She's your tenant, so if you want her out you need to evict her.
Quote Quoting Florida Evictions
Other Evictions

Under certain circumstances, if you have exhibited a lack of consideration for the rights and privacy of others, a landlord has the right to require you to move with very little notice.

In some cases (destruction, damage, misuse of property, unreasonable disturbances), the landlord does not have to give you an opportunity to remedy the problem, and may terminate tenancy by giving you a seven-day written notice.

Each eviction case is unique, so be sure to obtain legal advice. A landlord MAY NOT evict you solely in retaliation for the tenant complaining to a governmental agency about code violations or asserting other tenant rights.

Florida Law does not allow a landlord to force a tenant out by:
  • Shutting off the utilities, or interrupting service, even if that service is under the control of, or the landlord makes payment;
  • Changing the locks or using a device that denies the tenant access;
  • Removing the outside doors, locks, roof, walls or windows (except for purposes of maintenance, repair or replacement); and/or
  • Removing the tenant's personal property from the dwelling unless action is taken after surrender, abandonment or lawful eviction.