Miami, one neighborhood at a time.
From Brickell's glass towers to Homestead's value-play single-family, each area in metro Miami is its own micro-market. Below, the ones we track for international buyers and investors.
Downtown · Brickell · Wynwood
The urban core. High-rises, walkability, international rental demand.
Glass towers, hedge funds, Latin American capital. The most rented neighborhood in Miami and the densest cluster of new high-rise condos in the U.S. South.
PortMiami, Bayside, Pérez Art Museum and Frost Science. Downtown is the civic heart — bigger units, slightly older buildings, lower price per square foot than Brickell next door.
A 12-block strip of bayfront towers between downtown and the Design District. Newer construction, generous balconies, and unobstructed Biscayne Bay views.
Murals, breweries, design studios, and tech offices. Wynwood went from warehouse district to global creative destination in 15 years, and the residential build-out is just hitting stride.
Hermès, Dior, Louis Vuitton, Cartier — all within a 12-block grid. The Design District is what Brickell would be if Brickell wore quieter shoes.
The shopping-and-condo strip stitching Wynwood to the Design District. Solid mid-priced rental product, Target on the corner, Trader Joe's two blocks away.
Coral Gables · Coconut Grove
Tree-lined, historic, family-anchored. Lower volatility, slower appreciation.
Miami's most planned city, built in the 1920s by George Merrick. Banyan tunnels, Mediterranean facades, the University of Miami, and Miracle Mile — the neighborhood for buyers who find the towers too loud.
Miami's oldest neighborhood. Bayfront sailing, the Vizcaya estate, CocoWalk reborn, and a quieter, greener pace than anywhere east of US-1.
Miami Beach
The barrier island, Art Deco, lifestyle premium, second-home capital.
The neighborhood that put Miami on the global map. Art Deco hotels, Lincoln Road, Ocean Drive, and a residential pocket west of Alton Road that locals quietly hold for decades.
Faena, Edition, Soho Beach House, Fontainebleau. Mid-Beach is South Beach with the nightlife dialed down — same beach, more residential rhythm.
Coastal Islands
Ultra-luxury enclaves on the Atlantic. Sunny Isles, Bal Harbour, Key Biscayne.
A 2.5-mile sliver of Atlantic-facing high-rise condos. Branded by Porsche, Armani, Aston Martin, Bentley, Trump. Miami's most internationally-owned residential market.
A half-square-mile village on the Atlantic, anchored by Bal Harbour Shops — the highest sales-per-square-foot mall in the world. Quietest ultra-luxury enclave on the Florida coast.
A barrier island with one bridge in and out. The Miami address for buyers who want nature, tennis, and quiet — without giving up a 10-minute commute to Brickell.
North Bayshore
Aventura north, mall, marina, Brightline access.
South Miami-Dade
Where Lennar, D.R. Horton and Pulte actually build at scale.
Where Lennar, D.R. Horton, and Pulte actually build at scale. The fastest-growing corner of Miami-Dade for new construction, and the only place left where new-build single-family lives under $700,000.
Florida City is the gateway to the Florida Keys. D.R. Horton has built three townhome communities here in the past five years — Vista Sol, Hadley Place, Palm Cay — and prices remain the lowest in Miami-Dade for new product.