You saved up, signed a contract, and trusted a builder with what may be the most substantial investment of your life. Then you discovered a defect, whether it be a cracked foundation, water seeping through the roof, mold spreading behind the walls, or another problem requiring a costly fix. This circumstance is all too common, and it is one our Tampa residential construction defects lawyers help homeowners address head-on.
Florida law gives you tangible rights to recover what you are owed for a construction defect, but those rights come with strict deadlines, procedural traps, and other hurdles that can derail even legitimate claims.
Our construction defects lawyer at Wolfe Law Tampa PLLC is ready to evaluate your case. Call us today at (813) 803-0022 or contact us online to schedule your consultation.
Adam Wolfe brings a level of focused construction law experience that is genuinely rare in this region:
We serve homeowners throughout Hillsborough County and the greater Tampa Bay area from our office at 400 N. Tampa Street, Suite 2820, Tampa, FL 33602.
Construction defect work is not a side practice here; it is a primary focus. More importantly, when you hire our firm, you work directly with Adam from start to finish. Your file does not get handed off to a paralegal or a junior associate after your first meeting.
Under § 558.002, Fla. Stat. (2025), a construction defect is any deficiency arising out of the design, specifications, planning, supervision, construction, or repair of real property. Defects fall into two categories:
Some of the defects our residential construction defects lawyer sees in Tampa-area homes are:
Florida’s subtropical climate can make the consequences (and costs) of these issues more severe than they might be in other regions.
Florida law requires homeowners to complete a mandatory pre-suit process before filing a construction defect lawsuit. Chapter 558 of the Florida Statutes, known as the state’s “Notice and Right to Cure” law, works like this:
The way you draft this notice matters enormously. A vague notice, one that fails to name all responsible parties, or one that is flawed in another way, could limit your options and leverage in litigation. This is not a step to handle without an attorney.
In addition to the time-sensitive considerations we just shared, Florida imposes strict deadlines that determine whether a claim is viable.
Florida imposes two-layered time limits on construction defect claims:
Under § 95.11(3)(b), Fla. Stat. (2025), residential homes and townhomes have a seven-year outer limit from the date the certificate of occupancy or certificate of completion is issued. Once that window closes, your claim is almost certainly ineligible, regardless of how serious the damage is or how strong your case would have been.
These deadlines are one of the most obvious and important reasons to contact our team serving Tampa right now.
Responsibility in residential construction cases is rarely simple.
At Wolfe Law Tampa PLLC, we will investigate your case, determining if liable parties include:
Florida law allows you to bring claims against multiple parties simultaneously. Trust Attorney Wolfe and our team to identify all parties who are responsible for the defects that are causing you undue stress.
Clients often face misdirection and deception from those responsible for construction defects, and many of those clients want to know:
Some minor cosmetic cracking in the drywall is expected. Cracks in concrete slabs, widening structural cracks, or doors and windows that stick due to foundation movement are not. Have an independent structural engineer evaluate the property before accepting the builder’s explanation.
Not without involving Attorney Wolfe first. Repair attempts made without a written scope of work, proper documentation, and independent oversight can complicate your legal position if the problems persist or worsen.
Yes. Subsequent purchasers have rights under Chapter 558. The 7-year repose period runs from original construction, not your purchase date. If the seller knew about a defect and concealed it, you may also have a separate fraud or misrepresentation claim.
Residential construction defects tend to worsen (and become more expensive) over time. Protect yourself by speaking with our construction defect lawyer at Wolfe Law Tampa PLLC today.
Call (813) 803-0022 or reach out online. The consultation is confidential, the advice is direct, and the sooner you act, the more strategic options may remain available to you.