Police and Sheriff's Patrol Officers Salary in Florida
SOC Code: 33-3051What is this?
Professional in police and sheriff's patrol officers
Professional in police and sheriff's patrol officers
How Protective Service Careers Are Structured
Protective service wages — police, fire, corrections, security — split sharply between the public-safety core, with civil-service pay scales, strong benefits, and pensions, and private security, with little of any of those. The two halves share a group code but not an economic reality, and the spread in this data reflects that split.
The wage tables and percentile chart on this page show how police and sheriff's patrol officers pay is distributed in Florida specifically — and because state-level wages for the same occupation routinely differ by 30% or more, the local figures here are the ones that matter for offers, raises, and relocation decisions in this market.
What Moves Pay in This Field
For public-safety roles, jurisdiction is nearly everything: the same job pays dramatically differently across cities and states, and overtime commonly adds 20-40% to the base wages shown here. Rank progression is the internal ladder. For private security, armed/specialized credentials and site type create the more modest variation visible at the lower end of the distribution.
Public-safety entry runs through civil-service testing and academies, with hiring tied to municipal budget cycles — timing applications across multiple jurisdictions matters. The headline wage understates these careers: defined-benefit pensions and retirement eligibility at 50-55 are worth a substantial wage premium that no salary table captures.
New to reading wage distributions? Our guide to salary percentiles explains how to place yourself on the chart above, and the negotiation playbook shows how to use these numbers in an actual conversation.
Explore Similar Careers
Related Metrics
Viewing: Police and Sheriff's Patrol Officers (SOC: 33-3051)