Florida Camper Seller Disclosure Statement
When selling a Camper in Florida, what you disclose in writing protects you from post-sale claims as much as the AS-IS clause. This guide covers exactly what to disclose, Florida-specific legal requirements, and a complete Camper disclosure checklist.
Florida: Certain disclosures are required by law
Florida courts apply the "latent defect" doctrine — if a defect is not obvious to a reasonable inspection, sellers must disclose it if known. Disclosed defects that the buyer accepted are not actionable.
Florida Required Disclosures
Odometer reading (federal requirement for vehicles under 10 years)
Any known latent defects not discoverable through ordinary inspection
Flood damage history if known
Title brand (salvage, rebuilt, flood, junk) — must be on Florida title
Known pending insurance claims or liens
★ = Required or strongly recommended for Florida
Camper Disclosure Checklist
Standard Fields (all Campers)
Year, Make, Model, Trim, VIN
Odometer reading at time of sale
Number of previous owners (if known)
Accident/collision history (yes/no)
Frame or structural damage (yes/no)
Airbag deployment history (yes/no)
Flood, fire, or hail damage (yes/no)
Rebuilt or salvage title (yes/no)
Camper-Specific Fields
Transmission type and condition
Engine known issues (oil leaks, overheating, warning lights)
Smog/emissions test status (in applicable states)
Tire tread depth and age (approximate)
Service record completeness
Active manufacturer recalls pending
High-Risk Hidden Defects to Check
Hidden flood damage (check carpet, ECU, undercarriage)
Rolled odometer (check for fresh mileage inconsistencies)
Frame damage or unibody repair (check panel gaps)
Airbag module replacement after deployment
Florida Fraud Liability
Florida Statute 817.06 (Fraudulent Concealment) can expose sellers to criminal liability for intentionally concealing material defects. Civil claims under Florida's Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act (FDUTPA) allow for attorney fees.
Disclosure vs. AS-IS: How They Work Together
| Scenario | Best Protection |
|---|---|
| Known defect — buyer discovers after sale | Written disclosure that buyer signed |
| Unknown defect — buyer discovers after sale | AS-IS clause in bill of sale |
| Buyer claims you misrepresented condition | Signed disclosure + AS-IS + signed bill of sale |
| Lemon law claim | Neither applies to private sales in most states |
| Odometer fraud | Only option: disclose accurately (federal crime to falsify) |
| Salvage title not disclosed | Cannot be cured by AS-IS — always disclose title brand |
Frequently Asked Questions
Is a seller disclosure form required in Florida?
Yes — Florida requires certain disclosures in Camper sales.
What is the difference between disclosure and AS-IS?
A disclosure statement lists what you KNOW about the vehicle. An AS-IS clause disclaims liability for what you DON'T know. Both together provide the strongest seller protection — use both.
Do I have to disclose open recalls?
Federal law does not require private sellers to disclose open recalls, but best practice strongly recommends it. Check recalls at NHTSA.gov and include a line in your disclosure noting whether any are open.
What happens if I don't disclose a known defect in Florida?
Florida Statute 817.06 (Fraudulent Concealment) can expose sellers to criminal liability for intentionally concealing material defects. Civil claims under Florida's Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act (FDUTPA) allow for attorney fees.
Create a Florida Camper Bill of Sale
Include your disclosure statement with a professional bill of sale for complete seller protection.
Create Florida Camper Bill of Sale