
How to judge whether a condo truly works for adult children and long-stay guests
A guest-friendly South Florida condo is defined less by headline square footage than by privacy, rules, parking, amenity access, financial health, and day-to-day livability. For buyers planning to host adult children or extended visitors, the real test is whether the residence functions gracefully within the association’s framework.

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.

How to compare valet operations when a building promises seamless arrival
A seamless arrival is not just a fast car handoff. In South Florida luxury residences, the strongest valet programs are evaluated across staffing, circulation, technology, concierge coordination, security, and the quality of resident recognition during peak demand.

What buyers should ask about staff parking, nanny access, and secondary circulation in a luxury condominium
In South Florida luxury condominiums, discreet daily living often depends less on headline amenities than on the invisible systems that support them. Buyers who rely on nannies, caregivers, housekeepers, drivers, or frequent vendors should verify staff parking, access permissions, service elevators, and secondary circulation in writing before closing. The most sophisticated purchase questions are operational: how staff enter, where they park, which elevators they use, whether they can escort children or access amenities, and how the building handles emergencies when service routes matter most.

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.

Why a tower’s resident mix can matter as much as its finish level for full-time owners
For South Florida buyers planning to live in their residence year-round, a tower’s resident mix can shape daily life as decisively as architecture, views, or finish level. Owner-occupancy influences financing, reserve culture, board governance, amenity wear, and the overall rhythm of the building. In many luxury markets, the most satisfying full-time ownership experience often comes from communities designed less like rotating inventory and more like a long-term address.



