The South Florida real estate market is turning a corner heading into spring. After a year of shifting inventory and modulating buyer demand, the three-county region is settling into more predictable rhythms — and that's actually good news for anyone thinking about buying, selling, renting, or investing.
Here's what's happening across Palm Beach, Broward, and Miami-Dade right now, and what it means for you.
Prices: Modest Growth, but Not Everywhere
Home prices across South Florida are showing modest appreciation of around 1.1% year-over-year, according to recent market forecasts. For context, that makes South Florida one of the few major Florida metros expected to post positive price growth in 2026. But the picture is mixed depending on what type of property you're looking at.
Single-family homes are the resilience story. In Broward County, single-family prices rose nearly 7% year-over-year, and Miami-Dade saw a solid 3% gain. These homes are proving durable because land is scarce, and long-term demand from both domestic migrants and international buyers remains steady.
Condos, on the other hand, are cooling. Miami-Dade condo median prices dropped nearly 10% year-over-year and have fallen below $400,000 for the first time in three years. This matters if you're a condo buyer in Miami Beach or Brickell — there's more negotiating room than there was in 2024.
The median Miami-area home price currently sits at $574,000, down 2.3% year-over-year when you blend all property types together. Statewide, the Florida median is $413,000.
Inventory: Finally Some Balance
One of the biggest shifts over the past 18 months has been inventory. For years, South Florida was seller-friendly — not enough homes, too many buyers. That's changing.
Active listings across South Florida jumped 33.5% year-over-year through early 2026. For single-family homes, we're now sitting at roughly 6.2 months of inventory. For condos, it's much higher at 13.2 months — that's deep buyer's market territory.
What does this mean? If you're a buyer, you have more choices and more leverage to negotiate. If you're a seller, you'll need to price right and market well. Generic pricing or tired marketing won't cut it anymore.
A County-by-County Snapshot
Miami-Dade County remains the most dynamic but also the most competitive. Commercial sales dipped 13% in Q1 2026, but residential sales showed resilience with neighborhoods like Cutler Bay (+17%) and Miami Beach (+16%) leading the way. Cash transactions still dominate at 37.1%, signaling that international and investor interest remains strong. Miami Realtors® Chief Economist Gay Cororaton forecasts a buyer's market through mid-2026 here.
Broward County is showing balanced growth. Residential sales were up 10.6%, with standout performers in Pompano Beach (+46% sales) and Fort Lauderdale (+34%). Single-family home prices bounced back nicely. Commercial sales softened, falling 17%, but the residential picture suggests a market finding equilibrium rather than collapsing.
Palm Beach County is punching above its weight. Residential sales surged 23% year-over-year, and commercial sales jumped 80% in Q1 — a notable outlier. Cash transactions here are the highest of the three counties at 44.8%, reflecting the wealth concentration in the area and strong international buyer interest.
What's Driving the Market Right Now
Three factors are keeping South Florida's market steady despite broader Florida headwinds:
1. Limited supply of land. You can't build more beaches or waterfront. That structural scarcity supports prices, especially for single-family homes on larger lots or waterfront property.
2. Long-term migration and international demand. Domestic buyers continue to move from colder states, and international cash buyers — particularly from Latin America and Canada — remain active in luxury segments. Miami-Dade led the country last year with the most $20M-and-up condo sales.
3. Lower mortgage rates. As rates have eased into early 2026, buyer purchasing power has improved modestly, giving the spring market a small tailwind.
What's Uncertain
Tighter immigration enforcement could dampen long-term rental demand growth, which might ripple into condo absorption rates. The condo market in particular is worth watching — 13.2 months of inventory is substantial, and if absorption doesn't pick up, sellers may face pricing pressure through the summer.
The Bottom Line
South Florida's spring 2026 market is neither a buyer's nor seller's market — it's becoming a market where fundamentals matter. Pricing has to be justified. Homes have to show well. Investors need realistic return expectations.
For buyers, conditions are the most favorable they've been in two years. You have time to look, room to negotiate, and realistic sellers who understand where the market is.
For sellers, now is the time to be strategic. Price competitively, market smart, and understand that your home is no longer the only show in town.
For investors, cap rates are more realistic, cash flow is more achievable, and the speculative excess of 2021–2023 is finally washing out of the system.
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