There is no official Florida collaborative agreement NP template. Instead, the state law requires that any agreement, whether templated or custom-drafted, satisfy the requirements of 2025 Florida Statutes 464.012. A downloaded form that skips those requirements will not hold up during a board complaint or a payer audit.
Key Takeaways
- Florida does not publish an official collaborative agreement template, so any form you use, including a florida np collaborative agreement sample found online, must independently meet the requirements of the 2025 Florida Statutes 464.012. (Jump to Section)
- A compliant agreement defines the scope of practice, prescribing limits, chart review terms, and physician availability. Signature lines are not enough. (Jump to Section)
- Generic templates are frequently outdated or written for a different state, which creates exposure during an audit or a complaint investigation. (Jump to Section)
Why There’s No Official State Template
The 2025 Florida Statutes 464.012(3) requires every APRN to work within an established protocol kept on-site at every location where they practice. The statute does not provide a fill-in-the-blank form. The Florida Board of Nursing offers a suggested protocol format, but it is a starting reference, not a mandatory template.
That’s why a search for a Florida APRN protocol template turns up dozens of different layouts, and none of them are automatically compliant just because another practice used one. The physician who signs the protocol must also notify the Florida Board of Medicine within 30 days.
What a Compliant Agreement Must Include
A compliant Florida collaborative agreement needs five specific elements, regardless of format or template source. The 2025 Florida Statutes 464.012 sets the substantive requirements for all five. Missing any one of these five elements creates a gap that surfaces during a board investigation or a payer audit.
- Scope of practice: The agreement must define the exact services the NP performs at that location, not a generic list of duties.
- Prescribing and formulary limits: Under the 2025 Florida Statutes 464.012(3)(a), an APRN may prescribe controlled substances only if they hold a master’s or doctoral degree in a clinical nursing specialty, and the agreement must state that authority explicitly.
- Chart review terms: The agreement must specify the exact frequency and method of chart review, not a vague reference to “periodic review.”
- Physician availability: The agreement must include backup coverage if the primary collaborating physician is unreachable.
- Delegation of procedures: The agreement must clearly delegate any specific procedures the NP performs, including injectables or other aesthetic treatments.
The 2025 Florida Statutes 464.0123 allows autonomous practice only in primary care: family medicine, general pediatrics, and general internal medicine. Aesthetic and injectable services fall outside that scope, so autonomous registration does not replace a collaborative agreement for most med spa work.
The Risk of Using a Generic Template
Most downloaded Florida collaborative practice agreement forms have one of two problems: they were written for a different state, or they don’t match what the practice actually does. A board investigator checking a complaint doesn’t just read the agreement. They pull the NP’s procedure logs and compare them against the scope the agreement lists, and a mismatch there is what turns a routine complaint into a licensing action.
- Wrong-state language: The template was drafted for another state’s statute and never updated for Florida’s specific requirements.
- Scope mismatch: The template lists generic duties that don’t reflect the services the practice actually performs, including injectables, IV therapy, or other med spa procedures requiring explicit delegation.
Neither problem shows up until someone checks the agreement against the charts. By then, the practice had been operating out of compliance for as long as the agreement had been in place.
Attorney-Reviewed vs. Downloaded: What Actually Holds Up in an Audit
A downloaded template proves a document exists, but it doesn’t prove the document is right for Florida or for the practice. Meanwhile, an attorney-reviewed Florida NP physician agreement is built around the specific services the NP provides, the formulary limits that apply, and the chart review cadence the physician will follow. The table below shows where the two actually differ.
Downloaded Template | Attorney-Reviewed Agreement | |
|---|---|---|
Source of language | Copied from another practice or another state | Drafted for this practice’s actual services |
Prescribing limits | Generic, often missing formulary detail | Matches the NP’s specific prescribing authority under 464.012(3)(a) |
Chart review terms | Vague reference to “periodic review” | Specific frequency and method, named in the agreement |
Scope of practice | Lists standard duties, not actual procedures | Names the specific procedures performed, including injectables or IV therapy |
What happens in an audit | Investigator finds a mismatch between the document and the charts | Document already matches the charts |
A signature makes both documents look the same. However, only one of them matches what the investigator finds when they check the practice’s actual charts.
How Medical Director Co. Provides a State-Specific Agreement With Every Placement
Every physician placement through Medical Director Co. includes a Florida-specific collaborative agreement, reviewed for compliance with the 2025 Florida Statutes 464.012 before either party signs. Take a med spa hiring its first collaborating physician: a generic template might list “aesthetic services” as the NP’s scope and stop there, which won’t hold up if a payer asks which procedures the NP is authorized to perform. Medical Director Co.’s attorney names the actual procedures, injectables, IV therapy, or whatever the practice performs, along with the specific formulary limits and chart review cadence that apply, before anyone signs.
Your Template Doesn't Know Florida Law. We Do.
Every placement comes with a Florida-specific agreement, reviewed against the 2025 Florida Statutes 464.012 before anyone signs.
FAQ
Does Florida provide an official collaborative agreement template?
Florida law sets requirements for what the agreement must contain, but the state does not publish a standard fill-in-the-blank form. Practices and physicians can format the agreement however they choose, as long as it satisfies the 2025 Florida Statutes 464.012.
Can I use a template from another state for a Florida NP agreement?
Requirements vary by state, so a template drafted for another jurisdiction is likely to miss Florida-specific requirements. That includes onsite protocol storage and Board of Medicine notification within 30 days.
What clauses are required in a Florida collaborative agreement?
At minimum, the agreement needs a defined scope of practice, prescribing and formulary limits, chart review terms, and physician availability provisions, including backup coverage when the primary physician is unreachable.
Who should review a collaborative agreement before it’s signed?
A healthcare attorney familiar with Florida APRN law should review the agreement before either party signs it. Review catches scope mismatches and outdated language before they become audit findings.
How much does an attorney-reviewed collaborative agreement typically cost?
Costs vary by provider. Medical Director Co. includes an attorney-reviewed agreement in its flat-rate placement fee starting at $799 per month, with no separate drafting charge.
Auditing Your Agreement Before the State Does
Check your agreement against the 2025 Florida Statutes 464.012, not against the template you downloaded. Confirm scope, prescribing limits, chart review terms, and physician availability before anyone signs, and have counsel review the document against how the practice actually operates. Practices without that review find out what’s missing during an audit.
Don't Wait for an Audit to Find the Gap.
Get matched with a collaborating physician and a compliant agreement in one placement.

Bolton M. Harris, J.D., is a seasoned attorney with a formidable background in criminal law and a focus on healthcare law and compliance. As the in-house legal counsel at Medical Director Co., Harris brings a unique blend of prosecutorial experience and regulatory expertise to support healthcare professionals across Texas. Her career spans roles as a prosecutor in multiple counties and now as a trusted advisor on the legal intricacies of medical practice operations.
Education & Early Career
Bolton Harris completed her undergraduate studies at Southern Methodist University (SMU) in 2013. During her time at SMU, she was not only a dedicated student but also a competitive athlete on the university’s women’s swimming team. She went on to earn her Juris Doctor from Texas A&M University School of Law in 2016 and became a member of the Texas Bar that same year. Armed with a strong academic foundation and discipline honed as a student-athlete, Harris embarked on a career in criminal law immediately after law school.
Prosecutorial Experience in Texas
Bolton Harris began her legal career in public service as a criminal prosecutor. She served as an Assistant District Attorney in multiple jurisdictions, where she quickly rose through the ranks and handled a broad spectrum of cases. Some highlights of her prosecutorial career include:
- Assistant District Attorney, Dallas County, Texas: Prosecuted a high volume of criminal cases in one of the state’s busiest DA offices, gaining extensive trial experience in both misdemeanor and felony courts.
- Assistant District Attorney, Ellis County, Texas: Continued to hone her courtroom advocacy skills, known for meticulous case preparation and a tenacious pursuit of justice on behalf of the community.
- Assistant District Attorney, Navarro County, Texas: Broadened her legal expertise by handling diverse criminal matters in a smaller county, working closely with law enforcement and community leaders to uphold the law.
Through these roles, Harris built a reputation for being a tough but fair advocate. She brought numerous cases to trial and developed an in-depth understanding of the criminal justice system. This distinguished prosecutorial background laid a strong foundation for the next phase of her career in the private sector.
Healthcare Law & Compliance at Medical Director Co.
After her tenure as a prosecutor, Harris shifted her focus to healthcare law, applying her legal acumen to the medical field. She recognized that the same attention to detail and tenacity that served her in criminal law could benefit healthcare providers navigating complex regulations. Embracing this new direction, Harris became well-versed in the intricate laws governing medical practices – from licensing requirements to patient safety and privacy standards – and is passionate about helping practitioners stay compliant.
In her current role as the in-house attorney for Medical Director Co., Bolton Harris oversees all legal and compliance matters for the organization and its clients. Medical Director Co. is a nurse-owned firm that connects nurse practitioners (NPs), physician assistants (PAs), and registered nurses with qualified medical directors and collaborating physicians, offering fast placements and comprehensive compliance support for healthcare practices. Harris ensures that each of these partnerships and clinical ventures adheres to all applicable state and federal laws. She is responsible for drafting and reviewing collaborative practice agreements, advising on regulatory requirements, and providing ongoing legal counsel as clients establish and grow their clinics. Drawing on her prosecutorial eye for risk management, Harris proactively identifies potential legal issues and addresses them before they escalate, giving healthcare professionals peace of mind.
Bolton M. Harris’s multifaceted expertise – spanning high-stakes courtroom litigation to detailed healthcare compliance – makes her a formidable legal ally. Whether advocating in front of a jury or guiding a medical practice through regulatory hurdles, she remains committed to the highest standards of the legal profession. Her blend of courtroom-tested skill and healthcare law knowledge ensures that clients of Medical Director Co. receive elite-level counsel and steadfast protection in an ever-evolving legal landscape.