Buying an apartment in Miami has shifted from an aspirational purchase to a portfolio decision: dollarize, diversify out of local risk, and step into a deep, liquid market with clear rules.
What separates a good purchase from a mediocre one isn't market timing — it's the asset and the entry price. This guide orders what matters: where to buy, at what price, with what financing and under which ownership structure, so you reach the offer with numbers, not intuition.
Where the apartments for sale in Miami are
Each neighborhood is its own sub-market with its own logic for price, rent and buyer profile. Brickell concentrates new-tower supply and corporate rentals; Edgewater and Downtown offer more accessible bayfront entry points; Sunny Isles and Aventura target oceanfront luxury. The right choice depends on whether your goal is rental income, appreciation or your own use.
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View properties →Financing: the non-resident buyer does qualify
You don't need residency or citizenship. You can buy in cash or with a foreign national loan — typically 30%–40% down, a slightly higher rate, and documentation your bank or accountant can prepare. Many buyers pay cash and evaluate refinancing later.
Structure: in your name or through an entity
Holding personally exposes you to the U.S. estate tax — only a US$60,000 exemption — which is why many foreign buyers purchase through a structure (a Florida LLC, sometimes with a holding company above it). It isn't always worth it: it depends on the amount, the use and your estate. Decide it with your accountant before making an offer.
Pre-construction: entering at the lowest price
The staged payment plan of pre-construction lets you build a dollar position gradually — for example 20% at contract and the rest during construction — entering at the project's lowest price. The trade-off is the timeline and construction risk, mitigated by choosing developers with a track record.