Q1 2026 · By Anthony Guerriero · Updated April 2026
Mainland Sales
+13%
YoY luxury condos
Mainland Avg Price
+18%
YoY
Pre-Con Premium
+12–18%
over release pricing
Editorial Introduction
Miami in Q1 2026 is no longer functionally one market. It is two, diverging in opposite directions for opposite reasons.
For active sponsor inventory and Miami pre-construction allocations, explore Miami pre-construction .
Mainland Miami is the growth story — Brickell, Edgewater, Coconut Grove, and Downtown absorbing a maturing pipeline of branded vertical luxury. Miami Beach is the scarcity story — land-constrained, supply-constrained, and increasingly insurance- and assessment-constrained.
For UHNW buyers and sellers, the operative reality is that mainland and Beach must be underwritten as separate markets. Treating them as one will misjudge both.
01
MAINLAND MIAMI
The growth story
Brickell · Edgewater · Coconut Grove · Downtown
Branded vertical luxury maturing
+13% sales · +18% avg price · +9% PPSF
$3M+ sales nearly tripled YoY
Pricing driven by building (operator, brand, architecture)
02
MIAMI BEACH & BARRIER ISLANDS
The scarcity story
South of Fifth · Bal Harbour · Surfside · Fisher Island
Land-constrained · Insurance-constrained
Inventory declining — first time since 2023
Trophy oceanfront firm to record pricing
Pricing driven by land (water, view, frontage, irreplaceability)
A $1,500 PPSF Brickell branded unit and a $1,500 PPSF Mid-Beach oceanfront unit are not the same asset. One is buying a building. The other is buying a coastline.
Market Snapshot
Mainland Miami (luxury condos)
Sales: +13% YoY
Average price: +18% YoY
Average PPSF: +9% YoY
$3M+ sales: nearly tripled YoY
Miami Beach & Barrier Islands
Inventory: first decline since 2023
Trophy oceanfront: firm to record pricing
Pre-Construction (both submarkets)
Signed-contract appreciation: +12–18% above initial release pricing
Resale PPSF reference bands
Downtown · most product-sensitive
Edgewater · fastest-evolving
Coconut Grove · boutique waterfront
Brickell · mature submarket
Miami Beach · land market · branded oceanfront above band
$700 $900 $1,100 $1,300 $1,500 $1,700
Pre-construction at the top of each band trades materially above resale comps. Branded oceanfront on the Beach clears well above the upper bound.
Contracts — The Real-Time Market Signal
Closings describe the past. In Miami's pre-construction market, contracts are leading the resale comp book by six to eighteen months.
RESALE COMP
Backward-looking · 6–18 month lag
PRE-CONSTRUCTION CONTRACT
Forward-looking · Q1 2026 active book
Q1 2026 luxury pre-construction contracts cleared 12–18% above initial release pricing . Developers are raising release tiers as inventory absorbs. Resale and pre-construction are now distinct pricing systems.
Q1 2026 luxury pre-construction contracts cleared 12–18% above initial release pricing . Developers are raising release tiers as inventory absorbs, and signed-contract velocity is supporting the increases.
The implication: resale and pre-construction are now distinct pricing systems . Pre-construction sets the price; resale follows. Buyers underwriting either with the wrong instrument will misprice the asset.
Mainland Miami — Branded Vertical Luxury Matures
Five years ago, mainland luxury was a bet. Today it is an asset class — and the dominant product type is branded, vertical, full-service.
Brickell ($1,200–$1,500+ PPSF). The mature submarket. Branded core trades materially above the band. Financial-services and family-office demand is deepening the year-round floor.
Edgewater ($800–$1,100 PPSF). Fastest-evolving. Pre-construction at the top end is pricing well above resale — buyers underwriting on backward-looking comps will misjudge the launch market.
Coconut Grove ($1,000–$1,350 PPSF). Boutique low-density and waterfront branded product established the Grove as a genuine mainland trophy submarket, not a secondary one.
Downtown ($700–$950 PPSF). Most product-sensitive. Newer branded towers pull pricing upward; older inventory clears on the older curve.
Mainland buyers are committing to buildings, not locations alone .
Miami Beach & the Beaches — Scarcity Premium
The Beach is not appreciating on product. It is appreciating on land that cannot be replicated.
Resale ranges $1,100–$1,600+ PPSF , with branded oceanfront, South of Fifth, Bal Harbour, Surfside, and Fisher Island clearing well above the band. Oceanfront sites are largely accounted for; the post-Surfside regime has compressed launch cadence further.
The Q1 inventory contraction — first since 2023 — is the operative signal. After multiple quarters of growing supply, the Beach is now absorbing faster than it restocks.
Trophy oceanfront continues to perform strongly. The Q1 median moved on mix as more sub-$1M older inventory cleared. The top of the Beach — branded oceanfront, the private islands, Bal Harbour / Surfside trophy — recorded firm-to-record pricing. The Beach is repricing the bottom and middle while the top advances.
Price Differential — Why Miami Beach Trades Differently
Mainland and Beach price on different inputs.
The mainland is a product market : pricing driven by building — operator, brand, architecture, amenity stack. Replace the building, change the price.
The Beach is a land market : pricing driven by site — water, view, frontage, irreplaceability. Replace the building on the same site, the land still commands the premium.
A $1,500 PPSF Brickell branded unit and a $1,500 PPSF Mid-Beach oceanfront unit are not the same asset. One is buying a building. The other is buying a coastline.
A Two-Tier Market — Newer vs. Older Condo Stock
This is not simply a quality premium — it is a structural repricing of older condo stock.
Newer (<30 years). Branded, post-1992 code, modern reserves and structural posture, full-service operator. The inventory driving mainland's 18% average gain and the Beach's record top-end PPSF.
Older (>30 years). A fundamentally different risk profile under the post-Surfside regulatory regime.
01
Recertification
The 30-year (25-year coastal) milestone regime has produced material structural findings, with direct implications for assessments, financing, and resale liquidity.
02
Reserve Requirements
Statutory reserve funding is no longer waivable. Older associations must fund decades of deferred capex or pass it through as assessments.
03
Rising HOA Costs
Insurance, recertification, reserves, and maintenance have compounded into HOA increases that change the after-fee economics of older units.
04
Buyer Risk Pricing
Buyers and lenders now price reserve studies, assessments, structural reports, and insurance posture explicitly into the bid.
Older stock is no longer trading at "older building" pricing. It is trading at risk-adjusted pricing. That repricing is durable.
New Development Pipeline
Mainland is absorbing a generation of branded towers. Pre-construction is moving 12–18% above initial tiers; the pipeline is now the marginal price-setter for mainland luxury.The Beach pipeline is shallow by design. Land constraint, post-Surfside compliance, and entitlement complexity throttle launches. What does exist launches into structurally tight supply.
Notable New Development and Trophy Activity
Mandarin Oriental Residences
Brickell Key · branded vertical luxury
$49.9M PH at ~$6,300 PPSF
A new mainland ceiling for branded vertical luxury and validation of Brickell Key as a genuine trophy address.
The Perigon
Mid-Beach · ultra-luxury oceanfront
Mid-Beach reference for full-service oceanfront
The Mid-Beach reference for full-service oceanfront branded boutique at the top of the Beach band.
7200 Collins
North Beach
North Beach repositioning
Repositioning North Beach upward with branded oceanfront pricing.
The Cove
Edgewater · waterfront boutique
Above resale Edgewater pre-con band
Boutique waterfront; exemplifies Edgewater pre-construction pricing above the resale band.
Baccarat Residences
Brickell · branded vertical
Brickell Core reference asset
Branded vertical anchored by the Baccarat operator and program — a Brickell core reference.
Villa Miami
Edgewater · limited-inventory
Edgewater Top Tier trophy submarket
Limited-inventory branded waterfront; establishes the Edgewater top tier as a trophy submarket in its own right.
Okan Tower
Downtown · mixed-use vertical
Downtown pulling resale up
Mixed-use vertical branded; expanding Downtown branded inventory and pulling resale ranges upward.
E11EVEN Beyond
Downtown · E11EVEN-anchored
Downtown redefining baseline
Next phase of the E11EVEN-anchored Downtown vertical; continues to redefine the Downtown baseline at the upper end.
Miami's trophy market is a quality threshold — met by branded vertical on the mainland and scarce oceanfront on the Beach simultaneously.
Buyer Implications
Above $4M, and particularly above $10M, the Q1 data argues against waiting on a correction the bifurcated market is not signaling. Mainland is appreciating on product. Beach is appreciating on scarcity. Pre-construction is leading resale by 12–18%.
01
Mainland Branded Vertical
$700 – $1,500+ PPSF
Underwrite on brand, operator, architecture, floor plate, absorption pace . Brickell, Edgewater, Coconut Grove, Downtown.
02
Beach Trophy Oceanfront
$1,100 – $1,600+ PPSF
Underwrite on site, frontage, exposure, pedigree, structural scarcity . South of Fifth, Bal Harbour, Surfside, Fisher Island.
03
Older Commodity Stock
Risk-adjusted pricing
Underwrite on reserve studies, recertification, assessments, HOA trajectory, insurance posture . Without those documents, no bid is rational.
Seller Implications
For owners of newer, branded, or genuinely scarce product: pricing leverage is real and durable. Pre-construction is repricing the resale comp set; trophy oceanfront is operating in structurally tight supply. Well-priced, well-documented listings are clearing.
For owners of older stock: the market is not soft. It is repriced. Listings backed by clean reserve studies, current recertification, transparent assessments, and stable HOA posture are clearing. Listings without those documents are not. Liquidity now runs through buyer-grade documentation.
QUARTERLY REPORTS · 2024 — 2025
Eight quarters of bifurcation
Read end-to-end, the contracts-ahead-of-closings layer runs continuously from Q2 2024 forward. The structural-repricing thesis hardens visibly across 2024 and locks in at Q4. The mainland-product / Beach-land mental model is established in Q1 2024 and reinforced quarterly.
CHRONOLOGY · 8 QUARTERS · 2024 → 2025
Q1 2024 · April 2024
The market was already separating — it just wasn't being described that way yet.
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Editorial Introduction Q1 2024 opened the year in transition rather than acceleration. The post-pandemic repricing had largely played out, but the rate environment remained restrictive — the Federal Reserve held its policy rate near a two-decade peak through the quarter — and end-buyer activity reflected that restraint.
Beneath the headline calm, a more durable shift was beginning. The branded vertical pipeline that would define mainland Miami's next two years had begun to activate. Older Beach inventory was working through a slower absorption cycle. The market was already separating — it just wasn't being described that way yet.
Market Direction Activity was steady and selective. Closing volume softened year over year against an unusually active 2023 comparison; pricing held within a narrow band. Beach inventory continued its multi-quarter build; mainland inventory absorbed at a more disciplined pace. Liquidity was functional, not abundant — buyers had time, and they used it.
Mainland Miami Brickell and Edgewater entered the year as the most active mainland submarkets. Pre-construction at the upper tier — Aston Martin Residences nearing completion, Cipriani Residences Brickell deepening absorption, Mercedes-Benz Places Miami progressing — anchored the narrative around branded vertical product.
What mattered most in Q1 was not closing data, but the composition of what was being launched and contracted. Branded, full-service, architecturally distinguished towers were absorbing meaningfully faster than commodity high-rise inventory. Mainland was beginning to price as a product market rather than a location market.
Miami Beach and the Beaches The Beach entered 2024 with elevated inventory and patient buyers. Resale volume was muted; days on market extended across older mid-tier inventory. Trophy oceanfront — South of Fifth, Bal Harbour, Surfside, the private islands — held firm and was already demonstrating resilience independent of the broader Beach pricing curve. The Beach was beginning to behave as a land market, where the asset's premium was tied to a site that could not be replicated.
Insurance pressure was visible but not yet dominant. Older oceanfront buildings were absorbing the first round of structural integrity inspections under SB-4D; the assessment wave was still ahead.
Emerging Divergence The earliest divergence in Q1 2024 was technical, not yet structural. Newer inventory cleared at PPSF premiums older inventory could not match — a familiar dynamic, but the gap was widening. Mainland branded launches were absorbing without dependence on resale comps; older Beach mid-tier was, for the first time visibly, dependent on resale comps that were softening.
New Development vs Resale Pre-construction and resale operated on overlapping but increasingly distinct curves. Resale was negotiating against a wider inventory base and longer marketing cycles. Pre-construction was clearing on absorption math — release tier, deposit milestone, brand momentum — that did not require resale validation. Two pricing systems were beginning to run in parallel; in Q1, only one of them was disclosing its data clearly.
Buyer Behavior Buyers in Q1 2024 were patient, well-capitalized, and increasingly specific. The era of broad neighborhood bets had ended. Underwriting was shifting toward building, brand, operator, and floor plate. Domestic UHNW migration into South Florida continued; Latin American capital remained foundational; European and Northeast buyers re-engaged gradually as the rate environment stabilized.
Closing Insight Q1 2024 did not feel transformative. But the conditions for divergence were already forming: a maturing branded pipeline, a softening older-stock comp set, a regulatory regime entering its operational phase, and a buyer pool selecting for quality with growing precision. The next several quarters would confirm what disciplined readers could already see — Miami was no longer one market.
Q2 2024 · July 2024
It was the quarter in which the contract market and the closing market began telling different stories.
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Editorial Introduction The second quarter of 2024 introduced visible separation where Q1 had hinted at it. The macro frame remained restrictive, but two Miami-specific forces accelerated: the branded development pipeline broadened at the top, and Florida's structural integrity and reserve regime began transmitting cost pressure into older-building economics.
Q2 was not a quarter of broad gains. It was the quarter in which the contract market and the closing market began telling different stories.
Market Direction Headline volume remained moderate. Pricing was directionally firm at the top end and directionally soft in older mid-tier inventory. Inventory continued to build on the Beach; mainland new development absorbed steadily. Liquidity was concentrated in branded and trophy product.
Mainland Miami Mainland branded development gained narrative weight. Edgewater's pipeline broadened with the Cove and adjacent boutique projects entering visibility. Brickell core absorption continued at the upper end. The mainland's defining quality in Q2 — and what would compound across the next eighteen months — was the depth of branded supply and the discipline of its absorption. Mainland was now functioning unambiguously as a product market: priced on building, not block.
Miami Beach and the Beaches Beach inventory continued to climb. Median Beach pricing held flat to softer; the median was being pulled by mix as older sub-$2M inventory cleared more readily than mid-tier $2–10M product. Trophy oceanfront, by contrast, recorded firm pricing with selective record prints in Bal Harbour and South of Fifth. The Beach's land premium continued to perform; the older Beach building stock did not.
Emerging Divergence Q2 made the divergence harder to ignore. Branded mainland inventory cleared at premiums older mainland stock could not access. Trophy Beach operated in a separate liquidity environment from older Beach mid-tier. The earliest written commentary about a "two-tier market" began circulating in trade press; the data already supported it.
New Development vs Resale The signal from contracts began to lead the signal from closings. Sponsors raised release tiers as deposits accumulated; resale comps lagged. Signed deals at the top were clearing ahead of recorded pricing in the broader resale book — and sponsors were pricing accordingly into Q3 launches. For the first time, sophisticated buyers and sponsors began discussing pre-construction and resale as fundamentally different price-setting systems.
Buyer Behavior Buyers grew explicit about underwriting risk on older inventory. Reserve studies, recertification status, and assessment history began appearing in due diligence checklists. The same buyers, presented with newer branded product, accepted higher PPSF without those documents because the risk profile was structurally different. The bid was no longer agnostic about building vintage.
Closing Insight Q2 2024 was the quarter the market stopped being plausibly describable as a single asset class. The branded mainland pipeline had matured into a distinct system. Trophy Beach had decoupled from older Beach. The contract book had moved ahead of the closing book. The separation was no longer a forecast — it was operational.
Q3 2024 · October 2024
By Q3 2024, the structural separation was no longer forming. It was operational.
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Editorial Introduction Q3 2024 closed with the Federal Reserve's first rate cut of the cycle — a 50-basis-point move in September that reset financing math across luxury real estate. For Miami, the cut arrived into a market that had already begun to differentiate. Lower rates accelerated activity unevenly: branded mainland and trophy Beach absorbed the marginal demand; older inventory benefited modestly but continued to face structural headwinds rates could not address.
Market Direction Activity firmed across the quarter. Mainland $3M+ activity built measurable momentum. Beach inventory plateaued, with the first signs of selective contraction at the very top of the trophy band. Pricing direction was upward at the top, flat in the middle, softening at the older end.
Mainland Miami The mainland entered its strongest quarter of the cycle to date. Brickell core branded continued absorbing; Edgewater pre-construction firmed materially; Coconut Grove waterfront posted notable trades. Mainland's character as a product-driven market was now unmistakable: the assets that absorbed fastest shared building qualities, not neighborhood qualities.
Miami Beach and the Beaches The Beach's bifurcated picture sharpened. Trophy oceanfront — Surf Club, the Faena assemblage, South of Fifth, Bal Harbour Tower — recorded selective record prints. Older Beach mid-tier remained inventory-rich and price-sensitive. The Beach continued to operate as a land market, with the premium concentrating on irreplaceable sites while older buildings on those sites repriced independently.
The structural integrity inspection timeline was advancing toward the year-end reserve funding deadline; older buildings without funded reserves faced increasingly explicit buyer pricing.
Emerging Divergence Q3 2024 produced the first quarter in which pricing direction at the top and pricing direction at the older mid-tier moved in opposite directions on the same calendar. The divergence was no longer between mainland and Beach alone — it was running within each submarket on the newer/older axis. By Q3 2024, the structural separation was no longer forming. It was operational.
New Development vs Resale Contract activity at the top of the mainland market diverged meaningfully from closing data. Pricing was being set in the contract market first; closings would catch up two to three quarters later. Pre-construction emerged definitively as the marginal price-setter at the top — sponsors raised release pricing in confidence, and resale absorbed those moves with a lag where buildings could compete on quality.
Buyer Behavior Rate relief brought a wider buyer pool back into the market, but its composition remained selective. The marginal new buyer was not bidding broadly; they were bidding into specific buildings, vintages, and brands. Reserve and recertification posture were now core diligence rather than a side check.
Closing Insight Q3 2024 closed with the rate cycle turning, the regulatory deadline approaching, and the bifurcation visible at every level of the data. The next quarter's reserve deadline would convert the separation from visible to documented.
Q4 2024 · January 2025
The market repriced accordingly — and the repricing was structural, not cyclical.
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Editorial Introduction Q4 2024 closed the year against a regulatory inflection point. December 31, 2024 was the statutory deadline for Florida condominium associations to complete structural integrity reserve studies and begin funding under SB-4D. The deadline did not change overnight what older buildings owed; it changed what older buildings had to disclose, fund, and assess. The market repriced accordingly — and the repricing was structural, not cyclical.
Market Direction Activity finished the year firm at the top and selective in the middle. Mainland branded continued to absorb; trophy Beach posted further record prints; older mid-tier inventory cleared with extended marketing cycles and explicit assessment-adjusted pricing. The year-end aggregate masked deep differentiation underneath.
Mainland Miami The mainland closed 2024 with a maturing branded pipeline and rising contract velocity. Mandarin Oriental Residences at Brickell Key, St. Regis Brickell, Cipriani Brickell, Major Food Group's Villa Miami in Edgewater, and the Cove's Edgewater positioning all advanced through Q4 with deepening contract books. Brickell core resale tightened against the newer pipeline; Edgewater began trading clearly above its prior resale band; Coconut Grove confirmed its trophy status with limited but decisive trades. The mainland was now an institutional product market in functional terms.
Miami Beach and the Beaches Beach inventory ended the year elevated, but composition shifted. Older mid-tier listings stretched on market; trophy oceanfront tightened. The reserve funding deadline arrived precisely as buyer due diligence was already intensifying — regulatory pressure and buyer pressure compounded rather than offset. The Beach's land-driven premium continued to perform at the top; the older building stock on that land continued to reprice. Mid-Beach branded oceanfront — the Perigon's positioning maturing, North Beach's 7200 Collins entering visibility — supplied the narrative for what the Beach pipeline would look like.
Emerging Divergence Q4 2024 made the bifurcation describable in plain language. Two markets were operating: a branded, vertical, post-1992 market appreciating against a maturing pipeline and rate relief; and an older, pre-recertification, pre-funded-reserve market repricing against a regulatory regime now fully operational. Older inventory was not soft. It was repriced.
New Development vs Resale Pre-construction extended its lead. The pattern of contracts clearing at meaningful premiums to initial release pricing — and pulling sponsor confidence into raised tiers — defined the year-end book. Resale at the top followed; resale in older mid-tier did not. The pricing system divide was now structural.
Buyer Behavior The marginal buyer at year-end was disciplined and document-driven. Recertification status, reserve study findings, special assessment history, and insurance posture were entry conditions for a bid on older inventory. The same buyer placed bids on newer branded product without those questions because the questions were embedded in the building's structural premise. The bid book had bifurcated alongside the asset book.
Closing Insight The year ended with two markets running on two pricing systems, two risk profiles, and two trajectories. 2025 would not be the year the bifurcation arrived. It would be the year it became consensus.
Q1 2025 · April 2025
Bifurcation was no longer the story. It was the assumption.
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Editorial Introduction The first quarter of 2025 opened with the bifurcation now operational across every measurable layer of the market. The reserve regime was live. The branded pipeline was deep. Trophy Beach was tight. Buyers had adapted; sellers were beginning to. Bifurcation was no longer the story. It was the assumption.
Market Direction Activity firmed broadly but unevenly. Top-tier mainland and trophy Beach posted new pricing prints; older inventory continued its repricing path. The quarter recorded selective records — building-level peaks coexisting with neighborhood-level resets — that captured the market's two-track character.
Mainland Miami Mainland luxury continued to mature into an institutional asset class. Brickell core branded absorbed against a tightening newer-product comp set. Edgewater pre-construction held its premium to resale. Coconut Grove confirmed its trophy entry. Downtown's branded inventory — anchored by Okan Tower's progress and the early E11EVEN Beyond positioning — began pulling Downtown's resale ranges upward. Mainland was, by every measure, a product market.
Miami Beach and the Beaches Q1 produced the first widely-reported record-pricing prints on the Beach for the year, even as the broader Beach inventory remained elevated. South of Fifth, Bal Harbour, Surfside, and Fisher Island continued their separate trajectory; older mid-tier Beach continued absorbing reserve and assessment pressure. The Beach's two halves were now independently legible — a land-driven top tier appreciating, and an older building-stock tier repriced.
Emerging Divergence Q1 confirmed the Q4 2024 thesis: the bifurcation was the lens, not an episode. Mainland was the growth narrative, Beach was the scarcity narrative, and within each, newer beat older with widening spread. Trade press began reporting the dynamic explicitly; institutional research caught up to what brokerage and sponsor data had been showing for several quarters.
New Development vs Resale By Q1 2025, the contract market was operating six to twelve months ahead of the closing market. Pre-construction premiums consolidated in the low-double-digits across active branded launches. Reading closings without reading contracts was reading a stale instrument — release pricing was the new pricing reference, and resale comps followed.
Buyer Behavior Buyer behavior reorganized around the bifurcation. UHNW principals approached the market with three distinct underwriting frameworks — branded vertical, trophy land, older repriced inventory — rather than a single Miami thesis. The same buyer who paid full ask on a Bal Harbour branded penthouse negotiated a meaningful discount on an older oceanfront unit with an unfunded reserve study. Coherent buyer behavior, distinct asset behavior.
Closing Insight Q1 2025 set the cadence for the year. The remaining quarters would test how far the trajectory could compound.
Q2 2025 · July 2025
The discount applied to older inventory was no longer temporary. It had become embedded in the bid.
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Editorial Introduction Q2 2025 entered the slower seasonal half of the South Florida calendar. Activity moderated against the seasonal pattern; underlying pricing direction did not. The quarter's narrative belonged to the branded residences cycle, which by mid-year had become Miami's single most visible market story.
Market Direction Volume softened seasonally. Pricing held at the top, with selective continued records in trophy product. Older mid-tier inventory continued to absorb regulatory pressure; the spread between the two tiers stabilized at a wider band than 2024 had recorded. The discount applied to older inventory was no longer temporary. It had become embedded in the bid.
Mainland Miami Mainland branded saturation became part of the conversation rather than just a development thesis. Brickell, Brickell Key, Edgewater, and Downtown collectively held the deepest branded condo pipeline in any U.S. metro. The cycle's marketing reach — across global UHNW capitals, family offices, and institutional buyers — confirmed Miami's positioning as the headline market for branded residences globally. Mainland was an institutionalized product market.
Miami Beach and the Beaches Mid-Beach's branded oceanfront (the Perigon's progression visible) and North Beach's repositioning (7200 Collins advancing) defined the constructive Beach story. Older Beach mid-tier saw the second wave of reserve-driven assessment activity — buildings that had funded studies in late 2024 began passing through capital programs to owners through 2025. The Beach's land economics continued to work for trophy oceanfront and against older mid-tier on the same calendar.
Emerging Divergence The newer-vs-older divergence widened. Insurance market normalization in 2025 disproportionately benefited newer buildings — post-2002 construction, modern wind-load standards, clean structural posture — while older buildings continued to face elevated premiums that compounded with reserve and assessment exposure. The bifurcation was now multi-axis, and the axes reinforced each other.
New Development vs Resale Pre-construction continued to lead. The 12–18% appreciation band on signed contracts versus initial release pricing held across active launches. Sponsors increasingly underwrote release tiers with the assumption that contract velocity would support subsequent raises. The contract market was already pricing a different outcome than the resale comp set could explain.
Buyer Behavior Buyers grew increasingly specific about asset-class definition. Branded was no longer a single category; the operator, the architect, the floor plate, and the amenity stack drove discrimination within the branded set itself. Mid-cycle Q2 saw clear buyer preferences for specific operators across specific neighborhoods — a level of discrimination that further hardened the market's tiering.
Closing Insight Q2 2025 confirmed that the bifurcation was compounding, not resolving. The branded residences cycle, the regulatory regime, and the insurance market's selective normalization all reinforced the divide. The second half of 2025 would test whether the wider top-bottom spread was the cycle's new equilibrium.
Q3 2025 · October 2025
By Q3 2025, the bifurcation was no longer evolving. It was deepening on every axis simultaneously.
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Editorial Introduction Q3 2025 produced the year's most visible surge at the upper end. The $2M+ market accelerated meaningfully, mainland $3M+ activity built toward what would become the Q1 2026 print, and trophy Beach continued its independent trajectory. By Q3 2025, the bifurcation was no longer evolving. It was deepening on every axis simultaneously.
Market Direction Activity firmed at the top and remained selective in the middle. Pricing direction was unambiguously up in branded mainland and trophy Beach, flat to mixed in older mid-tier, soft in older commodity stock without clean documentation. The spread between best-in-class and the rest of the market reached its widest measurable level of the cycle.
Mainland Miami Mainland branded entered its most assertive contracting quarter to date. Mandarin Oriental Residences at Brickell Key advanced toward the penthouse pricing prints that would define the Q1 2026 narrative. Villa Miami, Cipriani Brickell, the Cove, Baccarat Brickell, and the broader Edgewater pipeline absorbed steadily, with sponsor confidence visible in release-tier moves. Mainland's product-market character was now its defining attribute.
Miami Beach and the Beaches The Beach's structural picture sharpened. Older mid-tier listings continued to experience extended absorption windows; buyer due diligence became standardized around reserve studies, recertification documentation, assessment history, and insurance posture. Trophy oceanfront — Surfside, South of Fifth, Bal Harbour, the islands — recorded continued firm-to-record pricing. The land-driven premium on irreplaceable sites compounded; the older-stock repricing also compounded.
Emerging Divergence By Q3 2025, the bifurcation was being reported in mainstream financial press alongside its specialty real estate coverage. The $2M+ surge against an otherwise selective broader market was the most accessible expression of the dynamic. Capital was concentrating into a narrowing band of best-in-class assets at an increasing pace.
New Development vs Resale Mainland $3M+ contract velocity in Q3 2025 was the leading edge of what Q1 2026 would document. The closing data that would print two quarters later was being committed to in real time — pre-construction at the front, newer resale in the middle, older resale at the back, operating as a stable architecture rather than a transitional one.
Buyer Behavior Repeat UHNW principals expanded existing Miami positions. New entrants — particularly from the Northeast, Latin America, and increasingly Europe — entered selectively at the top tier rather than broadly. The marginal buyer was not testing the market; they were committing to specific assets after extended diligence.
Closing Insight Q3 2025 set the velocity that would carry into year-end. The conditions for the Q1 2026 print were now visibly assembling.
Q4 2025 · January 2026
By year-end, the market had already repriced. Q1 2026 would not introduce a new market — it would simply record one that had already formed.
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Editorial Introduction The fourth quarter closed 2025 with a structural picture that had taken two years to assemble. Mainland branded had matured into an institutional product market. Trophy Beach was operating in its own land-driven scarcity environment. Older condo stock had been substantively repriced. The market was not becoming bifurcated. It was bifurcated, and the year-end data confirmed it cleanly.
Market Direction Activity finished firm at the top, with selective full-year pricing records across multiple branded launches and trophy submarkets. Beach inventory began to plateau against multi-quarter highs. Mainland $3M+ activity continued to build velocity into year-end. The annual aggregate framed 2025 as a record-pricing year that nonetheless required documentation discipline to access.
Mainland Miami Mainland closed the year with the deepest active branded pipeline in any U.S. metro. Brickell core, Brickell Key, Edgewater, Coconut Grove, and Downtown all closed Q4 with contract books that would carry directly into the Q1 2026 print. Sponsor confidence was visible in continued release-tier discipline. The Mandarin Oriental Brickell Key penthouse band, the Villa Miami top tier, the Cove's Edgewater pricing, and the Baccarat Brickell program all set the reference levels for what Q1 2026 would document.
Miami Beach and the Beaches The Beach reached its multi-quarter inventory peak in Q4 2025, with the first signs of contraction visible at the margin. Trophy oceanfront continued to set record-pricing references — Mid-Beach branded, Bal Harbour, South of Fifth, the islands. Older mid-tier Beach absorbed the year's accumulated regulatory and assessment pressure into year-end pricing positions. The Beach's land-driven mechanics produced exactly the dispersion the framework predicted.
Emerging Divergence By Q4 2025, the bifurcation was the consensus reading of the market. Mainland growth, Beach scarcity, newer outperformance, and older repricing were no longer competing interpretations; they were the descriptive framework. The repricing of older condo stock was structural and embedded — not a discount that would reverse with sentiment.
New Development vs Resale The 12–18% pre-construction-to-release appreciation band held into year-end. Resale at the top continued to track behind. Older resale liquidity remained conditional on buyer-grade documentation. The contract book had been pricing Q1 2026 since mid-year; the closing data was about to record what contracts had already determined.
Buyer Behavior Year-end buyer behavior was mature and selective. UHNW principals positioned for 2026 with specific assets in specific buildings under specific operators — not with broad neighborhood exposure. Family offices treated Miami as an asset-allocation decision rather than a residential one. The marginal buyer was disciplined, document-driven, and concentrated.
Closing Insight The year ended with the structural setup for Q1 2026 fully assembled. Beach inventory was poised to contract for the first time since 2023. Mainland $3M+ activity was building toward what would print as a near-tripling year over year. Pre-construction was setting the price; resale was following. Older stock was repriced and embedded.
By year-end, the market had already repriced. Q1 2026 would not introduce a new market — it would simply record one that had already formed.
Frequently Asked Questions
How is the Miami luxury condo market performing in Q1 2026? Mainland Miami luxury condo sales rose 13% YoY in Q1 2026, with average price up 18% YoY and average PPSF up 9% YoY. $3M+ sales nearly tripled year-over-year. Miami Beach inventory declined for the first time since 2023, with trophy oceanfront firm to record pricing.
What is the difference between mainland Miami and Miami Beach pricing? Mainland Miami is a product market — pricing is driven by the building (operator, brand, architecture, amenity stack). Miami Beach is a land market — pricing is driven by the site (water, view, frontage, irreplaceability). A $1,500 PPSF Brickell branded unit and a $1,500 PPSF Mid-Beach oceanfront unit are not the same asset.
What are the resale PPSF reference bands for Miami submarkets? Q1 2026 resale PPSF bands: Downtown $700–$950, Edgewater $800–$1,100, Coconut Grove $1,000–$1,350, Brickell $1,200–$1,500+, Miami Beach $1,100–$1,600+. Branded oceanfront on the Beach clears well above the upper bound.
How much premium is Miami pre-construction trading above resale? Q1 2026 luxury pre-construction signed contracts cleared 12–18% above initial release pricing. Pre-construction is now setting the price; resale follows. Buyers underwriting pre-construction with backward-looking resale comps will misprice the asset.
Why is older Miami condo stock being repriced? Four post-Surfside forces are repricing older condo stock: (1) 30-year recertification milestone findings, (2) statutory reserve funding requirements that are no longer waivable, (3) compounding HOA increases from insurance and maintenance, and (4) explicit buyer/lender pricing of structural and assessment risk. Older stock now trades at risk-adjusted pricing, not 'older building' pricing.
What were the most notable Miami luxury new development and trophy transactions in Q1 2026? Mandarin Oriental Residences at Brickell Key recorded penthouse pricing near $49.9M at approximately $6,300 PPSF — a new mainland ceiling. Other notable activity: The Perigon (Mid-Beach), 7200 Collins (North Beach), The Cove (Edgewater), Baccarat Residences (Brickell), Villa Miami (Edgewater), Okan Tower (Downtown), and E11EVEN Beyond (Downtown).
When did the Miami condo market begin to bifurcate? The structural separation between mainland Miami (product market) and Miami Beach (land market) began visibly in Q2 2024, when the contract market and the closing market started telling different stories. By Q3 2024 the separation was operational; by Q4 2024 it was structural; by Q1 2025 it was the consensus reading of the market.
How did the December 2024 Florida reserve funding deadline affect older Miami condos? The December 31, 2024 SB-4D deadline required Florida condominium associations to complete structural integrity reserve studies and begin funding. The deadline did not change what older buildings owed; it changed what they had to disclose, fund, and assess. The market repriced older stock structurally — not cyclically — and the discount became embedded in the bid by Q2 2025.
What happened to the Miami condo market after the Federal Reserve's September 2024 rate cut? The 50-basis-point cut in September 2024 reset financing math, but the marginal demand it released was selective — branded mainland and trophy Beach absorbed it; older inventory benefited modestly but continued to face structural headwinds rates could not address. Q3 2024 was the first quarter in which top-tier and older mid-tier pricing moved in opposite directions on the same calendar.
Did Miami pre-construction outperform resale in 2024 and 2025? Yes, decisively. By Q2 2024 the contract book began leading the closing book. By Q1 2025 contracts were running 6–12 months ahead of closings. The 12–18% pre-construction premium over initial release pricing held throughout 2025 and into Q1 2026. Pre-construction became the marginal price-setter at the top of the market.
Which Miami branded condo projects defined the 2024–2025 development cycle? Mandarin Oriental Residences at Brickell Key, St. Regis Brickell, Cipriani Brickell, Aston Martin Residences, Villa Miami in Edgewater, the Cove (Edgewater), Baccarat Residences Brickell, Mercedes-Benz Places Miami, the Perigon (Mid-Beach), 7200 Collins (North Beach), Okan Tower (Downtown), and E11EVEN Beyond (Downtown). Together they constitute the deepest active branded condo pipeline in any U.S. metro.
What was the Miami luxury condo market like in Q4 2025? Q4 2025 closed with Beach inventory at multi-quarter highs and the first signs of contraction visible at the margin. Mainland $3M+ activity continued building velocity into year-end. Pre-construction held its 12–18% premium. Year-end aggregates framed 2025 as a record-pricing year that nonetheless required documentation discipline (reserve studies, recertification, assessment history) to access at older stock.
Closing — The Manhattan–Miami Capital Corridor
Q1 2026 confirmed in both Miami and Manhattan what has been the operative thesis at Manhattan Miami: capital is concentrating into best-in-class assets, supply of fresh high-quality product is structurally constrained, and the corridor between New York and South Florida continues to deepen.
Aggregates are the wrong unit of analysis. The opportunity lies in the specific assets — by building, vintage, submarket, pedigree — where scarcity, quality, and timing converge.
Asset selection now matters more than market timing.
Sources: Corcoran Miami Beaches & Coastal Mainland Market Report 1Q 2026; The Real Deal Miami Q1 2026 coverage; Manhattan Miami Real Estate market analysis. By Anthony Guerriero, Manhattan Miami Real Estate · April 2026.
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