As real estate demand
softens, Miami-Dade condominiums are showing the weakest
numbers, according to new data from the county Property
Appraiser’s Office.
Real estate values on existing homes and commercial property
grew about 7% countywide at the start of 2025, according to
the June 1 report on taxable values across Miami-Dade. But
when isolated only to existing condominiums, values dropped
slightly from the start of 2024 — a decline of less than 1%,
according to Property Appraiser Tomás Regalado.
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A view of the downtown Miami skyline from Watson Island is shown in this 2024 photo |
Released on May 30, the report showed an 8.5% increase in overall values across Miami-Dade. That includes existing structures and new construction in 2024. That’s down from 10.7% growth last year and is the first single-digit gain since 2021, when the start of the COVID pandemic disrupted real estate sales.
“In a nutshell, the real estate market — after years of
sometimes wild growth — appears to have stabilized,”
Regalado said at the press conference.
His office didn’t have detailed value statistics for condos
in the county’s 34 municipalities. But Regalado said some of
the worst-performing condo markets were in Miami Shores,
where values were down 6.6%, and in Coral Gables, with a 5%
drop in condo values.
Also on the declining list: Aventura and North Bay Village,
both down 4%; North Miami, down 3.4%; and South Miami, down
1.9%.
On the other side of the spectrum are markets where condo
values continue to grow. West Miami, a tiny housing market
with only 83 condominiums at the start of 2024, saw taxable
values for condominiums spike 18% at the start of 2025.
Condo values grew 12% in Opa-locka and 4% in Hialeah
Gardens, according to figures Regalado shared.
The value declines are an average of each market, and only
cover existing condos at the start of 2024. Condo units
built last year are not part of the analysis, Regalado said.
Regalado’s discouraging news for condo sellers — and
encouraging figures for would-be buyers — reflect other
signs of softness for the real estate market overall.
Miami and Tampa were the only metro areas to show slight
home value declines in the last 20-city nationwide report
from the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller Index, which tracks
prices of single-family houses.
Sales of condos and townhomes were down 21% in April in
Miami-Dade, according to the latest report from the Miami
Association of Realtors. The median sales price of $445,000
was barely changed from a year ago — up just $1,000. Sales
of single-family homes were down 11%, and prices were up 4%,
to $680,000.
