Florida Tourist Scams

Florida hosts 140 million tourists annually — more than any other U.S. state. Scammers know it. Here are the most common schemes targeting visitors to Orlando, Miami, Tampa, and Florida's cruise ports.

140M
Annual Florida tourists
$127B
FL annual tourism revenue
8M+
Annual cruise passengers
58M
Annual Disney World visitors

The Six Most Common Florida Tourist Scams

1. Fake Disney/Universal Ticket Sites

Search "Disney World tickets discount" and dozens of fake sites appear. They sell counterfeit tickets, expired tickets, or non-existent tickets. Visitors arrive at the park, get turned away, and the website disappears. The only legitimate sources: disneyworld.disney.go.com, universalorlando.com, or authorized resellers like Undercover Tourist and Costco Travel.

2. Vacation Rental Fraud

Fake Airbnb/VRBO listings in Orlando, Miami Beach, and Florida Keys. Scammers copy real listings to fake sites, accept payment via wire/Zelle (no buyer protection), then disappear. Victims arrive to find the property doesn't exist or is occupied by actual owners. Defense: Only book through Airbnb.com or VRBO.com directly. Never pay via Zelle, wire, or gift cards for vacation rentals.

3. Cruise Port Taxi/Transportation Scams

At Port Canaveral, Port Miami, and Port Everglades, unlicensed drivers approach disembarking cruise passengers offering "great deals" to airports or attractions. Final fares can be 5-10x quoted prices, with destinations occasionally changed mid-trip. Defense: Use licensed taxis, Uber, or Lyft from the official port queue only.

4. Theme Park Area "Free" Vacation Offers

Outside Orlando theme parks and on hotel area sidewalks, salespeople offer "free" Disney tickets or vacation packages in exchange for a "brief presentation." The presentation is a 4-6 hour timeshare sales pitch. Some are legitimate timeshare marketing; others sell worthless "vacation memberships" that take years to escape.

5. Miami Beach Restaurant/Bar Overcharging

South Beach restaurants are notorious for hidden fees, unspecified "service charges" added on top of tips, and astronomically marked-up bottle service. Some establishments target tourists specifically with separate "tourist menus." Defense: Ask for itemized menus in advance. Verify whether tip is included before adding your own.

6. Beach Vendor and Photo Scams

On Miami Beach, Clearwater, and Daytona, vendors offer "free" photos with parrots, snakes, or in costume — then demand $50-200 after the photo is taken. Beach "henna tattoo" stalls and braiding stalls quote one price, then add hidden fees. Defense: Negotiate and confirm total cost in writing before any service begins.

How to Protect Yourself as a Florida Tourist

What to Do If You're Scammed While Visiting Florida

  1. Document immediately. Screenshots, photos, receipts, phone numbers.
  2. Dispute the charge with your credit card within 60 days of the statement showing the transaction.
  3. File a police report with the local jurisdiction (city police or county sheriff).
  4. Report to Florida AG at 1-866-9NO-SCAM. Florida actively prosecutes tourist-targeted fraud.
  5. Report to FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov.
  6. If significant fraud, contact your home state's Attorney General as well — many work with Florida AG on cross-state tourism fraud.
  7. Post detailed reviews on TripAdvisor, Google Maps, and Yelp to warn other travelers.

Related Resources

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I tell a real Disney ticket site from a fake one?
Real Disney tickets are sold only at disneyworld.disney.go.com (official site), through Disney's authorized resellers (Undercover Tourist, Costco Travel, AAA), or at park gates directly. Any other site claiming "discount Disney tickets" is either fraudulent or selling expired/used tickets at inflated prices. Check the URL carefully — fake sites use names like "disney-tickets-discount.com" that look legitimate but aren't.
Are vacation rentals in Florida safe to book?
Yes, if booked through major platforms (Airbnb.com, VRBO.com, Booking.com). Never book vacation rentals via Facebook Marketplace, Craigslist, direct wire transfer, or platforms you've never heard of. Florida is a major hotspot for vacation rental fraud — fake listings copy real properties and disappear after taking payment.
What's the safest way to pay for things as a Florida tourist?
Credit cards. Always. Credit cards give you chargeback rights for fraud, never-delivered services, and major misrepresentation. Debit cards have weaker protection. Cash, Zelle, wire transfers, and gift cards have essentially no protection — once paid, money is gone.
I got scammed in Florida — can my home state help?
Yes. Most state Attorney General offices coordinate with Florida AG on tourist-targeted fraud. File reports with both Florida AG (1-866-9NO-SCAM) and your home state's consumer protection division. Cross-state cases sometimes get more attention than single-state ones.
Are timeshare presentations in Florida legal?
Yes, legitimate timeshare sales are legal in Florida. But many "free vacation" offers near theme parks lead to high-pressure 4-6 hour sales presentations, and some are outright scams selling worthless "vacation club memberships." Read all paperwork carefully. Florida has a 10-day rescission period for legitimate timeshare contracts.