Florida courts allow post-judgment interest on uncollected balances. Calculate the current value of your judgment using Florida statutory quarterly rates per §55.03, F.S.
Judgment Details
$
%
Partial Payments (optional — up to 3)
Maximum 3 partial payments allowed.
Partial payments reduce the principal balance on the date paid; interest adjusts accordingly.
Results — As of Today
Days Since Judgment
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Current Daily Interest Rate
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Total Interest Accrued
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Total Judgment + Interest
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Interest Period Breakdown
Period
Annual Rate
Days
Principal Balance
Interest Earned
80% of civil judgments go unpaid.
The more time that passes, the harder it is to collect. Let AllClear Judgment Recovery help you recover what you are owed.
No recovery = no fee. We only get paid when you do.
What We Handle
All enforcement costs
Liens & levies
Wage garnishments
Service of process
Court filings & hearings
Debtor objections
Satisfaction of judgment filing
Why Interest Matters Before You Collect
Post-judgment interest accrues from the date of judgment under §55.03, Florida Statutes, at the quarterly rate set by the Florida Chief Financial Officer. Every day you wait, the balance grows — and the debtor knows it. Knowing the current value of your judgment gives you an accurate figure for enforcement proceedings, settlement negotiations, and deciding whether to act.
Florida judgments are enforceable for up to 20 years. That is a long collection window — but asset positions change, debtors relocate, and courts can dismiss inactive enforcement cases. The right time to move is when you have the information to move decisively.
Disclaimer: This calculator provides an estimate only and does not replace legal or accounting advice. Consult a licensed Florida attorney for legal guidance specific to your judgment.