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Permanent Total Disability in Florida: How to Qualify and Protect Your Benefits

Permanent Total Disability (PTD) is the highest level of wage loss benefit under Florida workers’ comp. It’s designed for injured workers who cannot engage in any kind of gainful employment.

How PTD Works

If approved, PTD pays two-thirds of your average weekly wage until age 75 (or for life if your accident happened after age 70).

Automatic PTD Eligibility

Florida Statute §440.15 says certain injuries automatically qualify, including:

Amputation at or above the knee or elbow

Loss of both hands, arms, feet, or legs

Complete blindness

Proving PTD When It’s Not Automatic

If your injury isn’t on the automatic list, you can still qualify by showing:

You cannot perform at least sedentary work

There’s no suitable employment within a 50-mile radius of your home

Why PTD Cases Get Denied

Carriers argue you can do “light duty” or desk jobs

IME doctors give unfavorable work restrictions

Vocational experts suggest unrealistic job options

Tip: Functional Capacity Evaluations (FCEs) and detailed DWC-25 forms from your doctor are critical to proving your case.