The Florida Building Code (FBC) is a large document, but a short list of chapters drives most of the review comments we see. Knowing where to look before you submit can cut rework and keep a project on schedule.
The chapters that touch almost every job
- Chapter 3 — Use and Occupancy Classifications. Gets your building type right before anything else.
- Chapter 5 — General Building Heights and Areas. Controls how big the envelope can be for a given construction type.
- Chapter 10 — Means of Egress. Door widths, travel distances, and common-path limits trip up more submittals than almost anything else.
- Chapter 16 — Structural Design. In Florida, wind loading is non-negotiable and location-specific.
Florida-specific pieces to double-check
High-velocity hurricane zones, flood-resistant construction (Chapter 16, Section 1612), and product approval requirements for exterior components are where Florida diverges most from the base IBC. If your project is anywhere near the coast, these are worth a dedicated pass before submission.
When the code is ambiguous
Declarations, local amendments, and recent errata all matter. When a clause could reasonably be read two ways, we document our interpretation in the plan review response so the building official has a clear record. That tiny bit of upfront communication saves a lot of back-and-forth later.
Have a code question on an active project? Send us the specifics — we’ll give you a direct answer, not a chapter reference.
