Buying a home in Miami in 2026 typically takes 30–45 days from offer to closing for financed buyers, and 15–30 days for cash. The Miami-Dade median price is approximately $700,000. Buyers carry 2–5% in closing costs and face Florida-specific inspection requirements (four-point, wind mitigation) and tighter insurance and condo rules under post-Surfside legislation.
Median Miami-Dade home price
~$700K
May 2026
International buyers paying all cash
47%
Florida 2025
Typical days on market
53–88
Single-family to luxury
Buyer closing costs
2–5%
of purchase price
Miami is a market where the difference between a great purchase and an expensive lesson comes down to three things: preparation, local insight, and a real plan. Properties here move across submarkets that barely resemble one another — a Brickell tower, a Coral Gables estate, and a Sunny Isles pre-construction unit each carry their own financing realities, tax implications, insurance profiles, and negotiating dynamics. Generic buyer advice doesn't travel well into this environment.
This guide walks through the full journey not as a checklist, but as the three phases an experienced buyer actually moves through: getting clear and getting ready, finding the right property, and executing from offer to keys. The same fundamentals apply whether you're a local professional upgrading, a domestic buyer relocating from another state, or an international client purchasing from abroad. If you're in that last group, the Relocation Guide covers the immigration, banking, and lifestyle layer in parallel depth.
PHASE 1 — FOUNDATIONS
SECTION 1
Get Clear on What You Actually Want
The most expensive mistake in real estate isn't a bad negotiation — it's buying the wrong thing. The clarity phase happens before you tour a single property, and skipping it is what leads buyers to see thirty homes and still feel uncertain.
Start by separating genuine requirements from preferences. Requirements are non-negotiable: a specific school district, a minimum number of bedrooms, proximity to a work location, or a price ceiling that accounts for taxes, insurance, and HOA — not just the mortgage. Preferences are everything else, and they're tradeable.
Next, settle the purpose question: primary residence, seasonal home, or investment property. This single decision changes almost everything downstream. A primary residence qualifies for Florida's Homestead Exemption — up to $50,000 off assessed value and a 3% annual cap on assessment increases under Save Our Homes — a meaningful annual saving on a $700,000+ purchase. A seasonal or investment property does not qualify, which changes both the tax math and the insurance calculation. Financing terms also diverge: lenders price primary-residence loans differently than investment properties.
Finally, pressure-test the wishlist against the market before you begin touring. If you want a waterfront single-family home in a top school zone for under $800,000 in Miami-Dade in 2026, your agent should tell you that plainly, and help you either adjust expectations or adjust the budget. That conversation is worth having at the start, not after thirty tours.
SECTION 2
Get Your Financing Squared Away Before You Tour
Pre-approval is not pre-qualification. Pre-qualification is a five-minute phone call that produces a soft estimate. Pre-approval involves verified documentation — income, assets, credit — and produces a letter a listing agent will take seriously when reviewing competing offers. In a market where competitive properties still move quickly, showing up without it is a handicap.
For U.S. buyers, the standard package is two years of tax returns, two months of bank statements, W-2s, and a recent pay stub. Self-employed buyers add two years of business returns and a year-to-date P&L.
For foreign nationals, the documentation set is different: passport, typically two years of foreign bank statements, a reference letter from your home-country bank, and often an ITIN (Individual Taxpayer Identification Number) from the IRS — a process that takes four to eight weeks and should be started early. Foreign-national mortgages typically require a down payment of 25–35% and carry interest rates approximately 1–2% above standard conforming rates. Around 47% of international buyers in Florida pay all cash, which eliminates this complexity entirely and compresses closing timelines from 45–60 days to 15–30 days.
For a rough sense of your numbers before speaking with a lender, the Mortgage Calculator and Affordability Calculator on this site give you an immediate framework. Then engage a lender — ideally one with a track record of closing international files — before you see your first property.
SECTION 3
Build the Right Team Around You
A Miami real estate transaction involves more professionals than most buyers expect, and the quality of each one matters more than it would in a simpler market.
Your buyer's agent is the quarterback — responsible not just for finding properties but for structuring offers, managing timelines, coordinating inspections, and advocating for your interests through every contingency. In a market that draws buyers from dozens of countries, experience with cross-border transactions, language capability, and knowledge of financing structures for foreign nationals are real differentiators, not marketing language.
Beyond the agent: you need a real estate attorney, particularly if you're a foreign national or purchasing through an entity. Florida doesn't legally require an attorney at closing, but the complexity of international transactions, title review, and contract negotiation makes one essential. A CPA familiar with both Florida tax law and international tax treaties handles your Homestead analysis, estimated tax payments, and — critically for foreign owners — FIRPTA planning for the eventual sale. Your lender, a licensed insurance broker (property, flood, and wind are three separate considerations in South Florida), and a licensed inspector complete the core team.
On cost: this is a transaction where the cheapest professional in each seat is almost never the right call. Attorney fees, inspection fees, and CPA fees are rounding errors against the purchase price. The decisions those professionals make — or fail to make — are not.
PHASE 2 — THE SEARCH
SECTION 4
Read the Market Before You Read Listings
Miami-Dade in May 2026 sits at a median home price of approximately $700,000 — single-family homes near $685,000 and condos closer to $415,000. Days on market run roughly 53 days for single-family homes, 71 days for condos, and 88 days for luxury properties above $3 million in Miami-Dade as of May 2026. At the ultra-luxury tier above $10 million, 361 transactions closed in 2025 — a segment that operates on its own logic entirely.
Those aggregate numbers, however, mask significant submarket divergence. Brickell and Downtown Miami — where high-rise condo supply has expanded meaningfully — trade at different absorption rates than Coral Gables, where single-family inventory is structurally limited and properties draw buyers willing to pay for the tree canopy, the school district, and the neighborhood's relative permanence. Coconut Grove has its own micro-demand driven by the arts-and-water lifestyle. Sunny Isles and Bal Harbour attract a concentrated international buyer pool, particularly from Latin America and Eastern Europe, which makes competitive offers work differently there than in, say, Kendall or Doral.
"Absorption" — the rate at which available inventory is being purchased — tells you more than the asking price. In a submarket absorbing at under three months of supply, sellers have leverage. Above six months, buyers do. Understanding where your target neighborhood sits on that spectrum before making an offer is basic preparation that many buyers skip.
Florida captures 21% of all U.S. foreign-buyer activity and has been the top destination for fifteen consecutive years. That context matters when timing a competitive offer: you are not competing only with local buyers.
SECTION 5
Tour With Intent, Not With Volume
Seeing thirty properties without a clear framework is not due diligence — it's procrastination with a car key. Buyers who move decisively and well typically tour far fewer homes because they've done the preparatory work before the first showing.
Approach touring in two stages. The first tour of any property is about the fundamentals: does the location actually work when you're standing in it, not looking at a map? Does the layout function for how you live? Does the building or street feel right at that time of day? If the answer to any of these is clearly no, move on. If yes, schedule a second visit — at a different time of day, with your inspector or a contractor if the property needs work.
In Florida specifically, there is a set of physical elements that must be assessed on every property regardless of price tier. HVAC age matters: systems over 10–12 years old in South Florida's climate are on borrowed time, and replacement is expensive. Roof age and material are critical inputs for insurance pricing and availability — a roof over 15 years old will trigger underwriting scrutiny or outright denial. Impact-rated windows and doors affect both insurance premiums and hurricane safety. Ask for the four-point inspection history if available. Look for stucco cracks that suggest movement, water intrusion stains in ceilings and walls, and pool equipment condition. For condos, request the last two years of HOA board minutes and the reserve fund study — post-Surfside legislation has resulted in material special assessments in older buildings, and this is now a standard part of due diligence, not an afterthought.
Always ask the listing agent: why is the seller selling, how long has the property been on market in its current condition, and have there been any prior offers that fell through?
SECTION 6
Build a Real Shortlist
Once you've toured and identified three to five serious candidates, the comparison should move beyond gut feel into a total-cost-of-ownership framework. Asking price is one number. The monthly reality is a different number.
For each property on your shortlist, build the full monthly cost stack: principal and interest on the mortgage, estimated property taxes (Florida's effective rate runs approximately 0.75%, though budget 1.0–2.0% depending on county and whether Homestead applies), homeowner's insurance, flood insurance if the property is in or near a flood zone, HOA dues, and a maintenance reserve. In Miami-Dade in 2026, the insurance line item deserves particular attention. The Florida property insurance market has been restructured following years of litigation and weather losses, and premiums — particularly for older roofs, non-impact windows, or properties near the coast — have risen substantially. Getting a bindable insurance quote before making an offer is no longer optional; it's a required input to your affordability math.
For condos, assess the HOA's financial health with the same rigor you'd apply to a corporate balance sheet. Florida's SB 4-D and subsequent legislation now require milestone inspections and minimum reserve funding for buildings three stories and above. Older associations that deferred reserves are now working through special assessment cycles. The reserve fund study, the most recent audit, and the board minutes will tell you where a particular building stands.
For a quick comparison across candidates on a per-square-foot basis, the Price-Per-Sqft Calculator on this site lets you normalize across properties of different sizes and configurations.
PHASE 3 — OFFER TO KEYS
SECTION 7
Craft an Offer That Wins Without Overpaying
The purchase price is the headline, but a real estate offer is a document with a dozen levers — and how those levers are set determines whether you win the property, and on what terms.
Earnest money in Miami typically runs 5–10% of the purchase price. At the higher end of that range, you signal serious intent and financial capacity; at the lower end, you limit your exposure if a contingency triggers. Contingencies — financing, inspection, appraisal — are your legal off-ramps. In a balanced market, keeping them is standard and reasonable. In a seller's market for a specific property, a buyer may waive or compress them, but that decision should be made with full information about the property's condition, never as a default.
Beyond price and earnest money: the closing timeline matters to sellers, and matching their preference (or offering a rent-back if they need more time) can differentiate your offer without adding dollars. Personal property inclusions — furniture, appliances, light fixtures — can be deal points. Seller credits toward closing costs are a tool for the buyer to reduce cash at closing; sellers may accept them in exchange for a slightly higher sale price.
Escalation clauses — where your offer automatically increases to beat a competing offer up to a ceiling — make sense in genuine multi-offer situations but expose your ceiling price, which is a real negotiating risk. Use them selectively.
A strong relationship between your agent and the listing agent is not a soft factor. In a market where the listing agent controls the information flow about competing offers, established professional relationships translate into better intelligence and sometimes the first call when a property comes available before hitting the MLS.
SECTION 8
Inspect Like You Mean It
The inspection contingency window in Florida typically runs 7–15 days from contract execution. That window is the buyer's primary legal protection, and it should be used fully, not treated as a formality.
A standard general inspection covers the home's major systems — structure, roof, electrical, plumbing, HVAC — and is the starting point, not the finish line. In South Florida, a complete inspection set includes at minimum: a roof inspection by a licensed roofing contractor; a four-point inspection (roof, HVAC, plumbing, electrical) required by many insurers before they'll bind coverage on homes over 25–30 years old; and a wind mitigation inspection, which documents features that reduce hurricane risk and can meaningfully lower your insurance premium. Mold testing is warranted in any property with visible water staining or a history of flooding. For pools, a pool and spa inspection is a separate engagement.
Once the inspection report is in hand, the question is not "is this perfect?" — no property is. The question is: which findings represent genuine financial exposure, and which are routine deferred maintenance? Structural issues, roof failures, unpermitted work, and active water intrusion are in the first category. Aging caulk, minor HVAC service needs, and cosmetic wear are in the second. Your agent and attorney help you translate findings into a re-negotiation position: a seller credit, a repair escrow, a price reduction, or — in genuine cases — a clean walk-away under the inspection contingency.
If the property requires an appraisal (financed purchases do), and the appraised value comes in below the purchase price, you have options: negotiate the price down, make up the gap in cash, or exercise the appraisal contingency and exit. Know which path you'd take before the appraisal is ordered.
SECTION 9
Closing Day and Beyond
Closing timelines in Miami-Dade run approximately 15–30 days for all-cash purchases, 30–45 days for financed domestic buyers, and 45–60 days for foreign-national financed transactions. If you're closing on a specific date for logistical reasons — school enrollment, lease expiration, a flight — make sure those constraints are built into the contract from the start, not added as last-minute requests.
Buyer closing costs in Florida typically fall in the 2–5% range of the purchase price. The largest line items: lender fees and points, title insurance (approximately 0.5% of the purchase price and required by virtually every lender), documentary stamp taxes on the mortgage ($0.35 per $100 of mortgage value), and attorney fees if you've engaged one. For a $1,000,000 purchase with 20% down, closing costs generally run $20,000–$40,000 depending on lender, title, and whether an attorney is involved. For a detailed estimate on your specific numbers, the Closing Cost Calculator on this site runs the full Florida-specific calculation.
Wire fraud is a real risk in real estate transactions — fraudulent wiring instructions sent via spoofed emails have cost buyers millions. Verify wire instructions by phone call to a number you have independently confirmed, every single time, even if you've wired to this title company before.
In the week before closing: confirm your homeowner's insurance binder is in place; coordinate utility transfers; set up mail forwarding; confirm the walkthrough appointment for the day of closing. After closing: file for Homestead Exemption if this is your primary residence (the deadline is March 1 of the following year); orient yourself with the HOA if applicable; reset the security system codes; and begin your hurricane preparedness checklist — this is South Florida, and a supply kit and a storm plan are not optional.
Mistakes That Cost Buyers Real Money in Miami
Skipping the wind mitigation and four-point inspection
Insurance underwriters in Florida use both reports to determine whether they'll bind coverage and at what premium. Buying a home and then discovering the insurance is denied — or repriced to a level that breaks your monthly budget — is a preventable outcome. Order both inspections during the contingency window.
Underestimating HOA financials in older condos
Post-Surfside legislation (SB 4-D and subsequent rules) mandates structural inspections and minimum reserve funding for buildings three stories and above. Associations that deferred maintenance for years are now levying special assessments to comply. A $435,000 condo purchase that comes with a $40,000 special assessment in year two is not the deal it appeared to be. Review the reserve fund study, the most recent audit, and the board minutes before waiving your inspection contingency on any condo.
Treating flood insurance as optional in a Zone X address
FEMA's flood maps update periodically, and lenders can require flood insurance if a property's zone designation changes after closing. Zone X properties near canals, low-lying areas, or coastal zones carry real flood risk even without a mandatory purchase requirement. Price the policy before you close.
Waiving inspection to "win."
Inspection waivers in competitive markets have resulted in buyers inheriting six-figure problems — failed roofs, unpermitted additions, active water intrusion, and mold remediation costs. The contingency window exists for a reason. Compress it if you must; eliminating it entirely is a gamble on a property you've spent days, not months, evaluating.
Ignoring SB 264 for restricted-country nationals
Florida's SB 264 (effective July 2023, upheld by the 11th Circuit in November 2025) restricts real property purchases by nationals of China, Russia, Iran, North Korea, Cuba, Venezuela, and Syria. The restrictions vary by property type and proximity to military installations. Violations carry criminal penalties. If any buyer in the transaction is a national of one of these countries, consult a Florida real estate attorney before signing anything.
Forgetting to file for Homestead
For a primary-residence buyer, Florida's Homestead Exemption reduces the assessed value by up to $50,000 and activates the Save Our Homes 3% cap on annual assessment increases. On a $700,000 home, the tax saving is meaningful every year. The deadline is March 1 following the year of purchase. It is not automatic — you must apply.
Skipping the wind mitigation and four-point inspection
Insurance underwriters in Florida use both reports to determine whether they'll bind coverage and at what premium. Buying a home and then discovering the insurance is denied — or repriced to a level that breaks your monthly budget — is a preventable outcome. Order both inspections during the contingency window.
Underestimating HOA financials in older condos
Post-Surfside legislation (SB 4-D and subsequent rules) mandates structural inspections and minimum reserve funding for buildings three stories and above. Associations that deferred maintenance for years are now levying special assessments to comply. A $435,000 condo purchase that comes with a $40,000 special assessment in year two is not the deal it appeared to be. Review the reserve fund study, the most recent audit, and the board minutes before waiving your inspection contingency on any condo.
Treating flood insurance as optional in a Zone X address
FEMA's flood maps update periodically, and lenders can require flood insurance if a property's zone designation changes after closing. Zone X properties near canals, low-lying areas, or coastal zones carry real flood risk even without a mandatory purchase requirement. Price the policy before you close.
Waiving inspection to "win."
Inspection waivers in competitive markets have resulted in buyers inheriting six-figure problems — failed roofs, unpermitted additions, active water intrusion, and mold remediation costs. The contingency window exists for a reason. Compress it if you must; eliminating it entirely is a gamble on a property you've spent days, not months, evaluating.
Ignoring SB 264 for restricted-country nationals
Florida's SB 264 (effective July 2023, upheld by the 11th Circuit in November 2025) restricts real property purchases by nationals of China, Russia, Iran, North Korea, Cuba, Venezuela, and Syria. The restrictions vary by property type and proximity to military installations. Violations carry criminal penalties. If any buyer in the transaction is a national of one of these countries, consult a Florida real estate attorney before signing anything.
Forgetting to file for Homestead
For a primary-residence buyer, Florida's Homestead Exemption reduces the assessed value by up to $50,000 and activates the Save Our Homes 3% cap on annual assessment increases. On a $700,000 home, the tax saving is meaningful every year. The deadline is March 1 following the year of purchase. It is not automatic — you must apply.
Skipping the wind mitigation and four-point inspection
Insurance underwriters in Florida use both reports to determine whether they'll bind coverage and at what premium. Buying a home and then discovering the insurance is denied — or repriced to a level that breaks your monthly budget — is a preventable outcome. Order both inspections during the contingency window.
Underestimating HOA financials in older condos
Post-Surfside legislation (SB 4-D and subsequent rules) mandates structural inspections and minimum reserve funding for buildings three stories and above. Associations that deferred maintenance for years are now levying special assessments to comply. A $435,000 condo purchase that comes with a $40,000 special assessment in year two is not the deal it appeared to be. Review the reserve fund study, the most recent audit, and the board minutes before waiving your inspection contingency on any condo.
Treating flood insurance as optional in a Zone X address
FEMA's flood maps update periodically, and lenders can require flood insurance if a property's zone designation changes after closing. Zone X properties near canals, low-lying areas, or coastal zones carry real flood risk even without a mandatory purchase requirement. Price the policy before you close.
Waiving inspection to "win."
Inspection waivers in competitive markets have resulted in buyers inheriting six-figure problems — failed roofs, unpermitted additions, active water intrusion, and mold remediation costs. The contingency window exists for a reason. Compress it if you must; eliminating it entirely is a gamble on a property you've spent days, not months, evaluating.
Ignoring SB 264 for restricted-country nationals
Florida's SB 264 (effective July 2023, upheld by the 11th Circuit in November 2025) restricts real property purchases by nationals of China, Russia, Iran, North Korea, Cuba, Venezuela, and Syria. The restrictions vary by property type and proximity to military installations. Violations carry criminal penalties. If any buyer in the transaction is a national of one of these countries, consult a Florida real estate attorney before signing anything.
Forgetting to file for Homestead
For a primary-residence buyer, Florida's Homestead Exemption reduces the assessed value by up to $50,000 and activates the Save Our Homes 3% cap on annual assessment increases. On a $700,000 home, the tax saving is meaningful every year. The deadline is March 1 following the year of purchase. It is not automatic — you must apply.
The Buyer's Checklist
Before you tour
Define your must-have list vs. preferences in writing
Confirm your full budget: purchase price + taxes + insurance + HOA + maintenance reserve
Obtain pre-approval letter (U.S. buyers) or proof of funds / foreign-national pre-approval
Engage your buyer's agent, real estate attorney, and CPA
Start ITIN application if you are a foreign national without a U.S. tax ID
Request Homestead Exemption information if purchasing as a primary residence
Confirm SB 264 eligibility if you hold a passport from a restricted country
During the search
Tour with a clear first-visit / second-visit discipline
Check HVAC age, roof age, window type (impact vs. standard), and water intrusion signs on every property
For condos: request HOA financials, reserve fund study, board minutes, and pending special assessments
Request seller disclosures on every property before making an offer
Run total-cost-of-ownership math on each serious candidate (mortgage + taxes + insurance + HOA + reserves)
Get a bindable insurance quote before finalizing your shortlist
Use the Price-Per-Sqft Calculator to normalize across candidates
From offer to keys
Submit offer with appropriate earnest money (5–10% of purchase price is typical)
Lock in contingencies you genuinely need: financing, inspection, appraisal
Schedule full inspection set: general + roof + four-point + wind mitigation (+ mold if warranted)
Review inspection findings with your attorney; negotiate credits or repairs as appropriate
Confirm appraisal outcome; have a plan for a low appraisal before it is ordered
Finalize homeowner's, flood, and wind insurance binders
Verify wire instructions by phone call to a confirmed number — not by email alone
Complete final walkthrough the morning of closing
File Homestead Exemption application if primary residence (deadline: March 1 of following year)
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about buying property in Miami
How much do I need on hand to start touring seriously in Miami in 2026?
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At a minimum, you need clarity on your financing before touring — either a pre-approval letter or documented proof of funds for cash purchases. As a practical number, budget for the down payment (20% is standard for U.S. buyers, 25–35% for foreign nationals), closing costs of 2–5% of the purchase price, and a reserve for inspections and moving costs. On a $700,000 purchase with conventional financing, that typically means $140,000–$175,000 liquid before the transaction begins.
How is buying as a foreign national different?
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The main differences are in financing, taxes, and eventual exit. Foreign-national mortgages require 25–35% down and documentation your home-country bank provides (reference letters, foreign bank statements, sometimes a U.S. ITIN). Florida has no state income tax, but federal rental income and eventual sale proceeds are subject to U.S. taxation. FIRPTA requires the buyer to withhold 15% of the gross sale price when a foreign owner sells — refundable via a U.S. tax return, but a real cash flow consideration. SB 264 applies if your passport is from one of the seven restricted countries. Engage a CPA and real estate attorney before signing.
What's the realistic timeline from first tour to keys?
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Cash buyers can move from offer acceptance to closing in 15–30 days. Financed domestic buyers typically close in 30–45 days. Foreign-national financed transactions run 45–60 days, sometimes longer depending on the lender's international processing queue. Add two to four weeks before that for the search and offer phase if you're working with a clear brief and a focused search area.
How is the 2026 Miami market different from a year ago?
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Median prices in Miami-Dade have remained stable near $700,000 after significant appreciation through 2021–2023. Inventory has increased modestly from historic lows, giving buyers more choices and slightly more negotiating room than in the peak years — but not a buyer's market by historical standards. Days on market have lengthened to roughly 53 days for single-family homes, 71 days for condos, and 88 days for luxury, which means sellers are more willing to negotiate than they were in 2021–2022.
What's the deal with condo insurance and HOA assessments after the Champlain Towers laws?
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Florida's post-Surfside legislation requires buildings three stories and above to complete structural milestone inspections and meet minimum reserve funding requirements. Many older associations that deferred reserves for years are now levying special assessments to fund required repairs and reserves. Before buying any condo, review the reserve fund study, the most recent structural inspection (if applicable), and two years of board minutes. Special assessments in progress or anticipated should be priced into your offer.
Is a pre-construction purchase smarter than a resale right now?
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Neither is categorically better — they serve different purposes. Pre-construction offers a purchase at today's price with delivery in 18–36 months, which can produce appreciation in a rising market but carries developer risk and deposit exposure. Resale offers immediate occupancy, a known physical condition, and established HOA financials. For primary residence buyers, resale typically makes more practical sense. For investors with a longer time horizon, pre-construction in the right project can be compelling. This is a decision that deserves a dedicated conversation based on your specific objectives.
What does it cost at closing on a $1M property?
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Estimate $20,000–$40,000 in buyer closing costs on a $1,000,000 purchase with 20% down ($800,000 mortgage). The major line items: lender origination fees and points, title insurance (approximately $5,000 at this price point), documentary stamp taxes on the mortgage ($2,800 on an $800,000 mortgage at $0.35/$100), title search and settlement fees, and attorney fees if engaged. Cash buyers save on lender and mortgage-related costs but still pay title and settlement fees.
Can I tour from abroad and buy without flying in?
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Yes, and it happens regularly. Video tours, 3D walkthroughs, and agent-facilitated in-person assessments allow international clients to do meaningful due diligence remotely. Most closing documents for foreign buyers can be signed at a U.S. consulate or via remote notarization (where permitted). However, for a purchase of this significance, at least one in-person visit — even a 48-hour trip — is strongly recommended before going under contract. The neighborhood experience at ground level is difficult to replicate remotely.
Ready to start your Miami search?
Schedule a no-pressure consultation to talk through your objectives, your timeline, and what the current market actually looks like for your target neighborhoods. The conversation is free, works across English, Russian, and can happen by phone, video, or in person — wherever you are in the world.
This guide covers the full buying process, but the rest of your toolkit is already built out on this site. If you're buying as part of a relocation from another country — navigating visas, banking, schools, and daily life alongside the property search — the Relocation Guide covers that layer in depth and is the natural companion to this document. The Mortgage Calculator, Affordability Calculator, and Closing Cost Calculator let you run real numbers on your specific scenario in minutes, without a lender conversation first. The Price-Per-Sqft Calculator helps you normalize across candidates on your shortlist.
When you're ready to look at specific inventory, the Map Search and Featured Properties give you a live view of what's available across South Florida's submarkets. And if you're still working out which neighborhood fits your lifestyle, the Neighborhood Quiz runs you through a seven-question matching process that covers nineteen distinct Miami-area neighborhoods. The goal of every tool on this site is the same: to get you to a confident, well-informed decision — whether that decision is to buy now, to wait, or to adjust what you're looking for.
Disclaimer: This guide is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, financial, or immigration advice. Market data reflects conditions in Miami-Dade as of May 2026 and changes continuously. Florida property tax estimates, Homestead Exemption applicability, SB 264 restrictions, and FIRPTA obligations are complex and fact-specific — confirm all details with a licensed Florida real estate attorney and a qualified CPA before making any purchase decision.