The Reality Check: What You're Up Against

Let's be honest. If you're reading this, you're probably a little stressed about your upcoming Florida daycare inspection. Maybe it's your first one. Maybe you've been through it before and just want to make sure you haven't missed anything. Either way, you're in the right place.

Here's the deal: Florida has one of the most rigorous daycare inspection programs in the country. The state requires a minimum of two unannounced inspections per year for every licensed child care facility. That's more frequent than most other major states. And "unannounced" means exactly what it sounds like: the inspector shows up whenever they feel like it. No heads-up. No scheduling call. Just a knock on the door and a clipboard.

On top of the routine inspections, any parent complaint triggers an additional inspection. So even if you just passed your last one with flying colors, a single phone call from a disgruntled parent can bring an inspector back to your door next week.

2+
Unannounced inspections per year
32
Inspection categories
100s
Individual line items checked
$500
Max daily fine per Class 1 violation

But here's the good news: there's nothing on the inspection that's a mystery. The form they use is publicly available. The rules are published. The standards are specific. If you know what they're looking for and you've prepared for it, you can absolutely pass with flying colors. That's what this guide is for.

The CARES Database: Your Public Record

Every single violation you receive is entered into the CARES database, which is completely public. Any parent in Florida can go to caressearch.myflfamilies.com, search your facility name, and see your entire inspection history. Every violation. Every fine. Every corrective action. Forever.

This is not theoretical. Parents actually do this, especially when they're deciding between daycare options. Your inspection record is basically a public Yelp review written by the state. That's why this matters so much.

Who Inspects You and How Often

Your inspections are conducted by the Florida Department of Children and Families (DCF). The actual person who walks through your door is officially called a "Licensing Counselor" — though you'll also hear them referred to as licensing inspectors or licensing specialists.

Your Licensing Counselor is typically assigned to a geographic area, so you'll often see the same person for multiple inspections. This is actually a good thing. Building a professional relationship with your Licensing Counselor can help because they get to know your facility and can sometimes give you a heads-up about common issues they're seeing across their caseload.

Inspection frequency

The Licensing Counselor has the right to inspect any area of your facility at any time during operating hours. They can review any documents, interview any staff member, and observe any classroom. You cannot refuse entry. You cannot ask them to come back later. Refusing or obstructing an inspection is itself a violation.

Pro tip

Don't treat your Licensing Counselor like an adversary. They're not trying to "catch" you. Most of them genuinely care about child safety and want to see you succeed. Be professional, be transparent, and don't try to hide things. If there's an issue, acknowledge it and show them your plan to fix it. That goes a long way.

The Inspection Form: CF-FSP 5316

The document that governs your entire inspection experience is the CF-FSP 5316, officially called the "Standards Classification Summary." This is the form the Licensing Counselor carries with them when they walk through your facility. It's organized into 32 major categories, each containing anywhere from a few to over twenty individual line items.

You can (and absolutely should) download and print this form yourself. Read it cover to cover. Then use it as your own self-inspection checklist. If you can walk through your facility and check every item on this form before the inspector does, you're going to be fine.

Each line item on the form is assigned a violation class (1, 2, 3, or 4), so you know exactly how serious each standard is. We'll break down those classes next.

Violation Classes: What They Are and What They Cost You

Not all violations are created equal. Florida categorizes every potential violation into one of four classes. Understanding these classes is critical because it tells you where to focus your energy. Class 1 violations can literally shut you down. Class 4 violations are basically a to-do list item.

Class Severity Fines Escalation Examples
Class 1 Immediate danger to children's health, safety, or well-being $100 – $500 per day, per violation 3rd Class 1 violation = license revoked Unsupervised child; unscreened adult alone with children; firearm on premises
Class 2 Direct threat to children's health, safety, or well-being Starts at $50; escalates to $100/day by 5th violation 5th Class 2 violation = $100/day fine + potential license revocation Ratio violations; missing outlet covers; no fire inspection certificate; no monthly fire drill
Class 3 Indirect threat — increased risk through non-compliance Fines start at $25 on 3rd violation Escalating fines with repeated violations License not posted; incomplete drill records; activity plan not posted
Class 4 Minimal risk — technical non-compliance No fines initially; corrective action required Must be corrected; can escalate if ignored Minor record-keeping gaps; administrative items
This is the one that ends careers

Class 1 violations are the nuclear option. A single one means fines of up to $500 per day until corrected. A third one means your license is revoked. Period. And every Class 1 violation sits in the public CARES database forever.

The most common Class 1 violation? An unsupervised child. Even briefly. Even if someone just "stepped away for a second." If the inspector observes a child without direct staff supervision, it's an automatic Class 1. Build your processes to make this physically impossible.

Notice the pattern: the things that can shut you down are all about immediate physical safety. Unsupervised kids. Unknown adults. Weapons. The things that accumulate fines more slowly (Classes 2-3) are about systemic risks: ratio violations, missing safety equipment, paperwork gaps. And Class 4 is essentially "you need to tidy this up."

Your absolute first priority is to have zero Class 1 risks in your facility. Then eliminate Class 2 risks. Then clean up everything else.

Staff-to-Child Ratios: The Numbers You Must Know

Staff-to-child ratios are governed by Florida Statute 402.305(4), and they're one of the most commonly cited violations. The concept is simple: for every age group, there's a maximum number of children one staff member can be responsible for. Exceed that number, even by one child for one minute, and you're in violation.

Age Group Staff : Children Ratio Max Children Per 1 Staff Member
Birth through 1 year 1 : 4 4 children
1 year to under 2 years 1 : 6 6 children
2 years to under 3 years 1 : 11 11 children
3 years to under 4 years 1 : 15 15 children
4 years to under 5 years 1 : 20 20 children
5 years and older 1 : 25 25 children
Ratio violations are Class 2

A ratio violation is a Class 2 offense — meaning it's classified as a "direct threat." Don't assume you can be one kid over for a few minutes while someone goes to the bathroom. The inspector counts heads at the moment they walk in. If the math doesn't work, you're getting written up.

The ratio trap most people fall into

Ratios don't just apply during regular classroom hours. They apply at all times during operating hours, including:

Build your staffing plan with a buffer. If the math says you need exactly 3 teachers, schedule 4. One sick call or one bathroom break shouldn't be able to put you out of compliance.

Space Requirements

Florida has specific minimum space requirements for both indoor and outdoor play areas. These are measured in usable square footage per child — not total room size, but the actual space children can use (excluding storage areas, staff-only spaces, bathrooms, etc.).

35 ft²
Indoor space per child (minimum)
45 ft²
Outdoor space per child (fenced)

These numbers determine your licensed capacity — the maximum number of children you can have in your facility at any one time. If your main classroom is 700 usable square feet, that room can hold a maximum of 20 children (700 ÷ 35 = 20). The room capacity must be posted in every room.

The outdoor play area must be fenced with a fence that meets DCF specifications. The inspector will check the fence for damage, check the gates for secure latching, and verify that the outdoor space is free from hazards.

A common mistake

Don't count space that's not actually usable. That storage closet? Not usable space. The area behind the bookshelf where no child can physically play? Not usable space. The inspector measures practical, accessible floor area. Be conservative in your calculations. It's better to have fewer kids in a room than to be caught over capacity.

What Must Be Posted on Your Walls

This is one of the most frequently cited categories, and it's entirely avoidable. These are items that must be visibly displayed in specific locations in your facility. The inspector will literally walk room to room checking for these. Miss one, and it's a violation.

Required Wall Postings

Here's a pro tip: do a wall-posting walk-through every single Monday morning. It takes five minutes. Walk every room and verify every posting is there, current, and legible. Postings fall down. They get covered up by kids' artwork. Someone takes down the menu to update it and forgets to put it back. A weekly check eliminates this entire category of violations.

What Must Be in Every Child's File

The inspector will pull child files — usually randomly — and check them for completeness. A file with a missing document is an immediate violation. The specific class depends on what's missing (a missing immunization record is more serious than a missing field trip form), but the point is: every file needs to be complete, every time.

Required Documents in Each Child's File
The immunization trap

Florida Form 680 (immunization records) are the number one child-file violation. Here's why: immunization records expire as children age and need new shots. A record that was complete when the child enrolled may be out of date six months later. You need a system to track when each child's immunizations are due and follow up with parents before they lapse.

What Must Be in Every Staff Member's File

Staff files get scrutinized just as carefully as child files. The inspector will pull files for some or all of your employees and check for each of these items. Missing a background screening clearance is especially serious because it directly affects whether that person is legally allowed to be alone with children.

Required Documents in Each Staff File
Background screening is non-negotiable

If an inspector discovers that an employee who has not completed Level 2 background screening was alone with children at any point, that is an automatic Class 1 violation. This includes volunteers, substitutes, and anyone else with direct child contact. No exceptions. No grace period. Screen everyone before they start.

Training Requirements

Florida requires a specific set of training credentials for every person who works with children in your facility. This isn't optional, and "I'm working on it" doesn't count on inspection day.

The four training pillars

1

40-Hour Introductory Child Care Training

Every child care employee must complete a DCF-approved 40-hour introductory course. This covers child development, health and safety, behavioral observation, and Florida-specific regulations. It must be completed through the DCF Training Portal or an approved provider. Keep the completion certificate in the staff file.

2

Pediatric CPR and First Aid

All staff must hold current Pediatric CPR and First Aid certification. Note the word "Pediatric" — adult CPR/First Aid alone does not satisfy this requirement. Certification must be from an approved provider, and you need to track expiration dates. Expired CPR certs are a frequent violation.

3

10 Hours Annual In-Service Training

Every year, each staff member needs at least 10 hours of continued professional development. Topics should be relevant to child care: child development, safety, nutrition, behavior management, etc. Keep documented proof — certificates, sign-in sheets, training logs — in each staff file.

4

Level 2 Background Screening

Everyone who has contact with children must complete Level 2 background screening through the DCF Clearinghouse. This includes fingerprinting and a comprehensive criminal history check. Screening must be completed and cleared before the employee begins unsupervised work with children. Results must be on file.

The most practical advice here: build a training tracker. A simple spreadsheet showing each staff member, their training completion dates, and their expiration dates. Check it monthly. Don't wait until someone's CPR expires to renew it — start the renewal process 60 days before expiration.

Facility-Level Paperwork

Beyond individual child and staff files, your facility itself needs to have certain documentation on hand and up to date. These are the institutional-level records the inspector will ask for.

Facility Documentation Checklist
Fire drills: the violation that writes itself

Monthly fire drills are required, and you must document every one. The most common version of this violation is that a facility does the drills but doesn't write them down. An undocumented drill is the same as no drill at all, from the inspector's perspective. Use a standard form. Fill it out immediately after the drill. Keep them in a dedicated binder. Simple.

The 32 Inspection Categories

Here's a bird's-eye view of everything the inspector evaluates, organized by the 32 categories on the CF-FSP 5316 form. Some categories have just a few line items; others have over 20. We've noted the high-stakes ones.

# Category What to Know
1 License display / citation posted License visible to parents. Class 3 if missing.
2 Minimum age requirements Staff meet minimum age for their role.
3 Ratio sufficient Staff-to-child ratios for all age groups. Class 2 violation.
4 Supervision 20+ sub-items. Many are Class 1. This is the highest-stakes category on the form.
5 Transportation Only if you transport children. Comprehensive requirements.
6 Driver's license / CPR training Drivers must have valid license, CPR cert, and physical exam.
7 Vehicle requirements Vehicle condition, insurance, inspection records.
8 Seat belts / child restraints Age-appropriate car seats and restraints for every child.
9 Planned activities Age-appropriate activities posted and followed. Class 3 if missing.
10 Field trip permission Written parent permission for each field trip on file.
11 Child discipline Written policy followed, no prohibited discipline methods.
12 Facility environment 24 sub-items. Covers cleanliness, maintenance, safety hazards, outdoor equipment. Many Class 2 items.
13 Toxic substances / hazardous materials / weapons All toxic materials locked. No weapons on premises. Class 1 for weapons.
14 Lighting, temperature, ventilation Adequate lighting. Temperature 65–82°F. Proper ventilation.
15 Licensed capacity Not exceeding capacity at any time. Posted in each room.
16 Indoor floor space Minimum 35 sq ft usable indoor space per child.
17 Outdoor play area / fencing 45 sq ft per child. Proper fencing. Safe equipment.
18 Bedding and linens Individual bedding, clean, properly stored. No sharing.
19 Nap / sleep space Age-appropriate sleep areas. Safe sleep practices for infants.
20 Crib requirements Cribs meet CPSC standards. No drop-sides. Firm mattresses. Nothing in the crib.
21 Restrooms and bath facilities Clean, stocked, accessible, child-sized or with step stools.
22 Operable phone Working phone accessible to staff at all times.
23 Fire drills & emergency preparedness 26 sub-items. Monthly fire drills, emergency plans, documentation. Many Class 2 items.
24 Food prep area 20 sub-items. Sanitation, storage, temperature, allergen management.
25 Staff personnel records Complete files for every employee. See staff file checklist above.
26 Background screening compliance Level 2 screening current for everyone with child contact. Class 1 if unscreened person is alone with kids.
27 Staff health requirements Staff health documentation on file.
28 Training & professional development 40-hour course, CPR/First Aid, 10 hrs annual in-service — all documented.
29 Children's health records Health exam forms on file for each child.
30 Immunization records Florida Form 680 current for each child. Very commonly cited.
31 Nutrition & meal service Current menu posted, age-appropriate meals, proper food handling.
32 Facility records & documentation Fire drill records, emergency prep drills, sign-in/out logs, all kept for 12 months.

If you're feeling overwhelmed, focus on the categories I highlighted in color. Those are the ones with the most sub-items and the most serious violation classes. Get those right, and you've eliminated the majority of your risk.

What Happens During the Actual Inspection

Understanding the flow of an inspection takes a lot of the anxiety out of it. Here's what typically happens, step by step.

1

The Licensing Counselor arrives unannounced

They'll identify themselves and show their DCF credentials. They should be polite and professional. So should you. Offer them a place to set down their things, and let your staff know someone is on-site.

2

Head count and ratio check

One of the first things they'll do is count children and staff in each room. They're checking ratios in real-time. This is why your staffing has to be right at all times — not just when you're "expecting" someone.

3

Physical walk-through

They'll walk every room in the facility, including outdoor areas, kitchens, bathrooms, and storage spaces. They're looking at wall postings, cleanliness, safety hazards, outlet covers, locked cabinets for chemicals, fencing, equipment condition — everything. This is the bulk of the inspection.

4

File review

They'll pull a sample of child files and staff files and check them against the requirements. Sometimes they review every file; sometimes just a random selection. You won't know in advance which ones they'll pick, so every file needs to be complete.

5

Record review

Fire drill logs, emergency drill records, sign-in/sign-out sheets, transportation logs — they'll check that your institutional records are complete and current.

6

Exit discussion

At the end, the Licensing Counselor will typically sit down with you and go over their findings. They'll identify any violations, explain the class and what's required to correct them, and give you a timeline for corrections. This is your opportunity to ask questions. Take notes. Be respectful.

The whole process typically takes 2 to 4 hours, depending on the size of your facility and how much documentation needs to be reviewed. Larger centers with multiple classrooms and lots of staff take longer. A small facility might be done in under two hours.

The Top 10 Reasons Daycares Fail Inspections

After analyzing thousands of Florida inspection reports, these are the violations that show up again and again. Fix these, and you eliminate the majority of failures.

1

Incomplete or expired immunization records (Form 680)

The single most common paperwork violation. Children's immunization requirements change as they age. A record that was complete at enrollment can become out-of-date. Build a tracking system that alerts you 30 days before any child's immunizations are due.

2

Ratio violations during transition times

Most ratio violations don't happen because someone is wildly understaffed. They happen during drop-off, pickup, lunch, or nap when a teacher steps away and the math temporarily doesn't work. Plan for transitions specifically.

3

Missing or outdated wall postings

Evacuation plans that fell off the wall. Last month's menu still posted. Room capacity sign missing from one classroom. It's always the little things. Do a weekly walk-through.

4

Expired CPR/First Aid certifications

CPR certs typically last two years. It's easy to lose track, especially with staff turnover. Maintain a tracking spreadsheet with renewal dates.

5

Incomplete fire drill documentation

You did the drill but didn't log it. Or you logged it but missed a month. Or the log doesn't have all the required details. Use a standardized form for every drill.

6

Background screening gaps

A new employee started before their screening cleared. A volunteer was left alone with children without being screened. A screening expired and wasn't renewed. Any of these can be Class 1.

7

Cleaning supplies or toxic materials not locked

Every cleaning product, medication, and toxic substance must be stored in a locked cabinet inaccessible to children. "On a high shelf" doesn't count if a child could climb to it. Lock it up.

8

Missing outlet covers

It sounds trivial, but it's a Class 2 violation. Check every outlet in every room. Kids pull them out. Replace them immediately.

9

Expired fire inspection certificate

Your fire inspection is annual. If you forget to schedule it and your certificate expires, you're immediately in Class 2 violation territory. Put the renewal on your calendar with a 60-day advance reminder.

10

Sign-in/sign-out log gaps

Parents forget to sign in or out. Your system doesn't capture the actual time. Records are missing for certain days. The log must show the time and a signature for every arrival and departure, every day, kept for 12 months.

Notice something? Almost none of these are about the quality of your childcare program. They're about documentation, tracking, and physical safety details. The cruel irony is that you can be an amazing daycare with wonderful teachers and still fail your inspection because of a missing piece of paper. That's the reality. The solution is systems, not harder work.

One Month Before: Your Prep Plan

Of course, you don't know exactly when the inspector is coming. That's the point. But if you're reading this because you know an inspection is due (maybe your last one was 5-6 months ago, or you just opened), here's a four-week preparation plan.

Week 1: Paperwork audit

Week 2: Physical walk-through

Week 3: Drills and records

Week 4: Staff preparation

The real secret

The best way to prepare for an inspection is to run your facility every day as if the inspector is coming today. If your daily operations meet the standards, you don't need to "prepare" at all. The four-week plan above isn't really about inspection prep — it's about building the habits and systems that keep you in compliance 365 days a year.

The Master Pre-Inspection Checklist

Print this. Laminate it. Use it weekly. If every item on this list is checked, you are ready for an inspection at any moment.

Supervision & Ratios
Wall Postings — Every Room
Child Files
Staff Files
Facility Safety & Environment
Facility Records

Official Resources and Links

Here are the primary sources you should bookmark. Everything in this guide comes from these official documents and databases.

Resource What It Is Link
DCF Child Care Licensure Main DCF page for child care licensing information myflfamilies.com
Child Care Facility Handbook The complete handbook covering all facility requirements (PDF) Download PDF
CF-FSP 5316 Inspection Form The actual form the inspector uses — your self-inspection bible Download PDF
CARES Public Search Public database showing every facility's inspection history and violations Search CARES
Florida Statute 402.305 The statute that defines licensing standards, including staff ratios View Statute
DCF Forms & Applications All DCF forms for child care providers Forms Page
DCF Training Portal Where staff complete required DCF-approved training Training Portal
Florida Admin Code 65C-22.010 The administrative code section covering child care facility requirements View Code

A note about staying current

Regulations change. Forms get updated. Fines get adjusted. While this guide was thoroughly researched and accurate as of April 2026, you should always verify critical details against the official sources linked above. Bookmark the Child Care Facility Handbook in particular — it's the single most comprehensive document and it gets updated when rules change.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I refuse a DCF inspection?

No. Refusing or obstructing an inspection is itself a violation and can result in administrative action against your license. When the Licensing Counselor arrives, you must allow them access to all areas of your facility and all required documentation.

What happens if I fail an inspection?

It depends on the severity. For Class 3 and 4 violations, you'll receive a corrective action plan with a timeline to fix the issues. For Class 2 violations, fines may be imposed and escalate with repeat offenses. For Class 1 violations, fines are immediate and can be up to $500 per day per violation. Three Class 1 violations result in license revocation. In all cases, the violations are entered into the public CARES database.

How long do violations stay on my public record?

Indefinitely. The CARES database is a permanent public record. Violations from years ago are still visible. This is why prevention is so much more important than correction — you can fix the issue, but you can't erase it from your public record.

My inspector seems to have it out for me. What can I do?

First, honestly assess whether the citations are legitimate. Most of the time, they are. If you genuinely believe a violation was cited incorrectly, you have the right to appeal. Contact your local DCF office and request the formal appeal process. Document everything. But keep in mind that antagonizing your Licensing Counselor never helps your situation. Be professional, document your disagreements in writing, and use the formal channels.

Do I need to be present during the inspection?

You don't have to be, but you absolutely should be if possible. The director or a designated representative should be available to answer questions, provide access to files, and participate in the exit discussion. If you're not available, make sure a qualified staff member knows where all documentation is kept and can act as your representative.

What if I just opened and haven't had an inspection yet?

Your first inspection is typically part of the initial licensing process. After that, you'll be on the regular schedule of at least two unannounced inspections per year. New facilities sometimes get inspected more frequently in their first year as DCF verifies that you're maintaining the standards you demonstrated during licensing.

The Bottom Line

Passing a Florida daycare inspection isn't about luck, and it isn't about being perfect. It's about having systems in place that keep you in compliance every single day. The facilities that consistently pass inspections aren't the ones that scramble to prepare when they think an inspection might be coming. They're the ones that built compliance into their daily operations.

Here's what that looks like in practice:

You got into this business because you care about kids. The inspection process exists because the state cares about kids too. When you look at it that way, you're on the same team. The inspection form isn't your enemy — it's a checklist that helps you make sure you haven't missed anything important.

You can do this. The fact that you're reading a 3,000+ word guide about how to pass your inspection tells me you're the kind of person who takes this seriously. That's already half the battle.

Now go check your wall postings.

About ComplianceKit

ComplianceKit is compliance management software built specifically for child care facilities. It automates the tracking and documentation that consumes hours of your week: staff training expirations, immunization record tracking, fire drill documentation, ratio monitoring, and everything else that shows up on the CF-FSP 5316.

Instead of spreadsheets, sticky notes, and hoping you don't forget something, ComplianceKit gives you a single dashboard that shows your compliance status in real time. When something is about to expire or a document is missing, you know about it before the inspector does.

Built by people who've been through the inspection process and got tired of the stress. Now used by hundreds of Florida child care facilities to stay inspection-ready every day of the year.

Learn more about ComplianceKit