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Live Miami
1,068 drops
−5.6% avg
39.6K watching
Market intelligence

Miami real estate market data,
updated daily.

Price-per-sqft trends, days on market, drop-depth distribution, and tier breakdowns for Miami.

Live · last updated
Active drops
1,068
+42 in past 24h
Average drop
−5.6%
Across active drops
Biggest % drop
−30.5%
4BR apartment · Miami Beach
Biggest drop
−$6.50M
Miami Beach · villa
Total wiped
$202.77M
Across all drops
Neighborhoods
32
Scanned daily
Showing drops · last scan

Overview

Active drops
1,068
Average drop
−5.6%
Biggest drop
−30.5%
Total wiped
$202.77M
Avg size
2,558 sqft

Drops by area

Drops detected · last 14 days
56 28 0 05-2305-2405-2505-2605-2705-2805-2905-3005-3106-0206-0306-0406-05
Top neighborhoods by drops
Miami Beach
165
Sunny Isles Beach
113
Brickell
101
Miami
96
Aventura
67
Coconut Grove
65
Coral Gables
61
Upper East Side
57
Pinecrest
51
The Roads
50

Drops by tier

< 10%
941
10–20%
113
20–30%
13
30–40%
1
40%+
0

Drops by bedroom count

Studio
11
1 BR
34
2 BR
268
3 BR
320
4 BR
235
5 BR
116
6+ BR
84

Top buildings · most active

No building-level data yet.

Avg price drop % by area

Surfside
6 drops
−6.8%
South Miami
22 drops
−6.8%
Kendall
45 drops
−6.7%
Bal Harbour
17 drops
−6.6%
North Miami Beach
9 drops
−6.4%
Miami Beach
165 drops
−6.1%
Shenandoah
12 drops
−6.0%
Wynwood
15 drops
−6.0%
Upper East Side
57 drops
−6.0%
Miami
96 drops
−5.8%
The Roads
50 drops
−5.8%
Downtown Miami
41 drops
−5.5%

Drop volume by area · with avg $

Miami Beach
avg $354K
165
Sunny Isles Beach
avg $139K
113
Brickell
avg $138K
101
Miami
avg $102K
96
Aventura
avg $96K
67
Coconut Grove
avg $204K
65
Coral Gables
avg $265K
61
Upper East Side
avg $133K
57
Pinecrest
avg $263K
51
The Roads
avg $185K
50
Kendall
avg $122K
45
Downtown Miami
avg $101K
41

Price drop index · area & building

1. Miami Beach
165 drops · avg −6.1%
87
2. Sunny Isles Beach
113 drops · avg −4.9%
63
3. Miami
96 drops · avg −5.8%
61
4. Brickell
101 drops · avg −5.2%
60
5. Upper East Side
57 drops · avg −6.0%
47
6. Aventura
67 drops · avg −5.1%
47
7. Kendall
45 drops · avg −6.7%
46
8. Coral Gables
61 drops · avg −5.2%
45
9. Coconut Grove
65 drops · avg −4.8%
45
10. The Roads
50 drops · avg −5.8%
44

Days on market vs drop size

0–30d
avg −6.0%
124
31–60d
avg −5.3%
212
61–90d
avg −6.0%
176
91–180d
avg −5.5%
343
180d+
avg −5.3%
213

Miami real estate market data — how to read this page

This page tracks the Miami luxury property market in real time using live listing data from Zillow, refreshed daily. The dataset captures the actual movement of asking prices: how many listings reduce their price, by how much, in which neighborhoods, and how quickly. Unlike a Miami Association of Realtors quarterly report, this view shows where the market is moving this week, neighborhood by neighborhood.

Miami luxury is in a structurally distinct cycle from 2024–2026 than the rest of the US. Post-pandemic migration drove prices to peaks in 2022; insurance, HOA, and property-tax inflation since then have pressured carrying costs and forced a meaningful segment of out-of-state owners to list. Price-drop activity in Miami luxury is materially higher than other US markets like Manhattan or LA over the same window.

Price per square foot — the Miami luxury map

Evaluate Miami property on a price-per-square-foot ($/sqft) basis, never headline price — unit sizes and floor plans vary dramatically. Current Miami luxury ranges:

  • Ultra-prime waterfront (Fisher Island, Star Island, Indian Creek, Palm Island, Hibiscus Island): $2,500–6,000/sqft
  • South Beach + Mid-Beach oceanfront (Faena, Setai, Continuum, Apogee): $1,800–3,500/sqft
  • Brickell + Downtown towers (Aston Martin Residences, Echo Brickell, Reach): $1,000–1,800/sqft
  • Coconut Grove + Coral Gables (Grovenor House, Vita at Grove Isle): $1,200–2,200/sqft
  • Sunny Isles + Bal Harbour (Porsche Design Tower, St. Regis Bal Harbour): $1,500–3,000/sqft
  • Edgewater + Wynwood + Midtown: $700–1,200/sqft

Compare any individual listing to the building's recent transaction range on a $/sqft basis. A "15% cut on a $5M unit" tells you nothing without knowing the building's current $/sqft median.

Why Miami luxury has more drop activity than other US markets

Four forces are concentrating distress in Miami specifically:

  • Insurance shock. Florida property insurance has roughly doubled since 2022, with luxury waterfront often facing 3–5x increases. For a $10M ocean-facing condo, annual insurance went from ~$25,000 to $80,000+. Carrying costs spike forced re-evaluation.
  • HOA escalation. Older luxury buildings (pre-2010 construction) are facing structural-reserve assessments post the Surfside (Champlain Towers) collapse legislation. Special assessments of $100k–500k per unit are common in 30–50 year old buildings. Owners are selling to avoid the bill.
  • Property-tax growth. Florida's no-state-income-tax advantage is real, but property taxes grow with market values (assessed at 85–95% of market). A unit that appreciated 60% from 2020–2023 now pays a property-tax bill that reflects that, even as the market has cooled.
  • Post-pandemic migration unwind. A portion of the 2020–2022 NY/CA/Chicago buyers have returned home as remote work policies tightened. These "trial Miami" properties are listing simultaneously.

None of this is bearish on Miami's long-term fundamentals — the migration math, climate-adjusted population growth, and HNW concentration remain intact. But it creates a 2024–2026 window where motivated-seller volume is meaningfully higher than typical.

Categories of Miami luxury drops

Waterfront condos

The highest concentration of drop activity. Brickell Bayfront, South Beach oceanfront, Sunny Isles, Edgewater. Specific buildings with elevated drop frequency tend to be 15+ years old with rising assessments. Discounts of 8–15% are common on motivated listings; 20%+ on units with assessment overhangs.

Single-family on the islands

Indian Creek, Star Island, Hibiscus Island, Palm Island, Sunset Island. Lower drop frequency but largest absolute amounts — when a Star Island house cuts from $50M to $42M, that's a real motion. Often driven by relocation or estate sales rather than carrying-cost pressure.

Coconut Grove + Coral Gables

More end-user (less investor) ownership; drops here are typically relocation-driven and smaller in % terms. The Grove's older buildings have more reserve-fund exposure; Coral Gables historic homes are more insurance-sensitive.

Brickell apartments

Highest investor/flipper concentration in Miami luxury, similar dynamic to Dubai Marina. Post-handover supply from the 2023–2024 luxury delivery wave (Aston Martin Residences, Una, Una Brickell) competing with each other.

How to read the data panels

The panels above show the current Miami market:

  • Drops by area — count of currently-active listings with price reductions, by neighborhood. Brickell + South Beach typically lead by volume.
  • Avg drop % by area — when an area's average climbs above 12%, motivated-seller density is high.
  • Days on market vs drop size — Miami DOM runs 60–120 days for luxury condos; longer-listed properties show consistently larger discounts.
  • Drops by tier — the $2M–$5M segment is most active; $10M+ has smaller volume but larger absolute discounts.

Buyer playbook — what's different about buying distressed in Miami

  • Pull the HOA reserve study and 2-year assessment history before MOU. This is the single biggest risk factor unique to Miami luxury — a "cheap" condo with a $300K pending assessment is not cheap. Florida's SB-4D legislation requires 25- and 30-year inspections for buildings 30+ stories; ask for current SIRS (structural integrity reserve study) status.
  • Get a current insurance quote in writing, not an estimate. The seller's existing policy may not transfer. Get a binding quote from a Florida-focused luxury broker (HUB, Marsh McLennan, FrankCrum) before closing.
  • Title insurance is non-negotiable. Miami has a higher-than-average rate of title issues from estate sales, partition actions, and historic LLC ownership.
  • Verify the property-tax cap if the property has been held long enough to trigger Save Our Homes protections. The cap resets to current value at sale — your first-year tax bill may be 50–100% higher than the seller's last year.
  • Closing costs run 5–7% of purchase price in Florida (vs ~4% in many US markets), driven by documentary stamps + intangible tax + insurance + title.

Methodology

Luxury Price Drops scans active Miami listings on Zillow daily, capturing original listing price, every subsequent price change, and the current asking price for each unit. Drops are detected within minutes of being posted. All figures are derived from actual published asking prices — listing-side data, not transaction-side. For closed-transaction values, the Miami-Dade Property Appraiser and Miami Association of Realtors MLS are authoritative.

Related Miami + US resources

Luxury Price Drops is an independent analytics platform — not a brokerage. We publish public listing-market data so buyers and investors can read the Miami luxury market clearly. We do not list, sell, or represent properties.

Frequently asked questions

What is the average price per square foot in Miami luxury real estate?

Miami luxury spans roughly $700–1,200/sqft for Edgewater/Wynwood, $1,000–1,800/sqft for Brickell and Downtown towers, $1,200–2,200/sqft for Coconut Grove and Coral Gables, $1,500–3,000/sqft for Sunny Isles and Bal Harbour, $1,800–3,500/sqft for South Beach oceanfront (Faena, Setai, Continuum), and $2,500–6,000/sqft for ultra-prime island estates (Fisher, Star, Indian Creek, Palm, Hibiscus). Always compare per-sqft to the specific building, not the city average.

Is the Miami real estate market crashing in 2026?

Not crashing — but materially softer than 2022 peaks for several specific reasons. Florida insurance premiums have roughly doubled since 2022 and luxury waterfront often saw 3–5x increases. HOA reserve assessments (post-Surfside legislation) are forcing $100K–500K special bills on older luxury buildings. Property-tax bills are catching up to peak-period assessed values. And some post-pandemic migrants are returning to their original cities. These create elevated motivated-seller volume in 2024–2026 without breaking long-term fundamentals.

How is Miami market data collected on this page?

We scan active Miami listings on Zillow daily, capturing original listing price, every price change, and current asking price for each unit. Price drops are detected within minutes. All figures are derived from actual published asking prices — listing-side data. For closed-transaction values, the Miami-Dade Property Appraiser and Miami MLS are authoritative.

How often is the Miami market data updated?

Daily. Listings are scanned every day and the panels on this page refresh continuously throughout the day. New price drops appear within minutes of being posted.

Where are most Miami luxury price drops happening?

By volume: Brickell and South Beach lead — both have high investor/flipper concentration and the largest active luxury condo inventory. By absolute discount size: Fisher Island, Star Island, Indian Creek, Palm Island, and Hibiscus Island produce fewer drops but the dollar amounts are large. Sunny Isles and Bal Harbour fall in between. Use the 'drops by area' panel for current activity.

What HOA risks should I check before buying a Miami luxury condo?

Three documents are non-negotiable before MOU: the current SIRS (structural integrity reserve study, required for buildings 30+ stories under Florida SB-4D), the last 24 months of HOA meeting minutes (look for upcoming special assessments), and the reserve fund balance versus the recommended reserve. An older building with a low reserve fund and pending SIRS inspection is the highest-risk profile in Miami luxury. A 'cheap' condo with a $300K pending special assessment is not cheap.

What does Miami's insurance situation mean for buyers?

Get a binding insurance quote in writing before closing, not an estimate — Florida's insurance market has tightened severely since 2022. The seller's existing policy may not transfer. Luxury waterfront units have seen premiums triple or quadruple. For a $10M ocean-facing condo, annual insurance can run $60K-100K+. Build that carrying cost into your ROI math before evaluating any 'discount.'

What are the all-in closing costs in Miami?

Florida closing costs run 5–7% of purchase price, higher than the US average. The components: documentary stamps (~0.7% of price), intangible tax on financed amounts (~0.2%), title insurance ($5–10K on a $5M purchase), inspection + survey + attorney + recording fees (~$5K), and prorated property taxes + insurance + HOA. A $5M Miami purchase typically has $250K–350K in closing costs.

Is Luxury Price Drops a Miami real estate brokerage?

No. Luxury Price Drops is an independent analytics platform that publishes public listing-market data. We do not list, sell, or represent properties. Use this data to read the market, then contact listing agents on Zillow directly to view and transact.

Independent analytics platform — not a brokerage. Price drops are a natural part of any healthy market and often represent opportunity. All data is sourced from publicly available listings. Read more