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Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.530 — Motions for New Trial and Rehearing;

Educational reference. This page summarizes a Florida Rule of Civil Procedure for educational purposes. The rule text and Committee Notes are mirrored from the Florida Bar's official publication and are public domain. The plain-English summary is the opinion of Phillips, Hunt & Walker and is general information only — not legal advice. Reading this page does not create an attorney-client relationship. Past results do not guarantee a similar outcome in your case.

What this rule means in plain English

Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.530 — Motions for New Trial and Rehearing; — sets out the procedural requirements for this aspect of Florida civil practice. AMENDMENTS OF JUDGMENTS; REMITTITUR OR ADDITUR …………………………………………. 174

Rule Text (verbatim from the Florida Supreme Court)

AMENDMENTS OF JUDGMENTS; REMITTITUR OR ADDITUR …………………………………………. 174

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Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.530 — Motions for New Trial and Rehearing;

Last verified from official source: April 30, 2026 · Source: Florida Bar — Florida Rules of Civil Procedure (eff. April 1, 2026), p. 3

Rule Text (verbatim)

AMENDMENTS OF JUDGMENTS; REMITTITUR OR ADDITUR

(a) Jury and Non-Jury Actions. A new trial may be granted to all or any of the parties and on all or a part of the issues. To preserve for appeal a challenge to the failure of the trial court to make required findings of fact in the final judgment, a party must raise that issue in a motion for rehearing under this rule. On a motion for a rehearing of matters heard without a jury, including summary judgments, the court may open the judgment if one has been entered, take additional testimony, and enter a new judgment.

(b) Time for Motion. A motion for new trial or for rehearing must be served not later than 15 days after the return of the verdict in a jury action or the date of filing of the judgment in a non-jury action. A timely motion may be amended to state new grounds in the discretion of the court at any time before the motion is determined.

(c) Time for Serving Affidavits. When a motion for a new trial is based on affidavits, the affidavits must be served with the motion. The opposing party has 10 days after such service within which to serve opposing affidavits, which period may be extended for an additional period not exceeding 20 days either by the court for good cause shown or by the parties by written stipulation. The court may permit reply affidavits.

(d) On Initiative of Court. Not later than 15 days after the date of filing of the judgment or within the time of ruling on a timely motion for a rehearing or a new trial made by a party, the court of its own initiative may order a rehearing or a new trial for any reason for which it might have granted a rehearing or a new trial on motion of a party.

(e) When Motion Is Unnecessary; Non-Jury Action. In a non-jury action, the sufficiency of the evidence to support the judgment may be raised on appeal whether or not the party raising the question has made any objection thereto in the trial court or

April 1, 2026 Florida Rules of Civil Procedure 174 made a motion for rehearing, for new trial, or to alter or amend the judgment.

(f) Order Granting to Specify Grounds. All orders granting a new trial must state the specific grounds therefor. If such an order is appealed and does not state the specific grounds, the appellate court shall relinquish its jurisdiction to the trial court for entry of an order specifying the grounds for granting the new trial.

(g) Motion to Alter or Amend a Judgment. A motion to alter or amend the judgment shall be served not later than 15 days after the date of filing of the judgment, except that this rule does not affect the remedies in rule 1.540(b).

(h) Motion for Remittitur or Additur.

(1) Not later than 15 days after the return of the verdict in a jury action or the date of filing of the judgment in a non-jury action, any party may serve a motion for remittitur or additur. The motion must state the applicable Florida law under which it is being made, the amount the movant contends the verdict should be, and the specific evidence that supports the amount stated or a statement of the improper elements of damages included in the damages award.

(2) If a remittitur or additur is granted, the court must state the specific statutory criteria relied on.

(3) Any party adversely affected by the order granting remittitur or additur may reject the award and elect a new trial on the issue of damages only by filing a written election within 15 days after the order granting remittitur or additur is filed.

Committee Notes

1992 Amendment. In subdivision (e), the reference to assignments of error is eliminated to conform to amendments to the Florida Rules of Appellate Procedure.

April 1, 2026 Florida Rules of Civil Procedure 175 2013 Amendment. Subdivisions (b) and (g) are amended to change the deadlines for service of certain motions from 10 to 15 days after the specified event. Subdivision (d) is amended to change the deadline for a court to act of its own initiative.

Court Commentary

1984 Amendment. Subdivision (b): This clarifies the time in which a motion for rehearing may be served. It specifies that the date of filing as shown on the face of the judgment in a non-jury action is the date from which the time for serving a motion for rehearing is calculated.

There is no change in the time for serving a motion for new trial in a jury action, except the motion may be served before the rendition of the judgment.

2022 Amendments. The amendment to subdivision (a) does not address or affect, by negative implication, any other instance in which a motion for rehearing is or might be necessary to preserve an issue for appellate review.

Plain-English Breakdown

Practitioner notes by John M. Phillips, Board Certified Civil Trial Lawyer — coming soon. Watch the video below for the plain-English breakdown.

Rule Text (Verbatim)

The text below is mirrored verbatim from the Florida Bar’s official publication. Public domain.

AMENDMENTS OF JUDGMENTS; REMITTITUR OR ADDITUR …………………………………………. 174

▶ Watch: Rule 1.530 — Motion for New Trial

Part of The Rule Book — full FRCP playlist. Plain-English breakdown by John M. Phillips, Board Certified Civil Trial Lawyer.

Infographic — Rule 1.530 at a Glance

Florida Rule 1.530 infographic

Committee Notes

View Committee Notes (legislative history)

No Committee Notes for this rule version.

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This page summarizes a Florida Rule of Civil Procedure for educational purposes. The rule text and Committee Notes are mirrored from the Florida Bar’s official publication and are public domain. The plain-English summary is the opinion of Phillips, Hunt & Walker and is general information only — not legal advice. Reading this page does not create an attorney-client relationship. Past results do not guarantee a similar outcome in your case.

Subsection-by-Subsection Practitioner Notes — Rule 1.530

Subsection (a) — Grounds for New Trial

(a) authorizes the trial court to grant a new trial on motion of any party. The recognized grounds in Florida civil practice are insufficient evidence, verdict against the manifest weight of the evidence, error in admission or exclusion of evidence, error in jury instructions, improper jury argument, juror misconduct, and newly discovered evidence. The standard of review on appeal differs by ground — manifest-weight rulings get strong appellate deference, while legal errors in instructions or evidence rulings get less. Frame the motion around the ground with the most appellate runway, not just the ground that feels strongest.

Subsection (b) — The 15-Day Window

(b) is the most critical procedural rule in Florida civil post-trial practice. A motion for new trial must be served not later than 15 days after the return of the verdict in a jury case or after the date of filing of the judgment in a non-jury case. The deadline is jurisdictional. The trial court cannot extend it. Filing a deficient motion within the window and “supplementing” later does not cure the problem if the supplement raises new grounds. If the 15th day is a weekend or court holiday, Rule 1.090(a) computation rules apply.

Subsection (c) — Time for Hearing

(c) sets the time for hearing the motion. Local practice varies on how quickly the court will set it. The motion suspends rendition under Rule 1.540 jurisprudence — meaning the appeal clock does not start until the post-trial motion is resolved.

Subsection (d) — On the Court’s Initiative

(d) lets the court grant a new trial on its own initiative within the same time the parties have to move. This is rare in practice but the rule preserves the court’s authority to correct manifest injustice without waiting for a motion.

Subsection (e) — Rehearing in Non-Jury Cases

(e) governs motions for rehearing after a non-jury trial or after a final order in equity. The 15-day rule applies. The motion is the analog of a motion for new trial in a jury case and serves the same purposes — preserve issues for appeal, correct factual or legal errors, and toll rendition for the notice of appeal.

Cross-references: See Rule 1.480 (directed verdict and JNOV), Rule 1.540 (relief from judgment), and Rule 1.470 (jury instructions and exceptions).

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