Child Injuries · Fort Lauderdale

Fort Lauderdale child injury lawyer.

When your child is hurt, the rules are different — and they work in your family's favor. The deadline to file is paused while your child is a minor, a parent or guardian brings the claim, and a judge has to sign off on any settlement to protect the money. We handle these cases with care, and we handle them right.

  • 40+ yearsFlorida personal injury
  • $100M+ recoveredfor Florida accident victims
  • 4.8 ★ / 51verified Google reviews
When a child is hurt

What a Fort Lauderdale child injury lawyer actually does for your family

A serious injury to a child is not the same as an adult's case, and it should never be treated like one. As a Fort Lauderdale child injury lawyer, Robert DiStefano steps in to protect both your child's health and your child's future — because some injuries to a growing body don't show their full cost for years.

The first job is to find out exactly what happened and who was responsible. A child can be hurt at a daycare, on a playground, in a community pool, by a defective product, or in a crash. The fault may sit with a property owner, a daycare operator, a product maker, or a driver. We gather the records, talk to witnesses, and bring in the right experts so the story is clear and provable.

The second job is to value the case correctly. Children heal — but they also grow, and a broken bone, a burn, a brain injury, or a scar can change how a child moves, learns, or feels about themselves over a lifetime. We work with doctors and life-care planners to account for future medical care, future therapy, lost earning ability, and pain — not just today's hospital bill.

The third job is to handle the special rules that come with a minor's claim. The deadline is paused, a parent or guardian files on the child's behalf, and a judge reviews the settlement before the money is approved. Done right, these steps protect your child. Done wrong, they can stall a case or put a settlement at risk. We do them right, and we keep you informed at every step.

Your child's case is built around one question: not just what does this injury cost today, but what will it cost over a lifetime?

The Florida law on a child's claim

The rules that make a minor's case different

Florida treats injuries to children differently from adult cases in three big ways — the deadline, who can file, and how a settlement gets approved. Here are the laws that matter most.

Fla. Stat. § 95.11(4)(a) amended 2023

The deadline is paused for a minor

Most Florida injury claims now have a two-year deadline to file a lawsuit. But for a child, that clock is tolled — legally paused — while your child is a minor. This protects a child who can't file on their own. The pause is not unlimited, though, and other deadlines can still apply, so it is a mistake to wait. The sooner we start, the stronger the evidence.

Florida law on minors' settlements

A judge must approve the settlement

When a case settles for a child, a Florida court reviews it before it becomes final. The judge makes sure the amount is fair to the child and that the money is protected — often placed in a guardianship account or structured settlement the child receives as an adult. Larger settlements may also require a court-appointed guardian to represent the child's interest. This is a safeguard, and we handle the whole process for you.

Fla. Stat. § 768.81 amended 2023

Shared fault and the 51% bar

Florida uses modified comparative negligence. If more than one party shares the blame, fault is split by percentage — and under the 2023 reform, an injured person who is found more than 50% at fault cannot recover. For a young child, arguments that the child was "careless" rarely hold up, but a defendant will still try. We push back hard and keep the focus where it belongs.

Florida compensatory damages

No cap on most of what your child is owed

Florida does not cap most compensatory damages in a child injury case. That means the recovery can reflect the full picture — past and future medical care, rehabilitation, lost future earning ability, disfigurement, and the pain your child has endured. We build the claim to capture the lifetime cost, not just the emergency-room invoice.

This page provides general information about Florida law and is not legal advice. Statutes and case law change; your specific case requires a consultation.

Rooted in Broward County

Where children get hurt across Broward

We are a Fort Lauderdale firm, and we know the places where Broward kids spend their days — and where injuries happen. These cases are local, and so are we.

Schools & daycares

  • Broward County Public Schools — the sixth-largest district in the country; falls, gym and playground injuries, and lapses in supervision happen on campuses across the county.
  • Licensed daycares & preschools — operators owe young children close, constant supervision. When that breaks down, a child can be hurt fast.
  • After-school & camp programs — summer and aftercare programs across Fort Lauderdale, Plantation, and Coral Springs carry the same duty to keep kids safe.

Pools & the water

  • Community & HOA pools — Broward is full of residential and community pools; unfenced gates, missing barriers, and no lifeguard turn a fun day dangerous.
  • Apartment & condo pools — landlords and associations must keep pools safe and properly secured against young children.
  • Drowning & near-drowning — Florida leads the nation in child drownings; a near-drowning can cause lasting brain injury that needs lifelong care.

Playgrounds & products

  • Public & park playgrounds — from Fort Lauderdale parks to neighborhood playgrounds, broken equipment and hard surfaces cause real harm.
  • Defective products — cribs, toys, car seats, and furniture that fail can seriously injure a child; the maker can be held responsible.
  • Crashes & pedestrian injuries — children hurt as passengers or while walking near home need a full, careful claim.
Why families call Robert

A 40-year Florida attorney handles your child's case personally

When you call DiStefano Law, you are not handed off to a call center or a rotating cast of junior staff. Robert DiStefano — a Florida personal-injury attorney for more than 40 years — handles your family's case himself.

That matters in a child's case, where the right call early can shape the whole outcome. There is no fee to talk, and on these injury matters we work on contingency: no fee unless we recover for you. You focus on your child; we carry the legal weight. Read more about Robert DiStefano, or See related case results →

01

Free, same-day review

Tell us what happened. We listen, explain your family's options in plain English, and tell you honestly whether you have a case — same day, at no cost to you.

02

We build the case

We gather records, secure evidence before it disappears, and bring in medical and life-care experts to show the full, future cost of your child's injury.

03

We protect the recovery

We negotiate hard, take it through court approval, and make sure your child's money is safeguarded the way Florida law requires.

Child injuries are part of our broader catastrophic injury practice. If your family is also dealing with a dog bite — a leading cause of injury to young children — or the loss of a loved one in a wrongful death case, we can help with that too.

Questions parents ask

Child injury claims in Florida — your questions answered

What is the deadline to file a claim when my child is hurt in Florida?
Most Florida injury claims now carry a two-year deadline to file a lawsuit. For a child, that deadline is tolled — legally paused — while your child is a minor, because a child cannot bring a claim on their own. The pause is not unlimited, and certain claims (for example, against some government entities) have their own strict notice deadlines that can apply much sooner. Because evidence fades and witnesses move, it is always best to start as soon as possible rather than rely on the pause. A free review will tell you exactly which deadlines apply to your child's case.
Who can file a personal injury claim on a child's behalf?
A child cannot file a lawsuit on their own. A parent or legal guardian brings the claim on the child's behalf as the child's representative. In some situations — often where the settlement is large — a Florida court will appoint a guardian to make sure the child's interests are fully represented and separate from the parents'. We guide your family through exactly who needs to act and when.
Why does a judge have to approve a settlement for my child?
When a case settles for a minor, Florida courts review the settlement before it becomes final. The judge confirms the amount is fair to the child and that the money is protected — frequently through a guardianship account or a structured settlement the child receives when they turn eighteen. This court approval is a safeguard built into the law so a child's recovery cannot be spent or mishandled before they are an adult. We prepare the paperwork and handle the court process for you.
My child was hurt at daycare or school — can I bring a claim?
Often, yes. Daycares, preschools, and schools owe young children close supervision and a reasonably safe environment. When a child is injured because of inadequate supervision, unsafe equipment, or unsafe premises, the operator may be responsible. Claims against a public school district can involve special notice rules and shorter deadlines, so it is important to get advice quickly. We will investigate what happened and tell you who can be held accountable.
What can compensation cover in a child injury case?
Florida does not cap most compensatory damages in a child injury case, so the recovery can reflect the full, lifetime impact of the injury. That can include past and future medical bills, surgery and rehabilitation, therapy, the cost of any future care, lost future earning ability, scarring or disfigurement, and the pain your child has suffered. Because a child is still growing, we work with doctors and life-care planners to value future needs — not just today's bills.
Client reviews

What clients say about working with us

4.8 ★★★★★ 51 verified Google reviews Read all on Google →

★★★★★

“The best lawyer in South Florida. Thank you DiStefano for all the hard work that you and your team have done to get me amazing results.”

Taravia Google

★★★★★

“I had a wonderful experience with Robert! He fought hard for me and kept me in the loop the whole time. The whole office is just great!”

Paulavia Google

★★★★★

“Mr. DiStefano is the best! Kept me up to date with everything, and his paralegal Michelle also kept us informed. Happy with my settlement — I highly recommend him.”

Stacy Leevia Google

Talk to us today

Your child deserves a careful, experienced advocate.

Tell us what happened. The call is free, confidential, and same-day — and there's no fee unless we recover for you. Reach our Fort Lauderdale office →

(954) 572-8000
Robert DiStefano, Esq. · Fort Lauderdale