Residential · Miami waterfront

Beach Houses for Sale in Miami

Single-family homes at the water — not condos. Where they are, what dockage and insurance really cost, and how to value the lot. The guide before you make an offer.

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Most "beachfront" listings in Miami are condos. Actual beach houses — single-family homes you own land-and-all, near or on the water — are a scarce, very different asset. Buying one is a decision about dirt, water access and resilience as much as about the house itself.

Where the beach houses actually are

True single-family beach houses cluster in a handful of enclaves. Miami Beach has the gated islands — La Gorce, the Sunset Islands, Venetian — and the oceanfront blocks where a house still stands instead of a tower. Golden Beach is a small, exclusively single-family town directly on the Atlantic. Bal Harbour and Key Biscayne offer waterfront homes with island feel and quick airport access. Each has a distinct trade-off between ocean frontage, bay frontage and the privacy of a gated street, and each prices accordingly.

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Dockage and the seawall

Water access is the value, but it is also the homework. A deep-water dock with direct, no-bridge ocean access is worth a large premium over a shallow canal berth that strands a big boat at low tide. Confirm the dock permit, the water depth at the slip and whether the channel is no-wake. Then inspect the seawall: replacing a failed seawall on a waterfront lot can cost six figures, and a buyer who skips that inspection inherits the bill. The dock and the seawall belong in the diligence, not in the celebration.

Flood zone and windstorm insurance

A beach house sits in a FEMA flood zone — typically VE or AE — and that drives the carrying cost more than buyers expect. Pull the elevation certificate; a home built or elevated to current code insures far more cheaply than a low, older structure. Windstorm and flood premiums on a waterfront house can run into the tens of thousands a year, and wind-mitigation features change the number materially. Underwrite the insurance before you fall for the view — it is a permanent line item, not a closing cost. Many foreign buyers also weigh ownership structure; see the steps to buy as a foreigner.

Lot value vs the structure

On the water, you are usually buying the land and the water access first and the house second. In the prime enclaves, tear-downs trade close to renovated homes because the buyer is paying for an irreplaceable lot — frontage, orientation, protected basin. That reframes the negotiation: an aging house on a great lot can be the better buy than a renovated one on a compromised lot. Value the dirt and the water on their own, then decide what the structure is really worth to you.

Beach houses for sale in Miami — beachfront residential property in Miami Beach
Beachfront residential property in Miami Beach.

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Frequently asked questions

House or condo at the beach in Miami? A house gives you land, privacy and a private dock but higher insurance and upkeep; a condo is lower-maintenance but you own no land. They are different assets.

How much is insurance on a Miami beach house? Windstorm and flood premiums on a waterfront home can run into the tens of thousands a year; elevation and wind mitigation change the number materially.

Does the house come with a private dock? Not always, and not all docks are equal. Confirm the permit, water depth, ocean access and seawall condition before you assume usable dockage.

How do flood zones affect a beach house purchase? They set insurance cost and lending terms. Pull the elevation certificate; a code-compliant, elevated home insures and resells better than a low older one.

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Dockage, seawall, flood zone and lot value — checked before you commit. Independent advisory, no obligation, with real numbers.

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Live Miami beach houses and waterfront properties are at miaminmobiliario.com/en/properties.

Operated by Carlos Balart, an independent real estate broker licensed in Florida (MIAMInmobiliario). This guide is informational and does not replace specific legal, tax or financial advice. Equal Housing Opportunity. Photo: Miami Beach - Former Townhouse Hotel — © P. Hughes / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 4.0).