Florida divides offenses into felonies (more serious) and misdemeanors (less serious). Capital, Life, 1st degree, 2nd degree, 3rd degree felonies.
Published May 6, 2026
## Felonies vs misdemeanors in Florida
Every state divides crimes into two big buckets: **felonies** (more serious, generally punishable by 1+ year in state prison) and **misdemeanors** (less serious, punishable by jail time of 1 year or less, or fines). The line between the two has consequences far beyond the sentence.
### How Florida classifies felonies
Capital, Life, 1st degree, 2nd degree, 3rd degree felonies.
### How Florida classifies misdemeanors
1st degree, 2nd degree misdemeanors. Plus 'noncriminal violations.'
## Why the distinction matters
A felony conviction follows you for life in ways a misdemeanor doesn't:
- **Voting rights** — many states disenfranchise felons (during incarceration, probation, or permanently)
- **Firearm rights** — federal law bars felons from possessing firearms (state laws may do the same)
- **Jury service** — felons are barred from juries in most states
- **Public office and licensure** — many professional licenses (legal, medical, real estate, security) are denied to felons
- **Employment** — felonies show up on standard background checks; ban-the-box laws help only at hiring stage
- **Housing** — landlords can refuse to rent to felons; public housing has specific bars
- **Immigration** — non-citizens face deportation for many felonies (and even some misdemeanors deemed "crimes of moral turpitude")
- **Education** — federal student aid is restricted for some drug offenses
- **Custody** — a felony can affect child-custody arrangements
## Where the line gets drawn
Most states use the federal definition: an offense punishable by **more than 1 year** in state prison is a felony. Some specific markers:
- A theft of property over a statutory threshold (often $500-$2,500) becomes a felony
- Drug possession is felony or misdemeanor depending on substance and quantity (state varies wildly)
- Domestic violence is often misdemeanor on a first offense, felony with priors or aggravators
- DUI is misdemeanor on a first offense in nearly every state, felony on multiple priors or with injury/death
- Assault is a graduated offense — simple misdemeanor, aggravated felony, with-deadly-weapon felony, etc.
## Wobblers and reduction
Many states allow some felony charges to be reduced to misdemeanors at sentencing or after successful completion of probation:
- **California's PC 17(b)** — wobblers can be designated misdemeanors at sentencing or by motion later
- **Reduction-after-probation** — some states let a felony be reduced to a misdemeanor after successful probation completion
- **Sentencing alternatives** — drug court, mental-health court, veteran's court, and similar diversion programs can result in reduction or dismissal
## Sentencing structures
States use one of three main sentencing structures:
- **Indeterminate** — the judge sets a range (e.g., 5-10 years) and the parole board decides actual release
- **Determinate** — the judge sets a specific term and the defendant serves that time minus good-time credits
- **Sentencing guidelines** — a grid based on offense severity + criminal history determines the presumptive sentence
Many states blend approaches.
## What you should do
If you've been charged in Florida, the FIRST question your defense attorney will ask is what class/level the offense is and what the sentencing range looks like. Even if conviction is a foregone conclusion, the difference between a felony plea and a misdemeanor reduction can be the difference between a manageable life and a permanently restricted one. Talk to a Florida criminal-defense attorney — most offer free consultations.
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*This guide is general information about Florida law as of early 2026 and is not legal advice. Classification and sentencing rules are detail-heavy and frequently amended. Talk to a licensed Florida criminal-defense attorney about your specific case.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.