
Guest-Ready Luxury Condos in Coconut Grove: Boutique Service, Bayfront Amenities, and the Details That Matter
In South Florida’s luxury market, “amenities” are only half the story. For buyers who host often, travel frequently, or maintain a second residence, the more decisive question is operational: how does the building handle arrivals, deliveries, vehicles, and the quiet logistics of everyday hospitality? Using publicly reported details, this MILLION Luxury editorial looks at two distinct Coconut Grove archetypes: a new, green-certified boutique concept and an established multi-tower bayfront community with event-forward lifestyle infrastructure. The goal is not to crown a single winner, but to clarify what to prioritize before you buy.

Coconut Grove’s Boutique Condo Boom, and the Fine Print on Rental Flexibility
In Coconut Grove, the most compelling new condominium offerings are increasingly boutique by design: fewer residences, larger floorplans, and amenities calibrated for privacy rather than spectacle. Yet for many buyers, the decisive detail is not the rooftop pool or the architect’s signature. It is the lease clause. Two of the neighborhood’s most discussed new projects, OPUS Coconut Grove and The Lincoln Coconut Grove, are both marketed with minimum six-month leasing and a cap of two leases per year. That structure can work beautifully for owners who want measured flexibility, but it is fundamentally incompatible with true short-term rental strategies. Against a backdrop of local enforcement against illegal short-term rentals, the difference between “occasional leasing” and “transient use” matters. Below, MILLION Luxury outlines what today’s boutique product is offering, how to read the rental rules like an operator, and where Miami Beach’s branded-residence lifestyle fits for buyers prioritizing service and lock-and-leave convenience over frequent turnover.



