FL Financial Affidavit (Forms 12.902(b) & (c))Forms 12.902(b)/(c) · Step 1 of 5
Parties & Income Level
Determine which form applies to you and gather your income information.
SharpeSystem helps you organize information for Florida court forms — not a lawyer, not legal advice. Florida Supreme Court approved forms are available free at flcourts.gov .
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Florida law note: Florida Rule 12.285 requires both parties to exchange financial affidavits automatically within 45 days of service — no request needed. Form 12.902(b) (Short Form) applies if your gross annual income is under $50,000. Form 12.902(c) (Long Form) applies if gross annual income is $50,000 or more. Both must be sworn and notarized.
Your full legal name (Petitioner)
Other party's full legal name (Respondent)
Enter the other party's full legal name. Use the same name from any existing court papers.
Florida judicial circuit you're filing in
Select the judicial circuit (court system) where you want to file. This is determined by the county where you or your spouse lives.
Select your circuit…
1st Circuit — Escambia, Okaloosa, Santa Rosa, Walton
2nd Circuit — Franklin, Gadsden, Jefferson, Leon, Liberty, Wakulla
3rd Circuit — Columbia, Dixie, Hamilton, Lafayette, Madison, Suwannee, Taylor, Union
4th Circuit — Clay, Duval, Nassau
5th Circuit — Citrus, Hernando, Lake, Marion, Sumter
6th Circuit — Pasco, Pinellas
7th Circuit — Flagler, Putnam, St. Johns, Volusia
8th Circuit — Alachua, Baker, Bradford, Gilchrist, Levy
9th Circuit — Orange, Osceola (Orlando)
10th Circuit — Hardee, Highlands, Polk
11th Circuit — Miami-Dade
12th Circuit — DeSoto, Manatee, Sarasota
13th Circuit — Hillsborough (Tampa)
14th Circuit — Bay, Calhoun, Gulf, Holmes, Jackson, Washington
15th Circuit — Palm Beach
16th Circuit — Monroe (Florida Keys)
17th Circuit — Broward (Fort Lauderdale)
18th Circuit — Brevard, Seminole
19th Circuit — Indian River, Martin, Okeechobee, St. Lucie
20th Circuit — Charlotte, Collier, Glades, Hendry, Lee
Not sure? Look up your county above — every county belongs to one circuit.
County of filing
Enter the Florida county where you want to file. This is usually the county where you or your spouse lives.
Case number (blank if opening a new case)
If you already have a family law case in court, enter the case number from your existing court order. If this is a new case, leave it blank — the clerk will assign a number when you file.
Court division / judge (if you have a case)
If you have an existing case, enter the court division or judge's name. Look at your existing court papers for this information.
Your gross annual income (all sources)
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