From Palm Beach to Miami Beach, luxury home prices in Florida’s richest enclaves are reaching new records as billionaires and millionaires proceed to buy up property.
The typical sale price of a home in Palm Beach topped $20 million within the third quarter, making it far and away the most costly market within the country, according to data from Douglas Elliman and Miller Samuel. The typical price per square foot of homes sold in Palm Beach reached $4,554, greater than 2.5 times costlier than Manhattan.
“The prices are mind-blowing,” said Chris Leavitt, a top Palm Beach broker with Douglas Elliman. “There’s a really limited supply, especially on the ultra-high-net-worth end, where the clientele is all clambering for that incredible lake front or oceanfront property.”
South Florida’s mansion boom is being driven by the continued flight of millionaires and billionaires from high-tax states equivalent to New York, New Jersey and California, in addition to the expansion of the Florida economy. Since ultra-wealthy buyers often pay money for his or her real estate, they’re less affected by soaring mortgage rates.
The dearth of inventory, especially for coveted waterfront locations, has powered a new surge in prices.
Palm Beach only has 53 homes in the marketplace as of the third quarter, down 61% from pre-pandemic levels, according to Jonathan Miller, CEO of Miller Samuel. The shortage of listed homes has reduced the variety of sales, which were down 31% over the past 12 months, he said.
Yet, brokers say the low inventory will proceed to put upward pressure on prices, making trophy properties expensive even for multimillionaires.
“You may still discover a nice house here for under $10 million,” Leavitt said. “I do know that feels like another universe. Because yes, that is another universe.”
In late July, a waterfront home that had last sold for $7.4 million went for about $50 million. The vendor was the estate of the late liquor distributor James Tigani, Jr., and the client was reported to be enterprise investor Harvey Jones.
Fashion tycoon Tommy Hilfiger this summer sold a Palm Beach mansion for $41.4 million, lower than six months after he bought it for $36.9 million.
The record for the most costly home sold in Palm Beach was set in April, when luxury automobile dealer Michael Cantanucci paid $170 million for a 1.6 acre oceanfront mansion.
Leavitt said that while the summer was slow, buyers got here rushing back starting mid-September.
“Often September is not that busy, however the market is heating up earlier this 12 months,” he said. “These buyers move very fast. They may call and say, ‘I’m flying down tomorrow.’ They’ll fly down on their private jet, they are going to look, buy it and shut inside seven days. And so they’re back in a month to move in. They need what they need, once they want it.”
Miami Beach has also seen a spike in prices from wealthy buyers — especially billionaires.
While the variety of sales of single-family homes within the Miami Beach area fell 3% within the third quarter, the dollar value of sales jumped 62% due to more closings upward of $10 million, according to Corcoran.
The typical price of luxury real estate in Miami Beach — defined as the highest 10% of the market — surged to a record $25 million, according to Douglas Elliman and Miller Samuel.
“The posh and high-end housing markets seem untethered to mortgage rates and the economy right away,” Jonathan Miller said. “Each Palm Beach and Miami Beach are disconnected from the rate of interest trend.”
Tech billionaire Eric Schmidt and his wife are the most recent billionaires to start amassing real estate collections in Miami. Brokers say the couple has purchased greater than a half dozen homes on the Sunset Islands, spending upward of $140 million. It’s unclear if the Schmidts plan to live in Miami or what they plan to do with the properties.
Hedge-fund billionaire Ken Griffin continues to expand his footprint on Star Island, recently buying back a bit of property for $45.5 million. He had sold the property to retired baseball star Alex Rodriguez in 2020 as a part of a land swap. Griffin also paid $107 million last 12 months for a historic waterfront estate in Miami.
Jeff Bezos has also joined the billionaires beach club, spending $150 million for 2 adjoining properties in Indian Creek Village. The 2 properties give him a combined 4.6 acres in an exclusive enclave and make him a neighbor to National Football League legend Tom Brady.
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