
What full-time luxury buyers should ask before choosing a seasonal hotspot as a permanent home
A seasonal address can feel effortless for a few winter months and far more complex as a year-round residence. For luxury buyers in South Florida, the right questions are less about glamour and more about the mechanics of permanent living: domicile, taxes, insurance, flood exposure, reserves, building rules, schools, commuting, and storm readiness. The most successful transitions happen when buyers underwrite the full carrying-cost and lifestyle reality before closing, not after move-in.

Why the seven-business-day condo document review window matters more in luxury deals now
In South Florida luxury condo transactions, the real issue is not whether buyers assume they have seven business days. It is that Florida’s statutory rescission period is only three business days after receipt of the required documents, while the risk hidden inside declarations, budgets, reserves, restrictions, and maintenance records has grown materially. For affluent buyers weighing lifestyle, capital exposure, and future flexibility, the document window has become one of the most consequential moments in the deal.

What to ask about HOA governance, reserve studies, and special-assessment culture before you close
Before closing on a South Florida condominium or branded residence, buyers should look past finishes and views to understand how the association governs, funds reserves, and handles capital risk. The most useful due diligence is practical: review the full reserve study, verify how much of recommended reserves is actually funded, inspect recent budgets and audited financials, and trace the property’s special-assessment history. In coastal markets where salt air, humidity, and storm exposure accelerate wear on façades, roofs, waterproofing, and elevators, governance quality can shape ownership experience as much as design or services. MILLION Luxury outlines the questions that matter most before you sign.

What HNWI buyers should ask about condo reserve funding before signing in Florida
For affluent condo buyers in Florida, reserve funding is no longer a back-office detail. It is a frontline due-diligence issue that shapes future assessments, carrying costs, financing options, and eventual resale liquidity. This MILLION Luxury guide outlines the questions sophisticated buyers should ask before signing, from funded percentages and reserve-study dates to restricted accounts, capital plans, and pending assessments.

Bentley Residences Sunny Isles for collectors deciding whether an in-unit garage is a real lifestyle upgrade
At Bentley Residences Sunny Isles, the in-unit garage is not a novelty amenity so much as a meaningful shift in how a collector stores, protects, and actually uses a car in a coastal high-rise setting. For the right owner, direct car-to-residence access changes convenience, privacy, preservation, and even presentation. For the wrong owner, it can be an expensive feature that matters less than expected.

What buyers miss when they focus on lobby glamour instead of resident circulation
In South Florida luxury real estate, the most revealing design test is often not the lobby but the route a resident takes every day. Elevator capacity, corridor width, acoustics, ventilation, service adjacencies, accessibility, and the path from parking to private residence shape comfort far more durably than arrival theatrics. For discerning buyers in markets such as Brickell, Miami Beach, Sunny Isles, and West Palm Beach, circulation is not a secondary detail. It is a practical measure of privacy, ease, long-term operating performance, and resale resilience.



