Contracts

    Breach of Contract

    A failure to perform a contractual obligation without legal excuse, which gives the other party remedies.

    A breach of contract occurs when a party fails to perform an obligation under the contract without a legal excuse. The non-breaching party may then pursue remedies such as specific performance, liquidated or actual damages, or rescission.

    When a buyer breaches, the seller may keep the earnest money as liquidated damages or sue for performance or damages. When a seller breaches, the buyer may sue for specific performance or damages.

    On the exam

    A breach unlocks remedies: specific performance, damages, or rescission. Match the remedy to who breached and what the wronged party wants.

    Exam trap

    Not every failure is a breach. A party excused by an unmet contingency or by impossibility has not breached.

    Tested in

    Contracts (12% of the exam)

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    This definition is Florida real estate exam-prep education, not legal, tax, or professional advice. Verify current rules against the official source before relying on them for a real transaction. Back to the full glossary.