Miami’s real estate market in July 2025 revealed contrasting fortunes: luxury single-family homes saw robust demand and high-dollar sales, but the condo sector continued to struggle with declining prices and fewer deals. The market’s split underscores a widening gap in affordability and buyer sentiment across the region.
Key Takeaways
- Ultra-luxury home sales remain a major strength for South Florida.
- Miami-area condo prices and sales dropped further amid new safety regulations and financing hurdles.
- Inventory levels for both houses and condos increased, giving buyers more leverage.
- Recent changes to condo law aim to ease financial pressures, but costs for necessary repairs remain high.
Ultra-Luxury Homes Remain in Demand
Despite broader market cooling, luxury homes—those priced above $10 million—continue to perform impressively. By July, 262 ultra-luxury properties had sold in Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties. If this pace persists, the area could see a near-record 426 sales by year-end, matching pandemic-era highs. This trend is driven by continued interest from wealthy buyers seeking lifestyle upgrades in South Florida.
Condo Market Loses Steam
Miami’s condo market took another hit as sales fell over 17% year-on-year in July. The median sale price for a condo in Miami-Dade dropped to $406,000, down from $424,950 a year prior and down sharply from June’s $445,000. Broward County saw similar trends, with prices dipping to $265,000 from $272,500 last year.
Stricter post-Surfside safety requirements are adding to condo owners’ burdens. Unit owners now face higher association fees, special assessments, and mandated repairs — all swallowing affordability gains, even as a new law attempts to reduce immediate financial pressures.
Single-Family Homes Stay Resilient
While not immune to the market’s overall slowdown, the single-family house segment fared relatively better. In Miami-Dade, 861 homes sold in July, just slightly below June and well below last year’s 1,008 sales. Broward’s numbers were steadier, with 1,055 sales in July. Prices slipped mildly: Miami-Dade homes ended July at a $660,000 median, 1.5% lower than last year.
Inventory Expands, Market Balances
Inventory increased for both condos and houses. Miami-Dade now sits at 6.6 months of house supply (up from 4.4 months last year) and 14.1 months for condos. Inventory above nine months favors buyers, and the current trend suggests softer price growth or even further declines ahead.
What Lies Ahead?
As high-end homes remain a beacon for investment and lifestyle buyers, affordability and regulatory pressures could keep the squeeze on condos. With more options and rising inventory, buyers may find new negotiating power as the market heads toward a more balanced equilibrium.
Sources
- South Florida real estate July trends: luxury leads, Miami Herald.