Residential · Condominiums · Miami, Florida

Miami Condominiums for Sale

New construction versus resale — and the deposit schedule, escrow, approval and closing steps that decide which path fits your timeline and capital. The guide to the process, not just the listing.

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Among Miami condominiums for sale the first real fork is not which building — it is new construction versus resale. The two are different transactions, with different capital schedules, different timelines and different risks, and choosing the wrong one for your situation costs more than choosing the wrong floor.

New construction vs resale: which transaction fits you

A resale closes in weeks: you see the actual unit, you get an existing association with a track record, and you can finance it conventionally. New construction (preconstruction) is a multi-year commitment: you buy from plans, your capital goes in over the construction period, and you take delivery when the tower is complete. Preconstruction can offer the newest product and a developer's payment plan; resale offers certainty and speed. Your timeline, your liquidity and your appetite for delivery risk should decide the path — not the render.

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The preconstruction deposit schedule and escrow

Preconstruction in Miami runs on a developer deposit schedule, not a single down payment. A typical structure for international buyers is roughly 20% at contract, another tranche at groundbreaking, further construction draws (often reaching 40%–50% before completion), and the balance at closing. Florida law requires the first deposits to sit in escrow, but developers can use later deposits for construction, which is why the developer's track record matters as much as the floor plan. Read exactly what is protected and what is released, and on what trigger.

Association approval and the closing process

Whether new or resale, a Miami condominium purchase passes through the association. Most buildings require a condo application and approval before closing — background and financial review, an interview in some cases, and an application fee — and the association holds a right of first refusal in many declarations. Build that timeline into your contract. On a resale you will also order a title search, a lien and estoppel letter from the association, and a survey; on a new unit you receive the developer's documents and a final walkthrough. None of it is hard, but each step has a date attached, and missing one delays the close.

Closing costs, financing and assignment

Budget beyond the price. Buyer closing costs in Miami typically run about 2%–5% — title, documentary stamps and intangible tax on any mortgage, recording, and on new construction often developer fees and a contribution to working capital. Non-residents can finance with a foreign national loan (usually 30%–40% down) or pay cash. If your plan is to assign (flip) a preconstruction contract before closing, confirm the developer permits it and on what terms — many restrict or charge for assignment, and that single clause can make or break a short-hold strategy.

Miami condominiums for sale — Brickell high-rise condo towers with pool deck
New-construction condominium tower in Edgewater — preconstruction runs on a developer deposit schedule, not a single down payment.

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Frequently asked questions

New construction or resale — which is better? Different transactions: resale closes in weeks with certainty; preconstruction is a multi-year commitment with a payment plan and the newest product. Your timeline and liquidity decide.

What is the preconstruction deposit schedule? Typically about 20% at contract, more at groundbreaking, construction draws reaching 40%–50%, and the balance at closing — staged over the build, not one down payment.

What are closing costs on a Miami condominium? Typically about 2%–5% for the buyer — title, documentary stamps and intangible tax on a mortgage, recording, and on new construction often developer and working-capital fees.

Can I assign or flip a preconstruction contract? Only if the developer permits it — many restrict or charge for assignment; confirm the clause and its terms before you sign, since it governs any short-hold strategy.

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New versus resale, the deposit schedule, escrow, approval and the true closing cost — step by step. Independent advisory, no obligation, with real numbers.

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Live condominiums and properties for sale are at miaminmobiliario.com/en/properties.

Operated by Carlos Balart, an independent real estate broker licensed in Florida (MIAMInmobiliario). This guide is informational and does not replace specific legal, tax or financial advice. Equal Housing Opportunity. Photo: Brickell Miami highrise condominium pool deck aerial view — © RealEstateImages / Wikimedia Commons (CC0).