At least 90 days before your license expires, the department will mail you a renewal notification postcard to your last known mailing address of record. You will have until midnight, Eastern Time, on the day your license expires to renew. Failure to renew an active or inactive license by the expiration date will result in the license being placed in delinquent status. Failure by a delinquent licensee to renew before the expiration of the current licensure cycle renders the license null and void without any further action by the board or the department.
Approximately 90 days prior to your license expiration date, the board office will mail you a copy of your renewal application letter.
In order to renew your Chiropractic faculty certificate, you must complete and submit the renewal application along with your fee.
Mail your application and fee to:
Florida Board of Chiropractic Medicine
P. O. Box 6330
Tallahassee, FL 32314-6330
Supporting documents must be mailed to:
Florida Board of Chiropractic Medicine
4052 Bald Cypress Way, Bin # C 07
Tallahassee, FL 32399-3257
Note: If your state is able to verify your license electronically, please have your verification sent to MQA.Chiropractic@flhealth.gov
Upon receipt of all required documentation, board staff will review and process your request. If any additional information is required you will be notified.
Name Changes
Name changes require legal documentation showing the name change. Please submit a request including your full name as it appears on your license, profession, license number, your new name, your date of birth, the last four digits of your social security number, and your signature. Attach supporting documents, which must be one of the following:
- A copy of a state issued marriage license that includes the original signature and seal from the clerk of the court
- A divorce decree showing the name change
- A court order showing the name change (adoption, legal name change, federal identity change)
Any one of these will be accepted unless the department has a question about the authenticity of the document. A social security card is not considered legal documentation.