Jacksonville (Duval County) announces closure of registration office on Fridays

For our members in Duval/Jacksonville. FAC has been informed that a notice has been posted in the Jacksonville registration office that effective October 5, 2026, they will be closed on Friday. Not only does this present a significant inconvenience (registration hours reduced by 20%), but it makes compliance with the law impossible in some cases.

Below is FAC’s response to this closure.

FAC Letter to Duval re Closure 07172026


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8 thoughts on “Jacksonville (Duval County) announces closure of registration office on Fridays

  • July 17, 2026

    Thankfully Highlands county has it so one can go to the jail 24/7 as needed when the reg office is closed, That office is open on Tuesdays only. Also, have found that possible to use the FDLE site as well,

    Reply
  • July 17, 2026

    Remember if any of the HB45 SB 212 laws effects you in a way of a loss write a declaration send it to FAC legal

    Reply
  • July 17, 2026

    I do believe that several years ago it was judged in Florida that registrants have the right to register, so I don’t see how this can be lawful.
    The registration fee is to provide the necessary resources for people to register.
    A call should be made to the Attorney General that this closure will certainly force some people into non-compliance and deny them their right to register.
    This could also start other counties to do the same.

    Reply
  • July 17, 2026

    TK most likely doesn’t care, it probably excites him that we will be in violation. That just means more arrests and inflation of recidivism numbers. It will be another pat on the back for his “great efforts” of getting us off the streets, and in his own words, locking us away forever or eradicating us. I for one will lose my job, lose the roof over the heads of the family of 9 of us, and possibly more. Friday is the only week day that I have off of work, so to go spend the better part of a day sitting while they leisurely process us through while extorting us out of $25, would financially wreck my family. Columbia county also makes it near impossible to stay compliant also, due to only processing registrations on Tuesdays and Thursdays, excluding holidays. At the end of the day, THEY really don’t want us to be compliant because it increases the numbers for them.

    Reply
    • July 17, 2026

      Leon County only does it on Mondays Wednesdays and Fridays, and if there is a holiday over the weekend they get friday or monday off so the office is closed. Its only open from 800am to 1130 AM then 130pm to 430pm. so you cant even go there on a lunch break to register

      Reply
    • July 17, 2026

      You have to pay $25 each time you reregister?

      Reply
  • July 17, 2026

    Thank you, FAC, for the update and your direct advocacy with the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office (JSO). I have resided in Duval County for the entirety of my time on the registry, and while I’ve always found the environment here more manageable than elsewhere in the state, it is becoming increasingly difficult to ignore the pattern of ‘tightening the screws’ across the board.
    ​The impact of these changes is tangible. Just this morning, I lost a major commercial client due to the new SB 212 rules—marking the second time in a year that shifting registry legislation has directly derailed my business. I have built a unique, self-employed model specifically to maintain my independence, but even that is now being rendered precarious.
    ​Regarding the JSO’s decision to close the registry office on Fridays: I understand they are grappling with staffing shortages and retirements, and that this may be a logistical necessity for them. However, for those of us on the registry, it turns an already complex compliance process into an impossible one. It feels less like a functional procedure and more like a deliberate attempt to make compliance unachievable. At this point, the combination of professional instability and these mounting administrative hurdles has left me feeling effectively under ‘de facto house arrest.’ It’s becoming difficult to see Florida as a viable, much less hospitable, place to live.

    Reply
  • July 17, 2026

    THESE LAWS ARE NOTHING BUT A LIFE LONG SENTANCE

    THESE LAWS ARE A TRAP!!! JUST CALL IT WHAT IT IS!!!

    it has always been impossible to comply with, when i was in hospital i was threatened with jail because i did not add the hospital address as a temp address!

    Reply

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