Claim review · afff

AFFF Firefighting Foam Lawsuit in Florida: Filing Window and Eligibility (2026)

Florida AFFF firefighting foam lawsuit: who qualifies, 2 years (effective March 24, 2023) filing window, MDL 2873 status, and exposure documentation. Not legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney.

AFFF (Aqueous Film-Forming Foam) was the standard fire suppressant at military bases, airports, and fire training facilities for decades. It also contains PFAS - per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances - that do not break down in the environment or the human body.

Florida has documented AFFF contamination sites at military installations and civilian airports, including Tyndall Air Force Base, Eglin Air Force Base (Fort Walton Beach), MacDill Air Force Base (Tampa), NAS Jacksonville, Patrick Space Force Base, NAS Key West, NAS Pensacola, and Homestead Air Reserve Base. Firefighters, military veterans, and base workers who trained or worked at these locations are filing claims after cancer diagnoses linked to long-term PFAS exposure.

If you were exposed to AFFF in Florida and have been diagnosed with a qualifying condition, this page covers the filing window, eligibility criteria, and how the federal MDL process works. Deadlines vary by state and by individual circumstances.

This is not legal advice. Talk to a licensed attorney in your state before taking any legal action.

Last updated: June 2026. MDL 2873 (D.S.C.) status: active - water utility settlements finalized; personal injury cancer claims in discovery.

Questions answered

The hard questions, answered.

+
+
+
+
+
+
+
Important · Not legal advice

This article is general information about AFFF firefighting foam lawsuit Florida and is not legal advice. last10legal is a matching service for state-licensed attorneys, not a law firm. Reading this article, contacting last10legal, or using any form on this site does not create an attorney-client relationship with last10legal. Laws and procedures vary by state and the facts of any specific matter change the analysis. Talk to a licensed attorney in your state before acting on anything you read here.

last10legal