How to Protect Your Assets After a Car Accident in Florida

Florida at-fault drivers protect their assets through three layers: adequate liability insurance (including an umbrella policy), Florida’s statutory exemptions, and, when the exposure warrants it, post-accident planning that converts vulnerable assets into protected ones. Most car accident claims settle within insurance policy limits because injury attorneys prefer quick settlements over expensive litigation against protected defendants.

Whether a car accident becomes an asset protection problem depends on the severity of the injuries, the amount of insurance the at-fault driver carries, and whether that person’s wealth is already protected under Florida law. Personal asset exposure becomes realistic only when the insurance falls short and the at-fault driver appears to have unprotected wealth worth pursuing.

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When Does a Car Accident Lead to a Personal Lawsuit?

Florida’s no-fault insurance system limits when an injured person can sue the at-fault driver directly. A personal injury lawsuit is available only when the injured person suffers a permanent loss of bodily function, permanent scarring or disfigurement, or death. Minor soft-tissue injuries (sore necks, strained backs) do not cross the threshold, no matter how expensive the medical bills.

When the injuries do cross that line, the injured person’s attorney evaluates the at-fault driver’s insurance coverage before deciding whether to pursue a personal judgment. When damages exceed the driver’s insurance coverage, the remaining balance becomes a personal obligation. Florida requires only $10,000 in personal injury protection and $10,000 in property damage liability. The state does not require bodily injury liability coverage at all. A driver carrying only the state minimums has zero coverage for the injured person’s bodily injury claim, which means the entire claim becomes a potential personal obligation.

Even drivers with $100,000 or $300,000 in bodily injury limits face exposure in serious accidents involving permanent injuries or multiple victims. The level of personal exposure depends on the distance between the driver’s coverage and the potential claim size. An umbrella insurance policy—typically starting at $1 million for $150 to $400 per year—covers the difference. When combined coverage exceeds the injured person’s damages, the case settles within policy limits and no personal assets are at risk.

What Can They Take If You Are Sued for a Car Accident?

A judgment creditor who wins a car accident lawsuit in Florida can use several collection tools. The creditor can garnish bank accounts—the bank freezes every account that includes the debtor’s name when served with a writ of garnishment. The creditor can garnish wages, directing the employer to withhold up to 25% of the debtor’s net pay each period until the debt is satisfied. The creditor can also record judgment liens against non-homestead real property, subpoena financial records, and take the debtor’s deposition under oath to locate assets.

Assets typically exposed include individually held brokerage accounts, investment real estate titled in only one spouse’s name, business equity in entities without LLC or limited partnership protection, and cash savings that do not fall into a protected category. Corporate stock and single-member LLC interests are also reachable.

Planning to hide assets is not a viable strategy. Florida courts give judgment creditors broad discovery tools, and a debtor who conceals assets risks sanctions, contempt, and worse outcomes than a full disclosure paired with proper exemption planning.

What Assets Are Protected from a Car Accident Judgment in Florida?

Florida provides some of the broadest creditor exemptions in the country. These protections apply regardless of whether the liability arose from a car accident, medical malpractice, or any other civil judgment.

Homestead. The Florida homestead exemption protects the at-fault driver’s primary residence from forced sale. A driver cannot lose a house because of an at-fault car accident when the property qualifies as homestead. The Florida Constitution protects homestead property with no dollar cap on value. The size limit is one-half acre within a municipality or 160 acres outside city limits.

Tenancy by the entireties. Tenants by the entireties property held between married spouses is protected from the individual creditor of either spouse. A judgment against only the at-fault driver cannot reach jointly held marital bank accounts, real estate, or investment accounts if the ownership is properly structured.

Retirement accounts. IRAs, 401(k) plans, and pension benefits are fully exempt from creditor claims under both Florida and federal law.

Head of household wages. Head of household wages are exempt from garnishment when the debtor financially supports a dependent. The exemption follows funds into a bank account if properly traced within six months of deposit.

Other exemptions. Life insurance cash value, annuities, disability income, Social Security benefits, and prepaid college plans are also protected.

Who Can Be Sued After a Car Accident in Florida?

Florida’s dangerous instrumentality doctrine extends liability beyond the at-fault driver to the owner of the vehicle. A parent who owns a car driven by an adult child can be held personally responsible for damages even though the parent was not driving.

Florida caps the vehicle owner’s vicarious liability at $100,000 per person and $300,000 per incident under § 324.021(9)(b)(3). Those caps disappear if the injured person can show the owner was negligent in entrusting the vehicle to someone known to be an unsafe driver. When someone other than the owner causes an accident in a vehicle the owner allowed them to use, both parties face potential liability.

An at-fault driver’s exposure after a Florida car accident depends on whether the injuries cross the lawsuit threshold and whether both drivers share fault. Modified comparative negligence and the driver’s available exemptions shape the final outcome.

How Tort Reform Changed Car Accident Cases in Florida

Florida’s 2023 tort reform legislation under HB 837 introduced several changes that reduce personal asset exposure for at-fault drivers. Under the modified comparative fault rule, an injured person who is 51% or more at fault cannot recover any damages. The deadline for filing a personal injury lawsuit was shortened from four years to two years. Medical damages are now limited to amounts actually paid rather than amounts billed, which shrinks potential verdict sizes and makes it less likely that a judgment will exceed insurance coverage.

What If You Are Being Sued but Have No Assets?

Lawsuits are expensive, time-consuming, and uncertain. An injury attorney who determines that the at-fault driver’s assets are substantially protected under Florida law has little financial incentive to chase a judgment that cannot be collected. The vast majority of car accident plaintiffs and their attorneys prefer a quick insurance settlement, no matter how small, over filing a lengthy, expensive lawsuit against someone who appears judgment-proof.

The same logic applies to people who do have assets but have structured them within Florida’s exemptions. A married couple whose home qualifies for the homestead exemption, whose savings sit in entireties accounts, and whose retirement funds are in 401(k) plans may have substantial net worth on paper but very little a creditor can actually reach. From the plaintiff’s perspective, that person looks the same as someone with no assets at all.

The financial affidavit is the tool that communicates this picture to the other side. The affidavit shows the injured person’s attorney exactly what the at-fault driver owns and how much of it is protected. A well-prepared affidavit that demonstrates the difficulty of collecting a judgment beyond insurance limits often pushes the case toward settlement within policy limits.

Can You Protect Assets After a Car Accident Has Already Happened?

Florida law does not prohibit asset protection planning after an accident has occurred. The at-fault driver can maximize exemptions by paying down a homestead mortgage, converting individual bank accounts to tenants by the entireties ownership, contributing to exempt retirement accounts, or purchasing a protected annuity.

Post-accident asset conversions must be made in good faith. Florida Statute § 222.30 restricts conversions made with the intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors. Courts scrutinize post-accident transfers more carefully than planning done before any claim arose. The fraudulent transfer analysis focuses on whether the person made the conversion to put assets out of a creditor’s reach or gave up more value than was received in return.

Pre-accident planning provides the strongest position because it avoids the scrutiny that attaches to transfers made after a claim exists. Even so, Florida’s broad exemptions give at-fault drivers meaningful options after an accident has occurred—particularly when the conversions involve moving assets into categories that Florida law already protects by statute.

Alper Law has structured offshore and domestic asset protection plans since 1991. Schedule a consultation or call (407) 444-0404.

Gideon Alper

About the Author

Gideon Alper

Gideon Alper focuses on asset protection planning, including Cook Islands trusts, offshore LLCs, and domestic strategies for individuals facing litigation exposure. He previously served as an attorney with the IRS Office of Chief Counsel in the Large Business and International Division. J.D. with honors from Emory University.

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