
Pied-à-Terre in Miami: What Part-Time Residents Should Consider in a Condo Purchase
A discreet, buyer-forward checklist for choosing a South Florida condo as a pied-à-terre, focusing on disclosures, reserves, insurance, rental rules, and cross-border planning.

House vs. Condo for Retirement: Key Factors for Florida’s Luxury Retirees to Consider
For South Florida’s ultra-premium buyer, the more expensive home is not always the one with the higher purchase price. The meaningful comparison is the all-in cost: taxes, insurance, reserves, maintenance, governance, and the financial friction that appears when life changes. This guide breaks down how condos and single-family homes distribute (and hide) costs in different places, with a focus on what sophisticated buyers should underwrite before signing.

Turnkey Furnished vs. Custom Decor: Deciding How to Outfit Your New Luxury Condo
In South Florida’s luxury condo market, “turnkey” and “furnished” are often used interchangeably, but they solve different problems. Turnkey describes readiness: the residence is move-in-ready without repairs or renovations. Furnished describes contents: the home comes with furniture and household items, whether or not the underlying condition is truly ready. For second-home buyers, executives relocating on compressed timelines, and owners weighing rental strategies, the distinction matters because it affects inspections, negotiations, operating complexity, and who your future buyer or tenant will be.

Combining Units: Why Some Ultra-Wealthy Buy Two or More Condos to Create a Mega-Residence
South Florida’s ultra-wealthy are increasingly purchasing adjacent and stacked condominium residences and commissioning seamless combinations that deliver privacy, scale, and full-service ease. From Fisher Island to Brickell, the “home in the sky” has become a second-home strategy: fewer keys, more volume, and a lifestyle that is intentionally lock-and-leave.

Miami–Hamptons Lifestyle: Planning Year-Round Living Between South Beach and the Hamptons
For the ultra-premium set, Miami and the Hamptons are not competing addresses. They are complementary seasons, each with its own cadence, logistics, and ownership math. In 2026, the most confident buyers are treating the corridor as an operating system: a Florida base that can run year-round, paired with a summer outpost that still defines East Coast social gravitas. This guide focuses on what actually changes your experience as an owner: travel time realities, residency and tax posture, seasonality, the practicalities of managing two homes, and the South Florida condo details that matter when you are not in town every week.

Is Miami’s Ultra-Luxury Condo Lifestyle Right for You? Questions to Ask Yourself
A buyer-first luxury editorial on what sophisticated condo purchasers in South Florida are underwriting right now: reserves, assessments, insurance, rental rules, and climate resilience.



