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How to become a licensed Interior Designer in Florida. Data verified 2026-03-21. Source: LicenseMap (getlicensemap.com).
Interior Designer — CID/RID
Governing Authority
Board of Architecture and Interior Design (under DBPR Division of Professions)
Official website →Yes
License Required
Yes
NCIDQ Required
Title act
Regulation Type
0 yrs
Experience Years
20 hrs
CE Hours
$75
Total Initial Fees
Degree & Accreditation
VerifiedDegree Required
Not Required
Graduate Degree
Graduate degree accepted through NCIDQ eligibility pathways
Degree Field
NCIDQ certification required; education embedded in NCIDQ eligibility requirements
Accreditation
NCIDQ passage demonstrates education sufficiency; CIDA-accredited program is the standard path
Interior designers seeking licensure or certification must hold a minimum of a bachelor's degree in interior design from a CIDA-accredited (Council for Interior Design Accreditation) program or an equivalent program approved by the state. CIDA accreditation ensures the program meets rigorous standards for interior design education.
Browse approved interior designer training programs to find the right fit.
Browse Interior Designer study materials on Amazon →(affiliate link)
Certification Requirements
VerifiedNCIDQ Certification Required
National Council for Interior Design Qualification
IDFX Exam
Interior Design Fundamentals Exam (IDFX): Covers design theory, building systems, construction standards, codes, and design communication. First section of the NCIDQ examination.
IDPX Exam
Interior Design Professional Exam (IDPX): Covers programming, schematic design, design development, contract documents, and project coordination. Second section of the NCIDQ examination.
PRAC Exam
Practicum (PRAC): A practicum-based exam testing application of interior design knowledge through scenario-based problems involving space planning, building code compliance, and design problem solving.
The NCIDQ examination consists of three sections: the Interior Design Fundamentals Exam (IDFX), the Interior Design Professional Exam (IDPX), and the Practicum (PRAC). All three sections must be passed to achieve NCIDQ certification. The exams are administered by the Council for Interior Design Qualification (CIDQ) and are offered multiple times per year at Prometric testing centers.
Professional Experience
Verified0 yrs
Years Required
Experience requirements embedded in NCIDQ/CIDQ eligibility pathways
Supervised Experience
Qualifying experience includes commercial and residential interior design, space planning, construction document preparation, building code review, specification writing, project coordination, and client consultation
Qualifying Experience
Most states require 2-4 years of diversified interior design experience working under the supervision of a qualified interior designer, architect, or other licensed professional. Qualifying experience includes commercial and residential design, space planning, construction document preparation, building code review, specification writing, and project coordination. The IDEP (Interior Design Experience Program) may be used to document qualifying experience in some jurisdictions.
State Licensing Requirements
VerifiedState License/Registration Required
Regulation Type
title act
Additional Notes
Florida has a title act for interior designers (changed from practice act in 2020).
Approximately 26 jurisdictions require some form of licensure, registration, or certification for interior designers. Regulation types include practice acts (which restrict who may practice interior design), title acts (which restrict use of the title), certification programs, and registration programs. Even in unregulated states, NCIDQ certification may be required by employers or enhance professional standing.
Practice Scope & Specialties
VerifiedCommercial
Authorized
Residential
Authorized
Space Planning
Authorized
Code Compliance
Authorized
Space Planning Details
Space planning including furniture layout, circulation patterns, accessibility compliance, and functional zoning for commercial and residential interiors
Code Compliance Details
Building code review and compliance for interior construction as defined by state title act; scope varies by jurisdiction
Interior designers practice in areas including commercial and residential design, space planning, furniture layout, material selection, lighting design, building code compliance, ADA accessibility, construction document preparation, and project management. The scope of practice varies by state regulation type, with practice act states providing the broadest scope of practice authority.
| Fee | Amount |
|---|---|
Application Fee | $75 |
License Fee | $0 |
Renewal Fee | $75 |
Total Initial Fees Includes application and registration fees (excludes NCIDQ exam fees paid directly to CIDQ) | $75 |
Use our licensing cost calculator to estimate your total investment including education and exam fees.
Renewal & CE Requirements
Verified2 years (biennial)
Renewal Period
20 hrs
CE Hours Required
$75
Renewal Fee
CE Details
20 CE hours per 2-year renewal; minimum 14 hours in HSW, 2 hours in Florida Building Code advanced courses
Regulatory Board
Interior design licenses, registrations, and certifications must be renewed on schedule with the state licensing authority. Most states require Continuing Education (CE) hours in interior design, building codes, life safety, accessibility, sustainability, or related professional practice topics. Requirements typically range from 8-24 hours per renewal cycle.
Out-of-State Reciprocity
VerifiedEndorsement Available
Yes
Comity Available
Yes
Reciprocity Requirements
Most states that regulate interior designers offer reciprocity or endorsement for NCIDQ-certified interior designers from other states. Requirements typically include verification of current credential, passage of all three NCIDQ exam sections, meeting education and experience requirements, and completing any state-specific application requirements. NCIDQ certification serves as the common standard across jurisdictions.
Moving to another state? Use our Transfer Tool to see what you need →
Florida converted from a practice act to a title act effective July 1, 2020, making it less restrictive. Registration requires NCIDQ passage. Florida mandates 20 CE hours per biennial renewal including 14 HSW hours and 2 hours in Florida Building Code advanced courses. Registrations expire February 28 of odd years.
Florida has a title act for interior designers (changed from practice act in 2020).
The NCIDQ examination (all three sections: IDFX, IDPX, and PRAC) is required for RID credential in Florida.
Experience requirements determined by NCIDQ/CIDQ eligibility pathways.
20 CE hours are required per 2-year renewal cycle.
Registrations expire February 28 of odd years.
Florida previously had a practice act but converted to a title act effective July 1, 2020.
There is no interstate compact for interior designers.
Interior Designer requirements in nearby states
Florida ranks #4 out of 27 for lowest interior designer licensing fees ($75). See full ranking →
Related Guides
Explore requirements for other professional licenses in Florida.
Interior Designer Schools in Florida
Compare approved training programs, costs, and requirements.
How this state compares to 50 others for this profession
Timeline
#1 of 51
Salary
#28 of 51
Cost
#4 of 51
Processing
#1 of 51
Based on May 2024 Bureau of Labor Statistics OEWS data for Interior Designers (SOC 27-1025)
Entry Level
$43,310
25th percentile
Median
$60,200
-5% vs. national avg ($63,490)Experienced
$77,390
75th percentile
Wage Distribution (Annual)
7,090 employed in this state
Source: BLS OEWS – Interior Designers (May 2024)
National employment projections for 2024-2034
Projected Growth
+5.7%
Average GrowthNew Jobs
+4,300
over 10 years
Annual Openings
7,400
per year (avg.)
75,100 currently employed nationwide (2024)
Source: BLS Employment Projections 2024-2034 (September 2025)
NCIDQ Exam (IDFX, IDPX, PRAC) — Spring 2023National rate
60%
Overall Pass Rate
By Section
IDFX ~55%, IDPX ~62%, PRAC ~62%. Three sections required for full certification.
Source: CIDQ (Council for Interior Design Qualification) (2023)
Pass rates are approximate national averages and may vary by state, exam provider, and candidate preparation.
Government fees and exam costs to obtain your initial license
Note: These are government licensing fees only. Education/training program costs (tuition, books, etc.) are not included as they vary widely by institution.
Estimated total: 228–246 weeks
Timeline estimated from licensing requirements on this page.
Source: Florida Board of Architecture and Interior Design — Licensing Requirements
4-8 weeks after complete application
Estimated processing time
Source: Florida Board of Architecture and Interior Design — Licensing Requirements
Study guides for the NCIDQ certification exam.
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Florida requires a title act for interior designers. All three NCIDQ exam sections (IDFX, IDPX, PRAC) are required. All licensing is managed through the Board of Architecture and Interior Design (under DBPR Division of Professions).
Requirements vary by state. Always verify current requirements with your state licensing authority.