
Relocating a Family Office to Florida: Why Real Estate Often Leads the Move
For many private families, a Florida move does not begin with office leases or corporate filings. It begins with a home. In South Florida, the residence often becomes the anchor for domicile, staffing, school selection, advisor relationships, and eventually a formal family office footprint.

How to choose between a beach address and a bayfront address when both look equally luxurious
A beach address and a bayfront address can appear equally polished on first viewing, but they deliver very different ownership experiences in South Florida. For luxury buyers, the distinction is less about aesthetics and more about how you intend to live: beach generally favors direct sand access, hospitality energy, and strong rental appeal, while bayfront tends to reward boating utility, privacy, and private dockage. The decisive comparison is practical. Buyers should evaluate flood designation, elevation, insurance exposure, shoreline or seawall obligations, zoning limits, view protection, and the daily rhythm of each setting before choosing the waterfront lifestyle that truly fits.

Capital Preservation Through U.S. Residential Real Estate
For sophisticated buyers and investors, U.S. residential real estate remains compelling not merely for upside, but for its ability to hold purchasing power through tax efficiency, durable demand, and hard-asset scarcity. In South Florida, that thesis becomes especially clear where constrained waterfront supply, international liquidity, and Florida’s tax structure combine to support long-term value retention.

Tula Residences North Bay Village for buyers entering the island before the next phase of transformation is priced in
For buyers considering North Bay Village before its next chapter is fully reflected in asking prices, Tula Residences represents a way to think strategically about timing, positioning, and island selection. This MILLION editorial focuses on what can be evaluated now: neighborhood trajectory, buyer profile, comparative context, and the discipline required when entering a transforming waterfront micro-market without relying on speculative promises.

What to ask about resale liquidity when a building is designed for a very specific buyer archetype
In South Florida luxury real estate, a sharply defined buyer profile can be an asset on the way in and a liability on the way out. This MILLION editorial outlines the resale-liquidity questions sophisticated buyers should ask before purchasing in a building designed around a narrow lifestyle, brand story, or ownership cohort.

A Private-Client Guide to U.S. Luxury Real Estate Investing
A buyer-oriented guide to luxury real estate investing in the United States, with a sharp focus on South Florida’s tax advantages, micro-markets, financing realities, resilience considerations, and the difference between prestige ownership and durable investment performance.



