Florida PIP Insurance Explained: What Clearwater Accident Victims Must Know
Florida’s no-fault insurance system confuses thousands of accident victims every year — and insurance companies count on that confusion. As a former senior casualty adjuster who spent over a decade evaluating claims from the inside, I have seen exactly how PIP works, where it falls short, and how insurers use victims’ lack of knowledge against them.
This guide gives you the complete picture.
Florida PIP pays for your own medical bills and lost wages after a car accident, regardless of who caused the crash. It covers 80% of medical expenses and 60% of lost wages, up to a $10,000 policy limit. But that limit runs out faster than most people expect — and what happens after is where your real legal rights begin.
What Is PIP Insurance in Florida?
Personal Injury Protection covers 80% of all necessary and reasonable medical expenses up to $10,000 resulting from a covered injury, no matter who caused the crash.
Florida is one of a small number of “no-fault” states in the United States. This means that after an accident, you do not turn to the other driver’s insurance first — you turn to your own. Your PIP policy pays either way, whether you rear-ended someone or they rear-ended you.
This system was designed to speed up compensation and reduce litigation over minor injuries. In practice, it creates a series of strict rules and deadlines that catch accident victims off guard — especially the 14-day rule.
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What Does Florida PIP Actually Cover?
Florida PIP pays for three categories of expenses, all drawing from the same $10,000 policy limit per covered person.
Medical Expenses — 80% coverage
PIP pays 80% of crash-related medical costs up to the $10,000 limit per covered person, for things like ambulance rides, hospital bills, doctor visits, and more. You are responsible for the remaining 20%. Note that Florida’s PIP laws do not cover acupuncture and massage therapy.
Lost Wages — 60% coverage
PIP pays 60% of your regular income if you can no longer work or have to miss work due to injuries from a car crash. It also pays for services you cannot do yourself because of the accident, like cleaning the house or caring for your kids.
Death Benefits
PIP pays $5,000 for each covered person who dies as a result of a car accident.

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Who Is Covered Under Your PIP Policy?
PIP insurance covers you and relatives living with you, passengers in your vehicle, pedestrians you hit, and anyone driving your car with your permission.
PIP also covers you if you were riding in somebody else’s car, or if you were struck by a vehicle as a pedestrian or bicyclist.
The 14-Day Rule — The Most Critical Deadline You Must Know
This is the rule that costs Clearwater accident victims their PIP benefits more than anything else.
Under Florida Statute §627.736(1)(a), you must seek initial medical treatment from a qualified provider within 14 days of the accident to be eligible for PIP benefits. If you do not see a doctor within that 14-day window, your insurer can deny your entire PIP claim — even if your injuries are real and well-documented, and even if you have a perfectly reasonable explanation for the delay.
As a former adjuster, I saw this happen regularly. Victims would feel okay after the accident, wait a week or two, then discover their symptoms were serious — and lose all PIP benefits because they missed the 14-day window.
The rule is simple: see a doctor within 14 days, even if you feel fine.
The Emergency Medical Condition Rule — The Hidden Limit Inside the Limit
Most accident victims know about the $10,000 PIP limit. Very few know about the rule that cuts that limit to $2,500.
Although PIP offers a maximum of $10,000 in benefits, that full amount is only available if you are diagnosed with an emergency medical condition (EMC) — a condition that requires immediate attention and poses a serious threat to your health if untreated. If your injuries are not considered an EMC, PIP benefits are capped at just $2,500.
This means a victim with real injuries — whiplash, soft tissue damage, moderate back pain — may only receive $2,500 from PIP if a provider does not formally document an emergency medical condition.
What to do: Ask your treating provider explicitly whether your injuries qualify as an emergency medical condition, and ensure it is documented in writing in your medical records.
What PIP Does NOT Cover — The Gaps That Matter
Understanding what PIP excludes is just as important as knowing what it covers.
Pain and suffering.
Compensation for non-economic damages like emotional distress or chronic pain can only be pursued through a lawsuit against the at-fault driver if your injuries meet the state’s serious injury threshold.
Medical costs above $10,000.
Once your PIP limit is exhausted, your policy stops paying. If your injuries require ongoing treatment, surgery, or rehabilitation costing more than $10,000, you are personally responsible unless you pursue additional compensation.
The remaining 20% of medical bills.
PIP only covers 80% of medical expenses. The remaining 20% is your responsibility unless you have supplemental coverage like MedPay.
Property damage.
PIP does not cover damage to your vehicle. That falls under Property Damage Liability coverage.

When Can You Step Outside the No-Fault System and Sue?
This is where the situation changes significantly — and where an attorney becomes essential.
To break through the no-fault barrier, you must prove that your accident caused permanent loss of an important bodily function, permanent injury within a reasonable degree of medical probability, significant and permanent scarring or disfigurement, or death.
If you meet this “serious injury threshold,” Florida law allows you to file a lawsuit directly against the at-fault driver for all damages PIP does not cover — including full medical expenses, lost income, future medical costs, and pain and suffering.
Under the modified comparative negligence standard enacted in 2023, you can recover damages only if you are 50% or less at fault for the accident. If you are more than 50% at fault, you recover nothing.
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What the Insurance Company Does Not Tell You — The Insider Perspective
Having spent over a decade as a senior casualty adjuster, here is what I witnessed routinely:
They hope you settle within PIP limits.
When a victim accepts a quick PIP payout and closes their claim, the insurer avoids any exposure to a larger lawsuit. They never volunteer the information that your injuries might qualify for additional compensation.
They scrutinize EMC documentation.
Adjusters are trained to look for cases where the emergency medical condition designation is questionable. If your provider’s documentation is weak, they will push to cap your benefits at $2,500.
They time the process.
Florida law gives insurers 30 days to pay and 60 days to investigate. During those 60 days, they are building a file. You should be building one too — with an attorney.
They use the 14-day rule aggressively.
Any gap in your initial treatment timeline gives adjusters grounds to question whether your injuries were caused by the accident at all.
What Happens When PIP Runs Out
For serious accidents in Clearwater, $10,000 runs out quickly. A single emergency room visit, imaging, and initial treatment can exhaust PIP entirely.
When that happens, your options depend on the severity of your injuries:
If your injuries meet the serious injury threshold, you can pursue a claim against the at-fault driver’s bodily injury liability insurance for full compensation — medical expenses beyond PIP, lost wages beyond 60%, and pain and suffering.
If the at-fault driver is uninsured or underinsured, your own uninsured motorist coverage becomes critical. This is why carrying adequate UM coverage in Florida is essential.
If neither applies, MedPay — a supplemental coverage some drivers carry — can help cover the 20% PIP does not pay and additional expenses beyond the $10,000 limit.
Key PIP Deadlines and Numbers at a Glance
| What | The Rule |
| See a doctor | Within 14 days of accident |
| PIP maximum (with EMC) | $10,000 |
| PIP maximum (without EMC) | $2,500 |
| Medical expense coverage | 80% of reasonable costs |
| Lost wage coverage | 60% of income |
| Death benefit | $5,000 |
| Insurer payment deadline | 30 days |
| Insurer investigation period | Up to 60 days |
| Personal injury lawsuit deadline | 2 years from accident date |
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Do You Need an Attorney for a PIP Claim?
For straightforward PIP claims involving minor injuries and cooperative insurers, you may not need legal representation. But consider contacting a Clearwater car accident attorney if:
Your insurer is delaying, disputing, or denying your PIP benefits. Your medical costs are approaching or have exceeded $10,000. Your injuries may qualify as a serious injury under Florida law, opening the door to a larger claim. The insurer is arguing your injuries are not related to the accident. You have not been offered compensation for pain, suffering, or future medical needs.
At Ghaly Injury Law, we handle PIP disputes and personal injury claims across Clearwater and all of Pinellas County. Michael Ghaly’s decade as a senior insurance adjuster means he understands exactly how insurers evaluate these claims — and exactly how to fight back.

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Frequently Asked Questions — Florida PIP Insurance
Does Florida PIP cover passengers in my car?
Yes. PIP covers passengers in your vehicle who do not have their own PIP policy.
What if my medical bills exceed $10,000?
If your injuries meet the serious injury threshold, you can pursue a claim against the at-fault driver’s insurance for additional compensation beyond PIP limits.
Can I choose my own doctor for PIP treatment?
Yes, but the provider must be a licensed physician, osteopath, chiropractor, or hospital. Treatment must begin within 14 days of the accident.
What happens if I miss the 14-day treatment deadline?
Your insurer can deny your entire PIP claim. There are very limited exceptions. See a doctor as soon as possible after any accident.
Is PIP required for all vehicles in Florida?
Yes. All vehicles with four or more wheels registered in Florida must carry a minimum of $10,000 in PIP coverage and $10,000 in Property Damage Liability.
Can I sue the other driver even if I have PIP?
Yes, if your injuries meet the serious injury threshold — permanent injury, permanent loss of a bodily function, significant scarring, or death. A Clearwater personal injury attorney can evaluate whether your case qualifies.
Does PIP cover me if I am hit as a pedestrian?
Yes. Your own PIP policy covers you even when you are struck by a vehicle as a pedestrian or cyclist.
Contact Ghaly Injury Law — Free Consultation
If your PIP benefits have been denied, delayed, or exhausted, or if your injuries may qualify for additional compensation beyond PIP, contact Ghaly Injury Law today.
Ghaly Injury Law
2454 N McMullen Booth Rd, Suite 402, Clearwater, FL 33759
📞 (727) 748-1748
Free consultation. No fees unless we win.
