Quick answer: Florida recognizes several legally defined protective orders, and the types of injunctions in Florida each have different filing requirements and proof standards. If you pick the wrong category (or miss a required element), the judge can deny the request—or the case can turn into a messy hearing.
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This guide explains the types of injunctions in Florida in plain English, so you can quickly identify which category matches your situation.
Florida courts treat these cases as urgent, and judges often focus on timelines, credible evidence, and whether the facts fit the legal definition for the order requested.
If you want the “big picture” first, start at the main hub: Florida restraining orders & injunctions overview. Then come back here to compare categories and avoid filing under the wrong label.
The types of injunctions in Florida are not interchangeable. Each one has its own legal elements.
In other words, the judge isn’t just asking, “Is this scary?”—the judge asks, “Does this match the statute and the approved court form?”
For example, some categories require a specific relationship, some require multiple incidents, and some require documentation (like a report) or specific statutory prerequisites.
Because of that, choosing correctly at the start can save time and reduce the risk of denial.
Below are the six most common protective orders people mean when they talk about the types of injunctions in Florida.

This applies when the parties have a qualifying family/household relationship under Florida law (for example, spouses, former spouses, people related by blood/marriage, or people who lived together as a family). Learn more here: Domestic violence injunctions.
This is for qualifying dating relationships and allegations of dating violence (or a credible threat). The court will scrutinize the relationship facts and timing. Learn more here: Dating violence injunctions.
Repeat violence cases often involve two separate incidents of violence or stalking-type conduct, with one incident typically within a recent time window. Learn more here: Repeat violence injunction guide.
This category can apply even without a family or dating relationship, but it has specific legal prerequisites and courts closely review proof. Learn more here: Sexual violence injunctions.
Stalking and cyberstalking injunctions usually rise or fall on whether the evidence shows a pattern, substantial emotional distress, and no legitimate purpose. Learn more here: Stalking injunctions. If the issue is online harassment, you may also want this background page: Cyberstalking restraining order overview.
Florida also allows protective orders focused on exploitation of vulnerable adults. These cases can overlap with guardianship issues and financial abuse concerns, so procedure matters.
Learn more here: Exploitation of a vulnerable adult injunction.
For the state court system’s overview of injunctions, you can review Florida Courts’ interpersonal violence resources here: Florida Courts — Interpersonal Violence.
For the stalking definition and related statutes, Florida’s stalking law and the civil stalking injunction statute are commonly cited here: Fla. Stat. § 784.048 and Fla. Stat. § 784.0485.
If you were served: Start with this step-by-step guide: Defending against a restraining order (respondent guide).
If you’re in Central Florida: Here’s the local starting point: Orlando injunction lawyer page.
The main types include domestic violence, dating violence, repeat violence, sexual violence, stalking/cyberstalking, and vulnerable adult exploitation injunctions. Each category has different legal requirements and proof standards.
The court can deny the request, set a hearing without temporary relief, or require amendments. Even if the underlying facts are serious, a mismatch between the facts and the legal elements can lead to denial.
No. This page is general educational information. Injunction outcomes depend on facts, evidence, procedure, and the specific type of injunction involved.
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