Easily Report Code Violations Anonymously in Daytona Beach, FL
Daytona Beach mixes aging beachside motels and cottages, older mainland neighborhoods, and a tourist economy that turns over short-term rentals through residential streets. The aging stock and rental churn drive the violations. You’ll find the derelict beachside structure, the short-term rental running against zoning, the rental cut into unpermitted units.
The violations are real. The reason neighbors stay quiet is also real. In Daytona Beach the person you’d report is often a beachside neighbor, a vacation-rental operator, or a landlord. Reporting openly invites blowback from someone with money on the line.
Florida SB 60 (2021) raised the cost of speaking up. The law ended anonymous code complaints statewide. File a complaint yourself and your name and address go on the record, public under Chapter 119. SNITCH files as the complainant of record instead, so a public-records request on the complaint returns SNITCH’s information, not yours.
Start your filing — submit the address and photos here.
What Counts as a Code Violation in Daytona Beach
If you’re not sure whether what you’re seeing is fileable, these are the common ones across Daytona Beach. Check the City of Daytona Beach code of ordinances for the exact chapter before you assume:
- Illegal short-term rentals — properties run against the city’s vacation-rental and zoning rules in residential areas.
- Derelict beachside structures — abandoned or decaying motels and homes, under the unsafe-structures and nuisance chapters.
- Illegal unit conversions — homes split into more units than zoning allows.
- Property upkeep and nuisance — overgrown lots, debris, derelict conditions, under the property-maintenance chapters.
- Unpermitted construction — additions and conversions done without a permit, through the city’s building division.
If the condition isn’t covered by an ordinance, SNITCH tells you before you pay. A real condition or nothing.
Why People Here Don’t File
Daytona Beach’s tourist economy is driven by operators who treat short-term rentals as a business. A resident who reports an illegal rental next door risks retaliation from someone with income on the line. A beachside neighbor who reports a derelict property still lives next to it. A tenant who reports a landlord worries the lease won’t renew.
SB 60 means none of those people are filing into a void. Their name lands on a public record the other side can pull. That is the wall SNITCH was built to get around legally.
How SNITCH Works
The process runs in one order, and verification comes before payment on purpose.
- You submit the address, photos, and a brief explainer of what you’re seeing.
- SNITCH confirms the condition is a fileable violation and that the City of Daytona Beach will accept a filing made on your behalf. If it won’t work, you hear that before any charge.
- You order, pay the filing fee (starting from $299), and submit your intake.
- SNITCH files as the complainant of record, then tracks the complaint and tells you when to follow up or escalate.
How Long It Takes and What to Expect
Start with the part that protects you: not every Florida municipality accepts a complaint filed by an agent, because cities read the SB 60 rules differently. So SNITCH takes your data first, confirms Daytona Beach will accept the filing, and only then takes payment, starting from $299. If it won’t be accepted, you hear that before any charge, so there’s no payment to refund and no surprise.
Once it’s filed, the city logs the complaint and assigns it for inspection on its own schedule. Timelines after that point are set by the City of Daytona Beach, not by SNITCH, and they vary with backlog and the type of violation. You get confirmation the complaint was filed, and SNITCH tracks the follow-up and tells you when to request a status update or push for escalation.
What Anonymity Actually Means Here
Be clear-eyed about this. Under SB 60, every code complaint filed directly carries a named complainant, and under Chapter 119 that name is public. SNITCH doesn’t break that law. SNITCH satisfies it by putting its own name on the filing as the complainant of record. A public-records request on your complaint returns The Z Production Group, Inc., not you.
What this does not do is erase you from every record. If you’ve already contacted the city yourself about the same property, that’s a separate public record SNITCH doesn’t control. Where Daytona Beach treats SNITCH only as a point of contact rather than the complainant, SNITCH tells you that before filing. The honest version holds up under a records request, which is the only version worth paying for.
Filing in Daytona Beach
Daytona Beach is part of SNITCH’s Northeast Florida and Space Coast service area, which also covers Volusia County and the surrounding cities.
FAQ
Are code complaints anonymous in Daytona Beach?
Not when you file them yourself. Florida SB 60 (2021) requires a named complainant, and Chapter 119 makes that name public. SNITCH files as the complainant of record so a public-records request returns SNITCH’s information instead of yours.
What does SNITCH charge?
Filings start from $299. SNITCH verifies the complaint is fileable in your jurisdiction before you pay anything.
Will SNITCH file any complaint?
No. SNITCH declines retaliatory, fabricated, or grudge complaints. There has to be a real, documentable condition.
To start, send the property address, a few photos, and a short description of the violation. Get started here.
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