Last week, twenty-five luxury properties changed hands across Miami-Dade County in a single seven-day period — totaling $266.9 million in asking volume, up $130 million from the week before. A $43 million Bal Harbour mansion and a $10.5 million Fisher Island condo led the week’s contracts. Cash buyers accounted for nearly half of all condo closings.
And yet, in that same week, the average luxury property sat on the market for 119 days before going under contract.
That tension — robust transaction volume alongside extended days on market — captures exactly where Miami’s luxury real estate market stands in mid-2026. Buyers are active, but they are deliberate. The question I hear most often from serious buyers right now is not which neighborhood or which building. It is a more fundamental question: Have I missed Miami’s window, or is the smart money still buying?
The answer depends entirely on what you are buying — and why. Buyers asking should I buy a luxury condo in Miami now face a very different calculus than those evaluating Miami Beach $5M+ waterfront estates. Below is the data that serious buyers are using to make that distinction in 2026.
What Miami Luxury Real Estate Data Actually Shows in 2026
Miami-Dade’s luxury market — properties priced above $4 million, tracked weekly by Douglas Elliman’s Eklund-Gomes team — posted one of its strongest contract weeks of the year in the third week of June 2026. Twenty single-family homes and five condos entered contracts between June 15 and June 21, with a combined asking volume of $266.9 million — data tracked by The Real Deal‘s weekly luxury market report.
Zoom out to the quarter and the picture is equally clear. In Q1 2026, the Miami-Dade market recorded 3,382 transactions at $1 million and above — a 22 percent increase year-over-year. Sales of properties priced at $1 million and above in May 2026 alone rose 14.7 percent compared to May 2025, from 389 to 446 transactions. Foreign buyers committed $4.4 billion to South Florida real estate in 2025, a 42 percent increase from the prior year.
These are not the metrics of a market that has quietly peaked and is waiting for buyers to notice.
At the same time, the broader condo market is showing signs that favor buyers. Existing condominium inventory reached approximately 12.9 months of supply — a number that gives negotiating leverage to buyers who know how to use it. The sale-to-list price ratio across Miami sits at 94.68 percent, meaning sellers are, on average, accepting approximately five percent below asking. Only 8.72 percent of homes are selling above list price.
Sources: Douglas Elliman Eklund-Gomes weekly report, Miami Association of Realtors, June 2026. Data subject to change.
Why “Did I Miss the Peak?” Is the Wrong Question
The buyers asking whether they missed Miami’s peak are typically thinking about 2021 — the year when inventory evaporated, multiple offers were routine, and a listing could sell above asking in 48 hours. By that standard, yes, the frenzy is over.
But framing 2021 as “the peak” fundamentally misreads how luxury real estate markets operate. The buyers who purchased at record prices in 2021 — waterfront homes, trophy penthouses, estates on barrier islands — are not selling at a loss today. The fundamental drivers that brought them to Miami have not reversed. Tax advantages, no state income tax, global connectivity, lifestyle, privacy, and a growing financial ecosystem that has turned Miami into a genuine alternative to New York and London for the ultra-wealthy.
What has changed is the character of the market. In 2021, buyers were competing. In 2026, buyers are choosing. That distinction matters enormously for how you approach a purchase.
The smart money is not chasing a “bottom” that may never materialize for irreplaceable assets. The Miami luxury market correction that some analysts predicted in 2023 never arrived at the trophy tier — and for good reason. Buyers who waited for it missed multiple appreciation cycles. The question in 2026 is not whether Miami real estate is overpriced, but whether the specific asset you want can be replaced at a lower cost later.

Two Different Markets Inside One City
The single most important thing a serious buyer in 2026 needs to understand is that “Miami luxury real estate” is not one market. It is at least two distinct markets — and they behave very differently. Buying without understanding this distinction is the most common strategic error this market produces.
The Condo Market: Buyers Have the Advantage
The luxury condo segment — particularly in Brickell, Downtown Miami, and parts of Miami Beach — gives buyers the most negotiating power this market has offered since 2019. For a cash buyer in Miami Beach in 2026, this window represents genuine leverage: sellers who listed at 2022 peak pricing are now open to negotiation, and days-on-market above 90 days creates room that simply did not exist during the pandemic frenzy.
However, this broad picture conceals important nuance. New luxury condos in marquee buildings — the Baccarat Residences, St. Regis Brickell, Waldorf Astoria — continue to command premium pricing because demand for best-in-class product with genuine scarcity remains strong. The softness is concentrated in older buildings, buildings with deferred maintenance, and overpriced units that were never realistically priced for this market.
Buyers with a discerning eye can enter best-in-class buildings at prices that would have been unavailable in 2021. The selection is wider, the timelines longer, and the seller motivation more transparent. That combination — in a market that still has structural upside — defines a genuine buying window.
Miami Beach New Development — Active Opportunities
Direct access to pricing, floor plans, and availability through David Nguah at Douglas Elliman
Ritz-Carlton Residences, South Beach
Ultra-luxury branded residences on Miami Beach’s historic oceanfront. Private beach access, Ritz-Carlton service, panoramic Atlantic views.
The Perigon, Miami Beach
Rem Koolhaas-designed tower on Collins Avenue. 82 residences, full-floor plans available, unobstructed ocean-to-bay views.
Ocean Terrace Residences, Miami Beach
Boutique oceanfront development on North Beach’s revitalized Ocean Terrace. Limited residences, private beach club, historic district setting.
The Residences Six, Fisher Island
The final residential collection on Fisher Island — South Florida’s most private address. Ferry-only access, resident-exclusive beach club and marina.
1250 West Avenue, Miami Beach
An anticipated new luxury development in Miami Beach’s sought-after West Avenue corridor. Register now for pre-launch pricing, priority floor plan selection, and early access — before the public release. Opportunities at this stage are strictly limited.
Pricing and availability subject to change without notice. Contact David for current information.
The Single-Family and Waterfront Market: Scarcity Protects Value
The single-family and waterfront market tells a different story. 56 Bal Bay Drive, Bal Harbour — a $43 million waterfront estate — going under contract the week of June 15 is not an accident. It is a data point that reflects a segment of the market where supply is genuinely constrained and demand from UHNW buyers remains robust.
Waterfront properties on the Intracoastal, direct ocean-front estates on Star Island, Palm Island, and Hibiscus Island, and trophy residences in established enclaves have a structural protection that condos do not: land. You can build another condo tower. You cannot create another acre of Biscayne Bay waterfront.
For buyers considering this segment, experienced advisors draw a consistent conclusion: the right waterfront property will not wait. When one appears, prepared buyers move. Those still “waiting to see where things go” typically find themselves waiting for the next opportunity — and in a structurally undersupplied market, that may be years away.

What the Ultra-Wealthy Are Actually Doing
One of the clearest signals in Miami’s luxury market is cash buyer activity. When 49.7 percent of existing condo transactions close in cash — with no mortgage contingency, no appraisal pressure, no lender timeline — it reflects a buyer pool that is acting on conviction, not speculation.
These are not distressed buyers chasing a deal. They are UHNW individuals and families — relocating from New York, California, and Chicago, or arriving from Latin America and Europe — who have evaluated Miami as a long-term wealth preservation decision and are executing on it. The fact that they are choosing cash in an environment where financing is available says something important about their level of commitment to this market.
Foreign buyer investment of $4.4 billion in 2025 — up 42 percent year-over-year — reinforces the same picture. Global capital is not retreating from Miami. It is accelerating.
Miami Beach Real Estate & Top Miami Neighborhoods Driving the Most Buyer Interest in 2026
Across the Miami Beach real estate market, price segments break down meaningfully by neighborhood: $5M+ buys a move-in-ready waterfront home on the Venetian or Sunset Islands; $10M+ opens doors to bay-front estates on Star Island, Palm Island, and Hibiscus Island with private dockage; at $20M+, you are in the exclusive tier of Indian Creek Island compounds and Fisher Island residences — properties where security, privacy, and long-term capital preservation are the primary drivers. Search all Miami Beach homes for sale by price.
Not every Miami neighborhood is performing equally. Based on current transaction data and buyer inquiry patterns, the neighborhoods drawing the most qualified buyers right now are:
Bal Harbour and Surfside: Ultra-low inventory, ultra-high buyer quality. The $43 million Bal Harbour contract in the week of June 15 is consistent with a pattern of UHNW buyers targeting this area for its combination of privacy, Intracoastal access, and proximity to the ocean without the noise of South Beach. Rivage Bal Harbour represents the pinnacle of new development in this corridor.
Fisher Island: The most private address in South Florida continues to attract buyers who prioritize security and exclusivity above all else. A $10.5 million unit at Palazzo Della Luna going under contract in the same week as the Bal Harbour mansion confirms that Fisher Island’s appeal is undiminished. Visit our Fisher Island real estate page to explore current availability.
Brickell’s premier buildings: The financial district’s best-in-class towers — those with genuine amenity packages, institutional developers, and long-term brand cachet — continue to attract buyers who want the city lifestyle with the comfort of knowing their building will hold its value. Baccarat Residences and St. Regis Residences Brickell remain the benchmark.
Miami Beach waterfront: Waterfront homes on Miami Beach — particularly those with direct ocean or bay access, private docks, and no-bridge boating — occupy a category of their own. Inventory here is genuinely limited and tends to attract buyers who are making a primary residence decision rather than an investment calculation.
How Smart Buyers Are Approaching Miami Luxury Real Estate Timing in 2026
The honest answer to “is now a good time to buy?” is that market timing is the wrong framework for a luxury real estate decision — especially in a market with Miami’s structural characteristics.
The buyers who purchased Miami waterfront in 2015, 2018, or 2019 — before the pandemic migration — did not buy because they timed the market. They bought because they found the right property, understood its long-term value drivers, and acted with conviction. The market timing, in retrospect, looked brilliant. But it was not the strategy. The property was the strategy.
In 2026, serious buyers are asking better questions than “has the market peaked?” They are asking: Is this property genuinely scarce? What are the long-term value drivers specific to this location? If this comes off the market, how easily could I replace it? Those questions lead to better decisions than any attempt to call a market top or bottom.
What the current market does offer that 2021 did not: time to think, room to negotiate, and access to a broader inventory of new listings to compare against each other. Those are genuine buyer advantages that were not available during the frenzy years.
Miami’s Most Coveted Addresses — Current Availability
Private access to Miami’s most exclusive addresses through David Nguah at Douglas Elliman
Four Seasons Private Residences, Surfside
Ultra-luxury oceanfront residences in Surfside with full Four Seasons hotel services. One of Miami’s most coveted boutique addresses — just 150 residences on a private beach.
Fisher Island
The most private address in South Florida. Accessible by ferry only, with no through-traffic, a resident-exclusive beach club, marina, and golf course. Consistently among the highest per-square-foot values in the country.
Star Island Estates
Trophy waterfront single-family estates on Miami Beach’s most exclusive private island. Gated, guarded, and home to a handful of ultra-high-net-worth families. Direct bay access with private dock capability on most lots.
Listing prices sourced from MLS and are subject to change without notice. Contact David for current pricing and availability.
Frequently Asked Questions: Miami Luxury Real Estate 2026
Has Miami’s luxury real estate market peaked in 2026?
No. Miami’s luxury market posted $266.9 million in contracts in a single week in June 2026 — not a signal of a peaked market. While condo inventory has broadened, giving buyers more negotiating room than in 2021–2022, single-family waterfront estates remain supply-constrained. David Nguah at Douglas Elliman observes that the most sought-after addresses — Fisher Island, Star Island, Bal Harbour — continue to hold value precisely because supply cannot expand.
Is it a buyer’s market or seller’s market in Miami luxury real estate right now?
It depends on the asset class. Miami’s luxury condo market above $1 million currently favors buyers, with expanded inventory and longer days on market creating negotiating leverage that did not exist two years ago. The waterfront single-family market remains firmly in sellers’ favor. David Nguah advises buyers to move decisively on waterfront estates while taking more time to negotiate on condo acquisitions in 2026.
Are cash buyers still dominant in Miami luxury real estate?
Yes. Cash transactions account for over 60% of Miami luxury sales above $3 million in 2026, driven by buyers from New York, Latin America, and Europe who are not rate-sensitive. This insulates the top tier of Miami’s luxury real estate market from interest rate volatility affecting other U.S. markets — a key reason why the corrections seen elsewhere have not materialized at David Nguah’s price point.
Which Miami neighborhoods offer the best luxury real estate value in 2026?
For value relative to scarcity, David Nguah highlights Surfside and Bal Harbour — boutique oceanfront inventory at prices still below South of Fifth benchmarks. For trophy appreciation, Star Island and Fisher Island are the strongest long-term holds given their hard geographic supply caps. Buyers seeking Miami Beach luxury real estate in new development should consider Ocean Terrace Residences and The Perigon for ocean-facing value ahead of occupancy.
How does David Nguah help luxury buyers navigate Miami’s market?
David Nguah is a luxury real estate advisor at Douglas Elliman with over a decade representing buyers on Miami Beach’s most sought-after addresses — including Star Island, Fisher Island, and Bal Harbour. He provides off-market access, current comparable sales, and private briefings on new development before public release. Contact David directly at (786) 200-3966 or info@miamisrealestate.com for a confidential consultation.
Miami Beach Real Estate & Miami Luxury Listings — Browse Live Inventory
Every property below is pulled directly from the Miami MLS and updated in real time — the moment a listing changes status, price, or availability, it reflects here. Browse by category, or speak with David privately for off-market opportunities that never reach this page.
Explore by Category
Sourced live from the MLS · Updated in real time
Refine by price, bedrooms, or location using the filters within each view — or speak with David for off-market opportunities.
Ready to buy a home in Miami Beach or explore Miami luxury real estate? Whether you are searching for a waterfront estate on the Venetian Islands, a private compound on Star Island, a penthouse in Surfside, or a Bay Point single-family home, David Nguah at Douglas Elliman provides discreet, expert representation for buyers at every price point — from $5M homes for sale in Miami Beach to $50M+ private island estates. Search Miami Beach luxury condos for sale, browse Miami penthouses, or call (786) 200-3966 for a private consultation.
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David Nguah
Luxury Real Estate Advisor
Navigating Miami’s luxury market in 2026? David provides current availability, recent comparables, and off-market access — directly, without the pitch.
Speak with David privately(786) 200-3966
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