
What Cash Buyers Should Still Verify About Pump Systems
A cash closing can remove financing friction, but it should not remove mechanical diligence. In South Florida luxury real estate, pump systems deserve a focused review before money changes hands.

What to Ask About EV Charging Rights Before Buying a Multi-Car Residence
For South Florida buyers with multiple vehicles, EV charging due diligence now belongs beside parking, insurance, reserves, and flood exposure. The essential questions begin with ownership of the parking space, then move to association authority, electrical capacity, billing, permits, and long-term infrastructure planning.

What buyers should verify about generator coverage before assuming storm-day comfort
In South Florida, backup power is often marketed as a luxury essential, but buyers should verify exactly what a generator can run, how it transfers, what fuel it depends on, and whether the installation is legal, maintained, and truly configured for comfort during an outage.

Edgeworth West Palm Beach vs Nora House West Palm Beach: private residential calm or culture-district immediacy?
A buyer-focused comparison of two distinct West Palm Beach luxury living propositions: Edgeworth’s private, gated residential calm and Nora House’s walkable, culture-district immediacy.

What to verify about backup power if you expect full storm-day livability rather than minimal emergency function
For South Florida luxury buyers, backup power should be evaluated as a livability system, not a checkbox. The essential questions are whether the home can support comfort cooling, water pressure, refrigeration, security, communications, and other expected loads for the duration of a real outage. That means reviewing load calculations, transfer equipment, fuel endurance, battery capacity, maintenance records, permitting, and the exact list of systems actually carried on backup power.

What to ask about private dining rooms, catering kitchens, and in-home entertaining support before closing
For buyers who entertain at a high level, the real due diligence starts after the showing. A private dining room may photograph beautifully, and a so-called catering kitchen may sound turnkey, but the practical test is whether the residence, its systems, and its governing documents can support the way you actually host. Before closing, buyers should verify association rules, permits, ventilation, electrical load, gas service, plumbing resilience, climate control, service circulation, and insurance implications so the entertaining program matches the promise.



