Contracts

    Liquidated Damages

    An amount the parties agree in advance that one will keep or pay if the other defaults, such as retained earnest money.

    Liquidated damages are a sum the parties set in the contract ahead of time as the measure of damages if one party defaults. In real estate, a contract often lets the seller keep the buyer's earnest money as liquidated damages if the buyer defaults.

    Because the amount is agreed in advance, the wronged party does not have to prove the actual loss.

    On the exam

    Liquidated damages are agreed in advance, often the retained earnest money on a buyer default.

    Exam trap

    Liquidated means set ahead of time. Do not confuse it with specific performance, which forces the sale rather than awarding money.

    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.