COBRA Administration Requirements for Landscaping & Lawn Care Companies in Hollywood, FL
Updated June 2026 · SouthernPlanFinder — Licensed Health Insurance Agency
- Hollywood, FL occupies a prime position on the I-95 corridor between Miami and Fort Lauderdale, serving both a dense res...
- COBRA applies at 20+ employees — Broward County landscaping firms with commercial contracts often exceed this threshold
- Florida has no state mini-COBRA law — employees of smaller firms use ACA marketplace special enrollment periods
- Employer must notify plan administrator within 30 days of qualifying event
- Employee has 60 days to elect COBRA; coverage is retroactive to date of coverage loss
- Florida leads all states with 61,700+ landscaping businesses — the industry's labor-intensive nature generates frequent COBRA qualifying events
Hollywood, FL occupies a prime position on the I-95 corridor between Miami and Fort Lauderdale, serving both a dense residential market and a significant beachfront commercial district around the Hollywood Beach boardwalk area. Major regional operators including Landscape Workshop maintain a Fort Lauderdale branch actively serving the entire South Broward corridor including Hollywood — bringing corporate-scale COBRA compliance infrastructure to a market that also includes many smaller independent operators.
Hollywood's mix of residential neighborhoods, beachfront hotel properties, and commercial strip corridors generates diverse landscaping contracts — from basic lawn maintenance to high-end hotel and resort grounds management. Firms serving the hotel corridor in particular often maintain crews above the 20-employee COBRA threshold.
This guide explains when COBRA applies to Hollywood landscaping companies, the notification deadlines and penalties, how seasonal and variable-hour workers complicate COBRA administration, and what Florida-specific rules affect your obligations.
COBRA Basics: Who Must Comply
The Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA) requires employers that sponsor group health plans to offer continuation coverage to employees and covered dependents who lose coverage due to a qualifying event. The law applies to private-sector employers with 20 or more employees on more than 50 percent of their typical business days in the prior calendar year.
For Hollywood landscaping companies, this 20-employee threshold is the first compliance question. Smaller residential lawn care operations typically fall below it. Companies holding commercial or institutional contracts in Broward County may well exceed it, particularly if they count part-time workers (who do count toward the 20-employee total) alongside full-time crew leads.
COBRA covers all group health plans the employer sponsors — medical, dental, and vision. If your Hollywood landscaping company offers group dental or vision as a separate plan, those are also subject to COBRA continuation requirements once the 20-employee threshold is met.
COBRA and Landscaping Firms: Why Seasonal and Part-Time Workers Create Complexity
The landscaping industry nationally reports that more than 80 percent of lawn care business owners have difficulty with staffing, and the U.S. landscaping industry employs more H-2B seasonal visa workers than any other sector. For Hollywood landscaping companies, the workforce structure — blending full-time crew leads, part-time hourly workers, and potentially H-2B seasonal workers — creates COBRA administration complications:
- Reduction in hours as a qualifying event: If a full-time crew member enrolled in your group plan has hours reduced below the plan's minimum eligibility threshold, that reduction is a qualifying event even without termination.
- End-of-contract layoffs: When a commercial maintenance contract ends or is lost, laid-off employees enrolled in the group plan each experience a qualifying event requiring individual COBRA election notices.
- Part-time workers crossing the 20-employee threshold: Part-time employees count toward the 20-employee COBRA applicability test. A company with 14 full-time and 8 part-time workers is likely at or above 20 employees on most business days.
COBRA Notification and Election Requirements
| Step | Actor | Deadline | Penalty for Failure |
| Qualifying event occurs | — | Day 0 | — |
| Employer notifies plan administrator | Employer | 30 days | Up to $100/day/beneficiary excise tax |
| Plan administrator sends election notice | Plan administrator / TPA | 14 days after employer notice | ERISA civil penalty |
| Employee elects COBRA | Employee / dependent | 60 days from notice or coverage loss | Loss of continuation right |
| First premium payment | Employee | 45 days after election | Coverage not activated |
| Maximum COBRA period | — | 18 months (36 for disability/secondary events) | — |
COBRA coverage is retroactive
If a Hollywood landscaping employee loses coverage and does not elect COBRA immediately, any medical claims incurred during the 60-day election window are covered retroactively if they ultimately elect COBRA and pay the premium. This is important for landscaping owners to understand: an employee who has a health emergency during the election period can elect COBRA after the fact to capture that claim. Proper notice and recordkeeping protect the employer's ability to demonstrate compliance with the election window rules.
Florida-Specific Considerations for Hollywood Landscaping Companies
Florida has no state mini-COBRA law. Unlike California, Connecticut, Texas, and other states that require COBRA-style continuation for employers with fewer than 20 employees, Florida imposes no such state-level obligation. Hollywood landscaping employees who work for firms below the 20-employee threshold have no state-mandated continuation right when they lose group health coverage.
Their practical alternative is the ACA marketplace. Loss of employer-sponsored coverage triggers a 60-day special enrollment period on HealthCare.gov. Employees who lose Hollywood landscaping company coverage can enroll in an ACA marketplace plan and may qualify for premium tax credits based on household income — particularly important for hourly landscaping workers earning near the state minimum wage.
Florida's minimum wage is $14/hr as of September 2024, rising to $15/hr in September 2026. Florida's statewide year-round growing season means Hollywood landscaping companies face consistent employment — and consistent turnover-driven COBRA qualifying events — throughout the calendar year rather than in concentrated seasonal layoff periods.
Florida classifies many landscaping operations under construction industry workers' compensation rules, requiring coverage at one or more employees. Workers' comp is a separate compliance obligation from COBRA but both apply to growing Hollywood landscaping businesses at different employee thresholds.
Alternatives to COBRA for Hollywood Landscaping Employees
- ACA marketplace plans: A 60-day special enrollment period is triggered by loss of employer coverage. Hollywood landscaping workers earning $25,000 to $50,000 annually may qualify for significant premium tax credits making marketplace coverage far less expensive than COBRA at the full group rate.
- Florida Medicaid: Workers with household incomes at or below 138% of the federal poverty level may qualify for Florida Medicaid at no cost.
- Spouse's employer plan: Loss of employer coverage is a qualifying life event that allows enrollment in a spouse's group plan outside of open enrollment.
- ICHRA from a new employer: If the employee finds a new job quickly, a new employer may offer an ICHRA that reimburses the cost of an individual marketplace plan — often cheaper than continuing COBRA from the previous employer.
Common COBRA Mistakes Hollywood Landscaping Companies Make
- Missing the 30-day employer notification deadline: When a crew member is terminated or has hours cut, the 30-day clock starts immediately. Landscaping owners focused on field operations often miss this administrative deadline.
- Failing to count part-time workers toward the 20-employee threshold: Part-time workers count in the employee tally. A Hollywood firm with 15 full-time leads and 8 part-time seasonal workers may be above 20 employees on most business days.
- Not treating hours-reduction events as qualifying events: Reducing a crew lead from 40 to 20 hours per week — if that drops them below the plan's minimum eligibility — is a qualifying event that requires notice, even without termination.
- Assuming Florida has state continuation coverage for smaller firms: Florida has no mini-COBRA law. Advising departing employees of smaller firms to seek “Florida COBRA” creates false expectations. The ACA marketplace is their actual option.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do landscaping companies in Hollywood have to comply with COBRA?
Only if the company employed 20 or more employees on more than 50 percent of typical business days in the prior year. Florida has over 61,700 landscaping businesses statewide — Hollywood operations serving commercial or institutional contracts in Broward County frequently exceed this threshold. Florida has no state mini-COBRA law for smaller firms.
What qualifying events trigger COBRA for Hollywood landscaping employees?
Termination for any reason other than gross misconduct, reduction in hours below plan eligibility, divorce from a covered employee, death of the covered employee, Medicare entitlement, and loss of dependent child status. Hours reductions when Hollywood contracts change scope are a frequently missed qualifying event.
What are the COBRA deadlines for Hollywood landscaping companies?
Employer must notify the plan administrator within 30 days. Plan administrator has 14 additional days to send the election notice. Employee has 60 days from notice or coverage loss to elect. First premium due 45 days after election. Coverage is retroactive to the date of coverage loss.
Does Florida have a mini-COBRA law for smaller Hollywood landscaping firms?
No. Florida has no state continuation law for employers under 20 employees. Employees of smaller Hollywood landscaping firms must use the ACA marketplace 60-day special enrollment period triggered by loss of employer coverage. They may qualify for premium tax credits based on income.
What are the COBRA penalty risks for Hollywood landscaping companies that miss notice deadlines?
Excise tax penalties up to $100 per day per qualified beneficiary, with a family cap of $200 per day, apply for missed notice deadlines. ERISA civil penalties may also apply. For a Hollywood landscaping company that terminates multiple employees at once, the per-beneficiary daily penalties accumulate quickly without documented notice compliance.
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SouthernPlanFinder — Licensed Health Insurance AgencyWe help landscaping and lawn care businesses across Florida navigate COBRA obligations, group health options, and ACA marketplace alternatives for departing employees. Licensed Health Insurance Producer · NPN #21249133. We are paid by the carrier — never by you.
Also see: HR Compliance Guide · Florida Health Insurance by County · Gulf Coast Health Guide · GetFloridaCoverage.com
Independent health insurance resource. Not affiliated with HealthCare.gov, the federal government, or any insurance carrier. Information on this site is for general reference only and is not a substitute for advice from a licensed insurance professional.