FL · age-by-state job guide
What jobs can a 14 year old do in Florida?
Quick answer for 14-year-olds in Florida — what hours are legal, whether a work permit is required, and the most common allowed jobs. Built directly from Florida state labor code.
Updated:
Quick answer
- Can a 14-year-old work?
- Yes
- Work permit
- Not required
- Minimum work age
- 14+
In Florida
Legal work hours
Florida sets different hour caps depending on whether school is in session.
During the school year
- Hours per school day
- 3 hr
- Hours per non-school day
- 8 hr
- Hours per week
- 15 hr
- Time window
- 07:00 – 19:00
No work during school hours.
Summer / school breaks
- Hours per day
- 8 hr
- Hours per week
- 40 hr
- Time window
- 07:00 – 21:00
Applies during summer vacation (Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day) and other school holidays.
Common allowed jobs for a 14-year-old
General age-appropriate jobs under federal FLSA. Florida adds its own restricted-occupations list below — check that before accepting any job.
- Retail cashier or sales clerk
Florida doesn't require a state work permit; the employer keeps proof of age on file. FL caps 14-15-year-olds at 3 hrs per school day, 15 hrs per school week (stricter than the federal 18).
- Counter food-service or drive-thru (no flame cooking, no alcohol service)
Florida bans minors under 18 from working in establishments where alcohol is served for on-premises consumption.
- Office or clerical work
- Tutoring younger students
- Park, recreation, or community-center program assistant
- Hand-tool yard work for neighbors
- Newspaper delivery on a regular route
FLSA carve-out at 29 USC § 213(d).
Restricted in Florida
- All federal hazardous orders HO-1 through HO-17(29 CFR Part 570)
- Roofing operations and work on or about a roof(HO-16)
- Operating power-driven hoists(HO-7)
- Excavation operations(HO-17)
- Door-to-door sales without adult supervision(FL Stat §450.061)
Related guides
Read the full Florida rules
This page summarizes the rules for 14-year-olds. For all ages, age-band breakdown, statute citation, and DOL references, see the full state page.