Tampa, Florida

Mediation Attorneys Serving Tampa, Hillsborough County

Supreme Court certified mediation for family, civil, and commercial disputes. Faster and less expensive than trial. Tampa civil and family matters that benefit from mediation frequently come to David as a Florida Supreme Court certified civil and family mediator, or as client counsel depending on who retained us.

How we approach mediation matters in Tampa

Tampa is the metropolitan center we sit on the edge of. Our Lutz office is a twenty-minute drive from most of North Tampa, and we handle matters for Tampa clients every week. We appear in Hillsborough County court regularly, know the local judges and mediators, and have relationships with Tampa-area title companies and healthcare providers built over twenty years of practice. For Tampa clients who want the attentive service of a small firm without the pricing of a downtown office, we are often the right fit.

Hillsborough County courts and local practice notes

Hillsborough courts order mediation early in civil and family matters, and a Supreme Court certified mediator based in Pasco is a frequent choice for Tampa counsel.

Directions from Tampa: From North Tampa (Carrollwood, Lutz, New Tampa), take Dale Mabry, Bruce B. Downs, or I-75 north to SR-54 and head east or west as needed. From central or South Tampa, the drive is 25–40 minutes depending on traffic. Virtual and phone consultations are always available for Tampa clients who prefer not to drive.

About our mediation practice

Mediation works because it puts the outcome back in the hands of the people who have to live with it. A judge decides a case based on evidence and law. A mediator helps the parties decide a case based on what they actually need. For a lot of disputes, especially family disputes and business disputes where the relationship has to continue, that is a materially better result.

David Walkowiak, certified mediator

David holds two separate certifications from the Supreme Court of Florida: Circuit Civil Mediator and Family Law Mediator. These certifications require training, observation, and examination beyond a law license. After twenty years of litigating civil, real estate, and family matters, David serves as a neutral in disputes he understands from both sides of the table.

How mediation actually works

Both parties meet at the mediator’s office or a conference room, usually with their attorneys. The mediator explains the process. Everything said in mediation is confidential and cannot be used at trial. The parties make opening statements. Then the mediator separates them into different rooms and moves between them carrying offers, testing positions, and proposing solutions. No one is forced to agree to anything. The mediator’s only leverage is the parties’ own interest in a predictable outcome and a lower legal bill than trial would produce.

When the parties reach an agreement, it is written up and signed on the spot. If the mediation is court-ordered, the agreement is submitted to the judge. If no agreement is reached, the case continues where it was. Nothing is lost.

What mediation is good for

  • Family matters. Divorce, custody, visitation, support, property division.
  • Business disputes. Partnership breakups, contract disagreements, non-compete enforcement.
  • Real estate. Boundary disputes, HOA conflicts, landlord-tenant matters.
  • Civil litigation. Personal injury settlements, construction defects, employment claims.
  • Probate and estate disputes. Will contests, trust beneficiary disagreements, accounting disputes.

Benefits over a courtroom

Mediation is faster. Mediation is cheaper. Mediation is confidential. There is no public record, no trial transcript, and no press coverage. Mediation preserves relationships that litigation destroys. And, most importantly, the parties retain control over the outcome rather than handing it to a judge or jury.

Common questions

Frequently asked about mediation in Tampa

Do Tampa courts order mediation?

Yes. Both Hillsborough County family and civil courts order mediation in most contested matters, and early mediation often resolves Tampa cases before trial preparation costs mount. David is Florida Supreme Court certified as a civil and family mediator.

What is the difference between a mediator and a judge?

A mediator does not decide anything. The mediator's job is to help the parties reach their own agreement. A judge imposes an outcome. That distinction is the entire point of mediation. You stay in control of the result.

Is mediation binding?

The mediation process itself is not binding. But if the parties reach an agreement in mediation and sign it, that agreement is a binding contract. Court-ordered mediation agreements are typically submitted to the judge for entry as a court order.

What credentials does a certified mediator have?

David H. Walkowiak is certified by the Supreme Court of Florida as both a Circuit Civil Mediator and a Family Law Mediator. These are two separate certifications that each require training, observation, and examination.

What are the possible outcomes of mediation?

Full agreement on all issues (submitted to the court for approval); partial agreement with the remaining issues decided by the court; or no agreement, in which case the case continues on its existing track. No party is ever forced to settle.

How much does mediation cost compared to trial?

Mediation is almost always dramatically cheaper than a contested trial. A half-day mediation can resolve a case that would otherwise take months or years of discovery, motion practice, and trial time, with correspondingly higher attorney fees.

Talk to a mediation attorney who knows Tampa.

Schedule a free 30-minute initial consultation. We'll explain your mediation options plainly and tell you whether we're the right firm.