
Top 10 South Florida Luxury New Developments Delivering 2027 and Beyond
South Florida’s next luxury cycle is taking shape now, with a pipeline of lifestyle-led towers and ultra-boutique beachfront collections targeting 2027 through 2030. Below, MILLION Luxury ranks 10 projects and explains how to evaluate timelines, neighborhoods, and pricing leverage as inventory normalizes.

Brickell’s Next Luxury Baseline: Three Interior Philosophies Buyers Are Actually Choosing
In Brickell, the most meaningful differentiator in new luxury towers is no longer a view line or amenity deck. It is the interior philosophy: whether a residence arrives as a calibrated design language, a turn-key furnished home, or a privacy-first waterfront retreat. Using current marketing materials, MILLION Luxury compares Mercedes-Benz Places, ORA by Casa Tua, and Una Residences through the lens most relevant to end users and investors: finishes, furnishing strategy, kitchen and bath specifications, ceiling height and arrival, and what each approach signals about long-term livability and resale.

Downtown Miami’s Next Branded Icons: Waldorf Astoria Residences and Faena on the River
Two high-profile branded towers are redefining the luxury conversation in Downtown Miami: a supertall hotel-and-residences landmark and a culture-forward riverfront twin-tower plan.

The Residences at Shell Bay: Hallandale’s New Standard for Private-Club Condominium Living
An ultra-luxury, Auberge-linked condominium tower within the Shell Bay private club enclave is positioning Hallandale for a more discreet, amenity-forward kind of waterfront ownership.

Origin Residences vs La Maré: Choosing Bay Harbor’s Next-Generation Waterfront Address
A discreet buyer’s comparison of two Bay Harbor Islands waterfront launches: Origin Residences’ curated boutique model versus La Maré’s multi-collection, privacy-forward campus.

Sky Garages, Car Elevators, and the New Luxury of Living With Your Collection
From Sunny Isles Beach’s in-home sky garages to trackside “car condo” campuses across the country, automotive real estate has matured into a discreet asset class. For South Florida buyers, the story is less about novelty and more about control: climate, security, provenance, and the ability to enjoy a collection without surrendering privacy. This editorial looks at what’s been publicly disclosed, what’s been widely marketed, and what sophisticated buyers should underwrite before they bring the garage into the living room.



