
The Surf Club Four Seasons Surfside vs 888 Brickell by Dolce & Gabbana: The Service, Privacy, and Daily-Use Questions That Matter
A discreet buyer’s comparison of The Surf Club Four Seasons Surfside and 888 Brickell by Dolce & Gabbana, focused on operational certainty, privacy, location, service culture, and everyday livability.

What Association Documents Reveal About Brand Premium Durability
A buyer-oriented look at how condominium declarations, bylaws, budgets, reserves, contracts and turnover records reveal whether a branded South Florida residence can sustain its premium after delivery.

Evaluating The Post Surfside Condominium Reserve Requirements For Luxury Buyers
For luxury condominium buyers in South Florida, the post-Surfside reserve conversation is no longer an abstract policy issue. It is a line-item reality that can influence monthly carrying costs, closing strategy, resale liquidity, and even which buildings feel truly “turnkey” over a 5 to 10 year hold. This editorial explains how to evaluate reserve requirements and special-assessment risk with the level of rigor sophisticated buyers apply to taxes, insurance, and title. Rather than focusing on any single property’s internal ledger, MILLION Luxury outlines a framework you can use across Surfside, Bal Harbour, Miami Beach, Brickell, and Sunny Isles: what to request, what numbers to pressure-test, and which qualitative signals often matter as much as the spreadsheet.

Ritz, Four Seasons, or Aman? Choosing a Luxury Residence by Brand Philosophy and Service
In South Florida, branded residences are not simply a logo on the porte cochère. The real premium is operational: service standards, staffing depth, owner recognition programs, and the daily cadence of a building run like a five-star property. This editorial breaks down what that premium can mean in practice across Miami Beach and Brickell, using well-known hospitality playbooks from Ritz-Carlton, Four Seasons, and Aman as a lens for buyers evaluating both branded and non-branded options.



