Market Intelligence

What the market
is telling us.

Unfiltered data. Honest analysis. Quarterly reports on every major Miami luxury corridor — so you make decisions based on facts, not hype.

01 Featured Reports

Latest market
intelligence.

Featured · April 2026
Brickell: It's About the Building, Not the Address
Some buildings outperform by 30%. Others quietly stagnate. Here's the data.
BrickellQ1 20267 min
Coconut Grove
Expensive and Only Getting More Expensive
Supply is structurally capped. The data doesn't support waiting for a dip.
HomesMarch 20265 min
South of Fifth
True Scarcity. Real Value Compression.
Oceanfront inventory at a 5-year low. What that means for pricing in 2026.
CondosApril 20265 min
Coral Gables
The Long Game: Why Gables Always Delivers
A decade of data confirms Miami's most reliable long-term hold.
EstatesFeb 20266 min
Sunny Isles
International Demand Is Quietly Pushing Prices
Branded residences attracting global buyers. Rental yield remains the story.
CondosMarch 20264 min
Key Biscayne
Island Scarcity: Why Buyers Here Don't Leave
Limited inventory and direct ocean access create a market that consolidates.
WaterfrontJan 20265 min
02 Market Pulse · April 2026

The numbers,
no spin.

Brickell
$2,400/sqft
↑ 8.2% YoY
Inventory tight. New supply absorbed within 60 days. Top performers: 1000 Brickell, SLS Brickell.
Coconut Grove
$1,850/sqft
↑ 18.4% YoY
Highest appreciation in Miami. DOM at 34 days. Structural scarcity driving premium.
South of Fifth
$3,100/sqft
↑ 5.7% YoY
Oceanfront inventory at 5-year lows. Price floor holding above $5M. Stable UHNW demand.
Bal Harbour
$3,400/sqft
↓ 2.1% YoY
Pricing correction creating entry opportunity. Rivage pre-construction resetting benchmark.
Coral Gables
$1,680/sqft
↑ 6.1% YoY
Gated communities outperforming. School district premium holding strong.
Key Biscayne
$2,450/sqft
↑ 9.3% YoY
Island scarcity driving consistent appreciation. DOM at 38 days — fastest in 3 years.

Data from MLS & public records · April 2026 · Indicative only

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Trump Administration Signals Limits on Institutional Buyers of Single-Family Homes: What It Means for the Market

The U.S. housing market has become increasingly polarized over the last decade. First-time buyers and owner-occupants are competing not only with each other, but also with well-capitalized institutional investors deploying billions into single-family homes (SFHs). Against this backdrop, the Donald Trump administration has signaled support for limiting or banning large institutional players from purchasing additional single-family homes, positioning the policy as a way to restore affordability and homeownership access.

Whether this ultimately becomes law or not, the idea itself is significant—and worth unpacking for anyone involved in real estate.


What’s Being Proposed (At a High Level)

The stated position is straightforward: large institutions—private equity firms, hedge funds, and Wall Street–backed landlords—should not be allowed to continue accumulating single-family homes, particularly existing homes that would otherwise be purchased by families.

The framing is clear:

  • Homes are meant to be lived in, not endlessly warehoused as financial assets

  • Institutional capital should be directed elsewhere (multifamily, commercial, development), not entry-level neighborhoods

  • Reducing institutional demand could improve access for everyday buyers

Details matter here—and they’re still thin. The real impact would depend on how “large institution” is defined, what exemptions exist, and whether new construction or build-to-rent projects are included.


The Case For Restricting Institutional SFH Ownership

1. Reduced competition for first-time and local buyers

Large funds often buy with cash, waive contingencies, and move quickly—advantages that typical households simply don’t have. Restricting these buyers could level the playing field in entry-level and workforce housing markets.

2. Potential moderation of prices in targeted neighborhoods

While institutions don’t dominate the entire housing market, they are heavily concentrated in certain metros and price ranges. Removing them from those segments could cool bidding wars and reduce price pressure at the margin.

3. Reinforcing the social role of housing

From a policy and messaging standpoint, this approach emphasizes housing as shelter first, investment second. For many voters and buyers, that distinction matters—especially after years of affordability strain.


The Case Against It (and the Real-World Tradeoffs)

1. Institutions are not the main driver of high prices

Nationally, large institutional owners control only a small percentage of single-family homes. Critics argue that banning them may sound impactful but won’t materially fix affordability in most markets.

2. The real problem is housing supply

Most economists agree: the U.S. simply does not build enough housing. If supply remains constrained, prices can stay elevated even if one buyer class exits. Smaller investors, high-income households, or foreign buyers may simply fill the gap.

3. Possible reduction in rental inventory

Institutional capital plays a major role in single-family rentals and build-to-rent developments. Restricting that capital could slow new construction, reduce rental supply, or push rents higher in some areas.

4. Enforcement and loopholes will determine effectiveness

Any restriction will live or die by its definitions:

  • How many homes qualify as “too many”?

  • Does it apply to LLCs, partnerships, and affiliates?

  • Are new builds treated differently from existing homes?

Poorly written rules could simply push ownership into smaller entities without changing outcomes on the ground.


What This Means for Investors and Buyers

For owner-occupants, this proposal is directionally positive—especially in markets where institutional buyers are active.

For small and mid-sized investors, the impact may be neutral or even positive. Many policies aimed at “big institutions” still allow room for individual investors, local operators, and value-add buyers.

For large funds, the signal is clear: political risk around single-family rentals is rising, and future capital may shift toward multifamily, development, or alternative real-estate strategies.


Bottom Line

The Trump administration’s stance reflects a growing bipartisan discomfort with the financialization of single-family housing. Restricting large institutional buyers may help at the margins, particularly in targeted neighborhoods—but it is not a silver bullet.

Until the U.S. meaningfully increases housing supply, affordability challenges will persist. Still, this policy debate matters, because it shapes where capital flows, who competes for homes, and how housing is defined in the American economy.

For buyers, investors, and operators alike, this is a space worth watching closely.


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