partial delivery may delay the start of the countdown. Buyers who receive incomplete disclosures may retain rescission rights until the complete set arrives.
Florida law now requires condominium associations to complete milestone structural inspections for buildings that meet certain age and proximity thresholds. The milestone inspection requirements under Section 553.899 apply to buildings three stories or higher that reach 30 years of age, or 25 years if they are located within three miles of the coastline.
The seller must provide the inspector-prepared summary of the milestone inspection report if a milestone inspection is required and has been completed. If no inspection was required or completed, this document may not apply.
Buyers who expected a summary but did not receive one may want to confirm whether the building met inspection thresholds.
The SIRS examines major structural components and calculates reserve funding needs. This study helps buyers understand whether the association has adequate funds for future repairs. A missing or outdated SIRS may leave buyers unaware of potential special assessments.
The statutory resale disclosure list under Section 718.503(2)(a) specifies which documents sellers must provide. The following items comprise the required resale disclosure package:
Incomplete delivery of these materials may affect when the seven-day rescission period begins.
Timing confusion causes many buyers to miss their cancellation window or assume they lost rights they actually still have. The CR-7 Rev condo rider specifies that the seven business days begin upon signing and receiving documents, not upon signing alone.
A buyer may sign a purchase contract on Monday but not receive association documents until the following week. In this scenario, the seven-day countdown begins when the documents arrive, not when the contract was signed. This distinction protects buyers from pressure tactics that rush signatures before disclosures arrive.
Sellers sometimes provide documents in batches. The seven-day period generally begins when the buyer has signed and received the required documents. If a required item arrives later, the start date may depend on when the buyer actually received the complete required set.
Contracts signed without proper document delivery may remain subject to rescission rights until disclosures arrive. The buyer’s ability to cancel may persist until the seller provides complete disclosures and the seven-day period expires. Once all required documents arrive, the seven-business-day countdown begins from that point.
Buyers who suspect they received incomplete disclosures face important questions:
Answers to these questions may determine when the rescission period actually started.
Buyers who decide to rescind must act within the seven-business-day window. The process requires written notice delivered to the appropriate party. Verbal cancellations typically do not satisfy legal requirements.
Written rescission notices must clearly state the buyer’s intent to cancel. The notice generally goes to the seller or the seller’s designated agent. Keeping proof of delivery, such as certified mail receipts or email confirmations, protects the buyer if disputes arise later.
Acting promptly matters even within the seven-day window. Document delivery dates sometimes become contested. Having clear records of when notices were sent and received strengthens a buyer’s position.
Buyers who properly rescind typically receive their deposits back. The timeframe for refunds depends on escrow arrangements and contract terms. Disputes about whether rescission was timely may delay the return of funds.
Many condominium buyers in Plantation, Florida, and throughout Broward County signed contracts before fully understanding these updated rules. If documents arrived late, arrived incomplete, or never arrived at all, rescission rights may still exist depending on when complete delivery occurred.
Attorney Carlos M. Amor brings more than fifteen years of real estate law experience to document reviews for condominium buyers. The Law Office of Carlos M. Amor, P.A. offers free consultations by phone, video meeting, or in person. Contact the office to discuss your situation and determine whether your cancellation window remains available.