Every US state has its own aquatic species list. Some are tightly regulated (Hawaii, California, Florida) and some defer almost entirely to federal Lacey Act enforcement. Florida's FWC maintains one of the strictest aquatic species lists in the country due to the state's warm climate and the ecological damage from established escaped pet fish populations. Fast Aquatics enforces FL restrictions automatically at checkout.
The species below are banned for import, sale, or interstate shipment under the federal Lacey Act. State-level enforcement may be additional, but the federal ban is the floor:
The species below are prohibited from possession, sale, or import in Florida without exception. Most are also banned at the federal level via the Lacey Act, which means the state ban is in addition to federal enforcement. Fast Aquatics blocks these species from checkout when shipping to a Florida address.
The species below are not banned outright but require a state permit, aquaculture license, or specific use case (e.g. triploid-only, indoor-only, retail-only). Hobbyists in Florida should confirm with the state agency before ordering any of these.
The vast majority of aquarium ornamentals are legal in Florida without permit:
When a buyer enters a Florida shipping address, our state-restriction engine automatically blocks any item from the cart that is banned in Florida. The buyer sees an inline note ("This species cannot ship to Florida") instead of a confusing rejection at payment. Where a permit is required for a conditional species, we route the buyer to the relevant state agency rather than completing the sale.
Vendors selling on Fast Aquatics do not need to memorize 50 states of regulations - the system enforces them automatically. This is one of the reasons Fast Aquatics exists: 50-state shipping is a paperwork problem more than a logistics problem, and we have done the paperwork once so vendors do not have to do it 1,000 times.
The state agency above is the authoritative source for Florida-specific rules. Federal Lacey Act species are listed by the US Fish and Wildlife Service. When in doubt about a species you do not see explicitly listed, contact the state agency directly - rules change and our list is updated periodically but is not a substitute for current state guidance.