"Miami condos" is not a building: it is a market. Hundreds of towers spread across Brickell, Downtown, Edgewater, Miami Beach, Sunny Isles and the islands, each with its own resale inventory, maintenance fee and rulebook. For the buyer arriving from abroad, the problem is not finding a condo —there are plenty— but knowing which one is well bought. This page orders that market: what resells today, at what price, and what to check before you offer.
The condominium is the housing form that defines Miami. From the beachfront buildings of the 1970s and 80s to the last decade's wave of branded towers —Brickell turned into a vertical forest, Edgewater and the Arts & Entertainment District densified, Sunny Isles lined with towers on the Atlantic—, South Florida built its real estate wealth upward. The result is the deepest, most liquid condominium market in the country outside Manhattan.
For today's buyer what matters is not the skyline postcard but the secondary market: which units owners are reselling, at what price per square foot, with what maintenance fee and under which rental rules. This page gathers the live inventory of resale condos across Miami's core neighborhoods —for sale and for rent— and explains how to read it, so you reach the offer with judgment, not enthusiasm.
New vs. resale: two different markets
Buying a Miami condo runs on two tracks, and they do not compete for the same thing. Before looking at prices it helps to know which one you are on:
- Preconstruction (new) you buy off-plan with staged deposits that in Miami often reach 50% or more before delivery. You lock today's price but take on construction, delivery and multi-year closing risk. The unit does not yet exist.
- Resale (secondary) you buy a physical, finished, habitable unit, almost always financeable and closing in weeks. In exchange you compete for scarcer inventory in the most desirable towers, and you inherit the building's age, its fee and its reserve history.
- Price per square foot rules it is the market's unit of measure. It reads against recent sales in the same tower and same line, not against the city average: a new branded tower and a 2000s condo on the next block can differ by double.
- Fees and reserves, after Surfside following the Champlain Towers collapse, Florida law now requires milestone inspections and structural reserve studies, and bars deferring them further. In older buildings that means higher fees and special assessments. It is the first thing to check in a resale.