
Reading the Map: Where Companies Are Moving in South Florida
A discreet look at the corporate relocations and expansion plays influencing where luxury buyers are choosing to live across Miami, Broward, and Palm Beach, and how to position a residence around work-life proximity and long-term value.

The Middle Eastern Elite Discover South Florida: A New Wave of Luxury Real Estate Investors
Middle Eastern capital has been a quiet but consequential force in South Florida luxury real estate, favoring prime coastal assets, branded experiences, and jurisdictions with strong legal protections. Today’s demand is shaped by all-cash buying power, a preference for luxury condominiums, and a broader wealth-migration narrative that continues to lift the region’s highest tiers.

How Foreign Buyers Can Finance Luxury Properties in Florida
Foreign nationals can buy Florida real estate, but luxury financing often requires higher down payments, deeper documentation, and early planning for compliance and closing logistics.

One for You, One for the Kids? Pros and Cons of Buying Multiple Units in the Same Condo Building
For ultra-premium buyers, owning more than one residence under the same roof can be a remarkably efficient way to live, host, and invest. The strategy also concentrates risk in a single association, balance sheet, and governance ecosystem. This MILLION Luxury playbook explains when multi-unit ownership shines in South Florida, where financing and condo-law realities can quietly set the boundaries, and how to structure an exit plan that protects liquidity.

Miami vs. Singapore: Competing Tropical Hubs for Ultra-Luxury Real Estate
In 2026, ultra-luxury buyers are comparing global safe-harbor markets through a sharper lens: liquidity, taxes, inventory depth, and the friction embedded in each transaction. South Florida and Singapore sit at the center of that conversation, but they reward different strategies. Miami offers a uniquely cash-heavy closing environment and a tax structure that many high earners find efficient. Singapore offers institutional-grade governance and a tightly controlled prime landed segment, but foreign buyers face meaningful stamp-duty headwinds. For South Florida’s luxury real estate audience, the takeaway is not that one market “wins.” It is that each city has become a different kind of wealth instrument: Miami as a lifestyle-forward, inventory-rich coastal platform with powerful cash velocity; Singapore as a scarcity-driven, policy-shaped store of value where access is often the primary differentiator. Understanding how these characteristics translate into negotiation, timing, and portfolio construction is the edge in 2026.

Strong Dollar Effect: Is Miami Real Estate a Bargain for Foreign Buyers in 2026?
A weaker U.S. dollar can make South Florida pricing feel materially different to overseas capital, but “bargain” is more nuanced than the headline FX rate. In a market where international buyers represent an outsized share of dollar volume and new-development absorption, timing, carrying costs, and exit frictions matter as much as the entry price.



