Roundup Cancer Lawsuit in Florida
Information for Florida residents researching Roundup Cancer lawsuits, non-Hodgkin lymphoma allegations, possible eligibility factors, records, deadlines, and legal options.
This guide is for general information only. It does not provide legal advice, does not create an attorney-client relationship, and case status can change.
What Florida residents should know
Florida residents are not necessarily limited to filing only in Florida state court. Many mass tort claims may be evaluated by national firms, filed in federal court, coordinated through MDL proceedings, or handled through another legal process.
State law may still matter for deadlines, damages, claim evaluation, and certain procedural issues.
What stands out about Roundup litigation in Florida?
Florida residents may have Roundup exposure histories tied to agricultural, residential, landscaping, or groundskeeping use, but the current litigation path is not Florida-specific.
Federal Roundup cases filed by Florida residents are transferred into the national proceeding, MDL No. 2741, in the Northern District of California before Judge Vince Chhabria. Many claims are also being resolved through the proposed $7.25 billion nationwide class settlement that received preliminary approval in Missouri state court in March 2026.
The practical center of gravity for Florida claimants is therefore the federal MDL and the nationwide settlement rather than a Florida-specific trial track.
Sources: JPML — pending MDL dockets; King v. Monsanto preliminary approval order (Mar. 4, 2026).
Possible eligibility factors
Florida residents may want to speak with a lawyer if they used or were exposed to Roundup and glyphosate-based herbicide products and later experienced non-Hodgkin lymphoma.
- Use, prescription, employment, service, or exposure history.
- Medical diagnosis and treatment records.
- Approximate dates of use, exposure, diagnosis, and treatment.
- Information about prior conditions, alternative exposures, or other facts a lawyer may need to evaluate.
What records support Roundup claims in Florida?
- Purchase receipts, product photos, farm, landscaping, groundskeeping, municipal, school, golf-course, or property-maintenance records.
- Records showing repeated glyphosate or Roundup use, mixing, spraying, application frequency, and exposure years.
- Oncology records, pathology reports, biopsy records, treatment history, and non-Hodgkin lymphoma subtype records.
- Prior claim forms, settlement paperwork, releases, opt-out documents, or law-firm communications if any exist.
What exposure and legal context matter in Florida?
State residents may have encountered Roundup through agricultural use, residential use, landscaping, groundskeeping, parks, schools, golf courses, or similar settings.
Where are Florida Roundup cases handled?
Living in Florida does not necessarily mean the case will be filed only in Florida. Claims may be evaluated by national firms, filed in federal court, coordinated through MDL proceedings, or handled through another legal process.
Federal courts in Florida
- Northern District of Florida
- Middle District of Florida
- Southern District of Florida
What is the filing deadline for Roundup lawsuits in Florida?
For a Florida resident researching Roundup claims, the starting point is usually Florida's general personal injury period: 4 years under Fla. Stat. § 95.11(3)(d). That is only a starting point, not a final legal deadline for every person.
The real filing deadline can depend on diagnosis date, when the injury and possible cause were discovered, exposure location, wrongful-death issues, prior claim paperwork, and whether the case is filed directly, transferred to an MDL, or handled through another process.
Discovery-rule note: Florida applies a four-year period to injury actions founded on the design, manufacture, distribution, or sale of personal property. Florida's 2023 tort reform (HB 837) cut the general negligence period to two years (§ 95.11(4)(a)) but did not change the product-liability period at § 95.11(3)(d). Latent-injury accrual rules can apply.
How long do Florida residents have to file?
Florida's personal injury statute of limitations applicable to product liability claims is 4 years (Fla. Stat. § 95.11(3)(d)). Accrual timing, tolling, and repose periods can still change the real deadline in an individual case.
- Filing period: 4 years — Fla. Stat. § 95.11(3)(d).
- Discovery rule: Florida applies a four-year period to injury actions founded on the design, manufacture, distribution, or sale of personal property. Florida's 2023 tort reform (HB 837) cut the general negligence period to two years (§ 95.11(4)(a)) but did not change the product-liability period at § 95.11(3)(d). Latent-injury accrual rules can apply.
- Statute of repose: Florida product liability claims can be subject to a 12-year repose period for certain products (§ 95.031).
Because the controlling deadline depends on diagnosis date, discovery facts, exposure history, wrongful-death rules, and how the claim is filed, only a licensed attorney can confirm the deadline that applies to a specific situation. This page is general legal information, not legal advice.
What should Florida residents ask a lawyer?
- What proof do you need of Roundup or glyphosate exposure and years of use?
- How do lymphoma subtype, diagnosis date, and oncology records affect review?
- Could prior settlement paperwork, releases, or opt-out documents affect my options?
- How do state filing deadlines apply to my diagnosis and discovery timeline?
- Would my claim be handled locally, nationally, or through the MDL?
- Are there upfront costs?
Frequently Asked Questions
Where are Roundup cases for Florida residents coordinated?
Federal Roundup cases filed by Florida residents are transferred into MDL No. 2741 in the Northern District of California before Judge Vince Chhabria. Many claims are also being resolved through the proposed $7.25 billion nationwide class settlement.
Why is Florida relevant to Roundup claims?
Florida residents may have agricultural, residential, landscaping, or groundskeeping exposure histories, but claims proceed through the federal MDL and the proposed nationwide settlement rather than a Florida-specific trial track.
Do Florida deadlines matter?
Yes. Filing deadlines may depend on state law, diagnosis date, discovery date, exposure history, and other facts.
What records should I gather?
Medical records, exposure or use records, pharmacy records, employment records, treatment invoices, and diagnosis documents may help a lawyer review a claim.
Does this page provide legal advice?
No. This page is general legal information only and does not create an attorney-client relationship.
Is a settlement guaranteed?
No. No settlement, claim value, or outcome is guaranteed.
Can defendants dispute Roundup Cancer claims?
Yes. Defendants may dispute causation, warnings, liability, damages, or other issues.
What should I ask a lawyer first?
Ask whether they are reviewing the claim type, what records they need, how deadlines apply, and whether the case would be handled locally, nationally, or through an MDL.
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Sources and Update Log
- Last reviewed
- June 16, 2026
- Last updated
- June 16, 2026
Sources reviewed may include court filings, MDL notices, public agency materials, manufacturer disclosures, and law firm case-status updates where applicable.
Recent updates focus on lawsuit status, state-specific context, eligibility factors, records, deadlines, and editorial disclosures.