
Private elevator keys and security protocols: What to ask before buying in an ultra-luxury building
A private elevator can elevate privacy, arrival, and resale appeal in an ultra-luxury residence, but only when its access rights, override rules, backup systems, and cost allocations are precisely documented before closing.

EV charging in condo garages: A 2026 buyer’s guide to load limits, billing, and waitlists
A buyer-focused guide to evaluating EV charging in South Florida condo garages, with practical insight on electrical capacity, billing structures, approvals, and charger waitlists.

How to evaluate a branded residence: Service standards, management agreements, and resale premiums
A branded residence is not simply a luxury condominium with a recognizable name. It is a real estate asset whose value is shaped by service depth, operator durability, contractual protections, recurring costs, and the market’s willingness to pay a premium at resale. For South Florida buyers, where branded inventory is unusually deep, careful diligence matters more than branding alone.

Top 5 questions to ask on a luxury condo tour that most buyers forget
A polished luxury condo tour can conceal the questions that matter most. This MILLION Luxury guide outlines five high-value questions South Florida buyers should ask before they move from admiration to offer, with a focus on fees, reserves, compliance, restrictions, and climate exposure.

Florida condo milestone inspections: What they are and how they can impact negotiations in 2026
Florida’s milestone-inspection framework is reshaping condo due diligence across South Florida. For 2026 buyers and sellers, the real negotiation now extends beyond finishes and views to structural reports, reserve funding, and the likelihood of future assessments.

Salt-air maintenance in coastal condos: Windows, railings, hardware, and what boards will restrict
In South Florida’s coastal condominium market, salt air is not a cosmetic nuisance. It is a persistent maintenance variable that affects window assemblies, balcony railings, exposed hardware, and the board approvals that shape every visible replacement. For buyers, owners, and association leaders, the real question is not whether corrosion will appear, but how early it is recognized, how intelligently materials are selected, and whether the work complies with both code and condominium rules.



