South Florida gets lumped together in most national investment headlines as if it's one market. It isn't. Palm Beach, Broward, and Miami-Dade each have a distinct investment profile right now — different price points, different cap rate ranges, different risk profiles, and different emerging neighborhoods. Here's how I break it down.
Why South Florida Still Belongs in Every Investor's Conversation
Zero Florida state income tax. Every dollar of rental income stays more whole here than in most states.
Landlord-friendly laws, no rent control. Florida's property tax rate runs 0.8% compared to the 0.99% national average. There's no state rent control, and eviction processes are more landlord-favorable than New York, California, or Illinois.
Migration-driven demand. South Florida added significant population in recent years, and the trend continues with high-net-worth individuals and financial firms relocating from New York and California — particularly to Miami-Dade and Palm Beach.
Strong rental yield growth: Miami-Dade rental yields grew 34.1% from 2022–2023 base levels. Broward grew 32.4%. Palm Beach grew 29.5% — all among the strongest yield growth for counties with 1M+ population in the U.S.
Palm Beach County: The Appreciation King
If you're investing for long-term appreciation, Palm Beach County has the clearest track record. Single-family home prices in Palm Beach County rose 116.9% from May 2015 to May 2025 — from $295,000 to $640,000. Closed sales jumped 23% year-over-year in December 2025, showing real demand from buyers even in a high-rate environment.
West Palm Beach became the first U.S. market to fully recover to pre-pandemic office utilization levels, hitting 103% of baseline. County-wide office occupancy sits at 87.5%, with nearly 1.6 million square feet of office space currently in development. That's professional-class jobs, and those workers need housing.
For investors: 2–4% residential appreciation is the 2026 forecast, with stronger performance in luxury areas like Palm Beach, Boca Raton, and Delray Beach. Emerging markets worth targeting: Boynton Beach (waterfront parks, marina district, growing investor interest), Loxahatchee/West Lake Worth (affordable with growth potential), and West Palm Beach proper (consistent appreciation, strong rental demand).
Broward County: The Value Play in a Correcting Market
Broward is the middle-ground county — more affordable than Palm Beach, more accessible than Miami-Dade's complexity — and it's currently showing the most obvious entry opportunities for investors who know where to look.
The Broward County median home price hit $445,000 in January 2026, down 3.3% year-over-year. Inventory is sitting at approximately 9.84 months of supply — close to the highest level since the post-2007 crash. That's buyer leverage, and it's where investors with patience can negotiate real discounts.
Cap rates in South Florida multifamily currently run approximately 5.4–5.5% overall, with individual strong deals — particularly duplexes in specific neighborhoods — hitting 6.0–6.2%.
Emerging investment neighborhoods in Broward:
- Tamarac: Median listing price around $251,300, 14% population growth since the early 2010s, strong rental demand from working families who can't afford to buy.
- Lauderhill: Median listing price approximately $165,000; active Community Redevelopment Agency investment along the SR-7 corridor.
- Margate: Commercial redevelopment play — strip malls being repositioned as medical and wellness hubs, which tends to stabilize and lift adjacent residential prices over a 3–7 year horizon.
Rising insurance costs are the primary risk factor in Broward: annual premiums often running $5,000–$8,000 for standard homeowner properties, which eats directly into cash flow. Run insurance quotes before you run cap rate calculations.
Miami-Dade County: High Yield, Higher Complexity
Miami-Dade has the highest rental yields but also the most moving pieces for investors to navigate. Miami median rent sits around $3,000/month with a vacancy rate of 7.8%. Condo prices fell below $400,000 in November 2025 for the first time in three years, and condo inventory hit 13.2 months of supply — meaningful buyer leverage if you're willing to do the due diligence work.
Miami-Dade also has the most aggressive STR enforcement in South Florida. The county established a dedicated STR enforcement unit in 2023 with active data-sharing with Airbnb and VRBO. Miami Beach specifically bans rentals under 6 months in most residential areas, with fines up to $20,000 per violation.
For long-term rental investors in Miami-Dade: the structural affordability gap creates a durable renter class. Neighborhoods like Little Havana adjacent, Hialeah, and established working-class areas near major employment centers have strong long-term tenant demand.
The Numbers Side-by-Side
| Factor | Palm Beach | Broward | Miami-Dade |
|---|---|---|---|
| Median SFH price | ~$640,000 | ~$445,000–$600,000 | ~$400,000–$550,000 |
| Rental yield growth (2022–23) | +29.5% | +32.4% | +34.1% |
| Current inventory | 5–6 months (SFH) | ~9.84 months | 13.2 months (condos) |
| Best for | Appreciation | Value entry | High yield |
| Primary risk | Entry price | Correction exposure | STR regulation, insurance |
Which County Fits Your Strategy?
Buy-and-hold for appreciation: Palm Beach County, specifically West Palm Beach, Boynton Beach, and Delray Beach. The commercial expansion is creating a professional tenant base and long-term price support.
Cash flow focus: Emerging Broward neighborhoods — Tamarac and Lauderhill specifically — offer the most accessible entry prices relative to rental demand. Run the insurance number carefully.
High-yield with complexity tolerance: Miami-Dade long-term rentals in workforce housing submarkets. Condo opportunities with 13 months of inventory but requires thorough due diligence on reserve funding and Fannie/Freddie eligibility.
Short-term rental (STR): Fort Lauderdale in Broward is the most accessible major STR market in South Florida. Miami Beach is essentially off-limits for new investors.
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