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Neighborhoods

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.

01

Downtown · Brickell · Wynwood

The urban core. High-rises, walkability, international rental demand.

Brickell
$$$$
Manhattan in the tropics — Miami's financial core.

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.

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Downtown Miami
$$$
Where the city meets Biscayne Bay.

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.

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Edgewater
$$$
Bayfront living, north of Brickell.

A 12-block strip of bayfront towers between downtown and the Design District. Newer construction, generous balconies, and unobstructed Biscayne Bay views.

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Wynwood
$$$
The art district that ate Miami's marketing budget.

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.

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Miami Design District
$$$$
Luxury retail capital of the Americas.

Hermès, Dior, Louis Vuitton, Cartier — all within a 12-block grid. The Design District is what Brickell would be if Brickell wore quieter shoes.

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Midtown Miami
$$
Between the art and the towers.

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.

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