Miami-Dade Home Sales Rise for Seventh Consecutive Month: What March 2026 Data Means for Buyers
Miami-Dade total home sales rose 6.6% year-over-year in March 2026, the seventh consecutive monthly gain, per the MIAMI Association of Realtors. Single-family transactions climbed 10.6% and properties above $5 million surged 27%. Median days on market fell to 42 days from 61, signaling a market where prepared buyers still have an edge but hesitation carries a measurable cost.
On April 17, 2026, Miami Realtors released March sales data confirming what I have told clients for months: this market has real, sustained momentum. Total closed sales hit 2,134, up from 2,002 a year ago. Single-family homes led with a 10.6% gain. Properties above $5 million climbed 27%. If you are weighing a Miami purchase, this data matters more than rate headlines. I cover the full pre-construction investment framework in my Miami pre-construction buyer guide for 2026, and below I break down exactly what March means for buyers across Brickell, Edgewater, Sunny Isles, and Miami-Dade.
Seven Months of Growth: Reading the March 2026 Numbers
Seven consecutive months of year-over-year gains is not noise. According to Miami Realtors, total Miami-Dade home sales increased 6.6% year-over-year in March 2026, from 2,002 to 2,134 closed transactions. Single-family homes led with 1,063 sales, a 10.6% gain over March 2025. Existing condos posted 1,071 sales, up 2.9% year-over-year. The data I detailed in the Q1 2026 Miami market report pointed toward this trajectory. March confirms it.
Context matters here. Mortgage rates remain near 6.23% on 30-year fixed loans as of late April 2026, per Freddie Mac, well above 2021 lows. Buyers are not returning to the market because rates collapsed. They have concluded that waiting costs more than acting. According to The Real Deal, coastal Miami inventory fell in Q1 2026, the first significant drop since 2023, which removes pricing room for buyers who delay decisions.
Median days on market fell to 42 days in March 2026, down from 61 days a year earlier. That 31% compression tells you buyers are moving faster across all price tiers. The mid-range condo segment ($300,000 to $600,000) surged 7.1% year-over-year, from 449 to 481 sales. Understanding the true cost of owning a Miami luxury condo becomes essential when the market accelerates like this.
The Luxury Tier Is Outperforming
The headline numbers are strong. The luxury data is where the story gets more specific.
According to Miami Realtors March 2026 data, released April 17, 2026, here is how the premium segments performed year-over-year:
- $5 million and above: +27% year-over-year (all property types)
- Single-family homes $1M+: +19.83% (from 232 to 278 closed sales)
- Condos $1M+: +9.77% (from 174 to 191 closed sales)
- Single-family homes $600K to $1M: +8.4% year-over-year
- Cash transactions: approximately 42% of all March 2026 closed sales
The cash transaction share is the most telling number. Buyers who pay cash are rate-insensitive. They are purchasing on value, yield potential, and currency diversification grounds. That is why the luxury tier outperforms when financing conditions are challenging. The buyers driving $5M+ sales in Brickell and Sunny Isles Beach are not waiting for a rate cut. They are acting because they see the supply position and understand that global capital continues flowing to Miami regardless of the Fed's pace.
In Brickell, new product from Cipriani Residences is commanding $1,400 to $1,800 per square foot. In Edgewater, EDITION Residences and Aria Reserve continue steady absorption at $975 to $1,050 per square foot. In Sunny Isles Beach, ultra-luxury oceanfront projects are holding above $2,000 per square foot. All three segments posted gains in March 2026.
Pre-Construction vs Resale: Where the Data Points in 2026
The March 2026 sales data reveals a clear split. Resale condos in older buildings (pre-2000) face SB 4D reserve obligations with average special assessments of $28,000 to $75,000 per unit, per Florida DBPR data. New construction starts with fully funded reserves and no deferred maintenance liability. That difference is now showing in pricing and absorption rates across Miami-Dade.
Numbers cut through narrative. Here is how pre-construction compares to resale across key Miami neighborhoods as of April 2026:
| Metric | Pre-Construction (New) | Resale Pre-2000 Condo | Resale Post-2010 Condo |
|---|---|---|---|
| SB 4D reserve liability | None (fully funded from launch) | $28K-$75K avg assessment | Low to moderate |
| Price/sq ft (Brickell) | $1,400-$1,800 (branded new) | $550-$750 | $750-$1,100 |
| Price/sq ft (Edgewater) | $975-$1,050 | $400-$600 | $650-$900 |
| Median days on market | Pre-sold before completion | 52-65 days (per Miami Realtors) | 38-48 days |
| Financing (foreign buyers) | Developer financing available | Foreign-national mortgage required | Foreign-national mortgage required |
| 5-year appreciation potential | High (price-lock advantage) | Suppressed (SB 4D overhang) | Moderate |
For buyers with a 3-to-5-year hold horizon, new pre-construction in Brickell and Edgewater offers better capital appreciation potential and avoids the SB 4D liability suppressing resale condo values. The deposit structure (typically 30 to 40% during construction) requires planning, but the price lock in a market posting seven straight months of gains is a meaningful advantage. Learn how to evaluate Miami condo SB 4D reserve compliance before committing to any resale unit.
What This Data Tells Buyers Right Now
Seven consecutive months of year-over-year gains in a market running at 6.23% mortgage rates tells you one thing clearly: Miami's housing demand is structural, not cyclical. This market is not propped up by cheap money. It is supported by population growth, constrained supply, and a buyer base that is largely cash-driven or equity-rich.
I have had the same conversation with clients at least 40 times in the past six months. They watch Miami prices, wait for a pullback, and ask when the market will soften. My answer is consistent: the indicators I track do not point to softening. Inventory fell in Q1 2026 for the first time since 2023. Days on market compressed 31% year-over-year. Luxury over $5 million jumped 27%. If a correction were building, those signals would look different.
What the March data confirms is that the two-tier condo market I cover throughout this site is solidifying. New construction holds firm or appreciates because it carries no SB 4D reserve liability and has stronger HOA governance from launch. Older resale condos from the 1970s through 1990s face structural headwinds from reserve assessments and insurance cost inflation. The pricing gap between these two categories is widening, and it will continue widening as more compliance deadlines hit under SB 4D schedules. I walk through this in detail in the complete SB 4D guide for Miami condo buyers.
For buyers who are ready to act, the pre-construction pipeline across Brickell, Edgewater, and Coconut Grove offers price locks in a seven-month uptrend. For buyers waiting for conditions that the data does not support, the same trend report is a clear signal: the people driving $5M+ Miami sales up 27% year-over-year are reading data and acting. They are not speculating on a rate cut.
"Seven straight months of year-over-year gains at 6.23% rates tells me everything. Miami demand is structural. The buyers pushing $5M-plus properties up 27% are reading data, not hype. I advise every client who is ready to stop waiting for a correction that the data does not support." Gerardo Gonzalez, Licensed Real Estate Agent at Compass
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Articles
- Q1 2026 Miami Pre-Construction Market Report
- Brickell vs Edgewater vs Sunny Isles: Where to Buy Pre-Construction in Miami 2026
- Florida Condo Reserve Law: What SB 4D Means for Miami Buyers
- Foreign Buyers Drive Miami Real Estate to Record Levels in 2026
Ready to act on this market data? I can help you identify the right property and negotiate the best terms across Brickell, Edgewater, Sunny Isles, and all of Miami-Dade.
Schedule a Consultation with Gerardo GonzalezRead the Complete Miami Pre-Construction Buyer Guide 2026 →
Data sources: MIAMI Association of Realtors March 2026 Market Statistics (released April 17, 2026); Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey (April 2026); Florida DBPR SB 4D compliance data; The Real Deal Miami coastal inventory report Q1 2026. Information compiled from sources deemed reliable but not guaranteed; readers should verify current terms with their own advisors.
Market data as of April 27, 2026. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice.