As legal challenges mount at the Amrit
Ocean Resort on Singer Island, Riviera Beach’s police
department is now investigating complaints from buyers that
they were misled about their units’ eligibility for
Florida’s homestead property tax exemption.
Owners say they were led to believe they were buying condo
units at Amrit Ocean, which is classified as a hotel and
therefore not eligible for the homestead exemption, the Palm
Beach Post reported. Amrit, at 3100 Ocean Drive on Singer
Island in Riviera Beach, was completed in 2022 by an
affiliate of Dilip Barot’s Creative Choice Group 15 years
after the project was initially conceived.
Residents also said they are not only missing out on
promised tax benefits, but also struggling to address issues
at an allegedly shoddily built complex.
“Every room in the Amrit is a hotel room,” Riviera Beach
City Council member Glen Spiritis told the Post. “It is not
a condominium. It was approved as a hotel. It was built as a
hotel.”
The oceanfront complex includes two towers. A 2021 Florida
YIMBY article describes the unit split in the building as
“182 ultra-luxury residences” and “155 resort units,” but
the condominium declaration filed with Palm Beach County
states the units are not classified as permanent residences.
Amrit owners, many of whom paid $1 million or more for their
units, are saying they were misled not just about the
condominium status of the units they were buying, but also
about the luxury amenities and management of the complex,
the Post reported.
“I was promised homestead. I was promised a lifestyle where
I didn’t have to worry about septic, sewage. I wouldn’t have
to worry about fire alarms. I came here with this
unbelievable fantasy that it was an incredible condo,” Amrit
resident Chris Hickey told the publication.
Residents said nothing about the purchasing process
indicated they were buying into a hotel property.
“We can all read our documents. There was nothing in these
documents that implied we were buying a hotel suite. This is
wrong, and this should be righted by our government,” Amrit
resident David Frank said at a town hall with Riviera Beach
officials. “We have been defrauded. Three hundred of us have
been defrauded.”
Spiritis said the city is exploring a zoning change for the
property to make owners eligible for the homestead
exemption.
But Amrit is still facing a mounting stack of legal
challenges. At least seven lawsuits have been filed against
the property and affiliates of the developer, WFLX reports.
One suit cites inoperable elevators, water intrusion and
cracking ceilings, according to the outlet. Another involves
two contractors alleging they were not paid more than
$100,000 worth of work.
“We are doing an investigation, and we want to get to the
bottom of all of the issues,” Spiritis told the Post. “This
is horrible. This is not a good situation.”