Data source: MLS export · Surfside · June 2026 · Condos and single-family

June 2026 Snapshot

Two condos closed in Surfside in June — one at The Surf Club for $6,200,000 and one at Surfside Towers for $850,000 — producing a median of $3,525,000 and $1,573 per square foot. Those numbers lean heavily on the single Surf Club closing, so they reflect what happened to trade at the top of the market, not what the neighborhood looks like as a whole.

The more telling number is on the supply side: 86 condos are active at a median ask of $994,500, and at June's absorption pace that inventory represents roughly 43 months of supply — one of the most oversupplied condo markets in the area. Buildings carrying the heaviest concentration of active listings — The Waverly, Solimar, Azure — have buyers who can wait, compare, and negotiate without urgency. The single-family side was far more active: six homes closed at a median of $3,328,712 and 77 days on market, against 19 active listings and three that were cancelled or withdrawn.

For a building-level breakdown and buyer/seller guidance, see the Surfside Market Report.

Buyers evaluating Surfside condos typically compare this market against Bay Harbor Islands for price positioning and against Bal Harbour for oceanfront access. Understanding how those comparisons work at the building level is often the most useful starting point for making a well-informed decision.

Local Context

Surfside is a small municipality of approximately one square mile situated along Collins Avenue between 88th and 96th Streets in Miami-Dade County. The market is defined almost entirely by proximity to the ocean — nearly every building in Surfside is either oceanfront or within a short walk of the beach. This concentration of ocean-adjacent inventory creates a relatively consistent buyer profile but significant pricing variation depending on building age, condition, and structural certification status.

Post-Champlain Towers legislation — Florida SB 4-D, enacted in 2022 — has materially changed how buyers and lenders evaluate older buildings in Surfside. Milestone inspection requirements and Structural Integrity Reserve Study compliance are now active due diligence factors that affect both pricing and financing options across the market.

Practical Observations

The most consistent pattern in the Surfside condo market is the divergence between oceanfront and non-oceanfront buildings at the same price point. Two units at similar asking prices can represent very different buyer propositions depending on building age, floor, direct ocean access, and reserve funding status. Buyers who focus on list price alone often encounter material differences during due diligence that are not reflected in the initial comparison.

Buildings completed post-2015 tend to command a structural premium over comparable older inventory. Reserve funding adequacy has become a buyer concern that increasingly influences offers — a shift that was less visible before 2022 and now shapes how the market absorbs older buildings across the price spectrum.

Buyer or Resident Perspective

Buyers in Surfside are predominantly motivated by ocean access. The most consistent decision factor — more than building amenities or floor plan size — is whether a unit has a direct ocean view or convenient beach access. Buyers who are flexible on these factors typically find more competitive pricing in the non-oceanfront segment, where buildings closer to Collins Avenue offer proximity to the beach without the oceanfront premium.

International buyers from Latin America and Europe represent a consistent segment of the Surfside market. Seasonal residents from the Northeast United States also form a significant portion of the buyer pool, particularly in buildings that permit short-term rentals. Rental restriction policies vary significantly between buildings and are often a deciding factor for investor buyers comparing Surfside with Bay Harbor Islands or Bal Harbour.

Market Implications

Pricing in Surfside is increasingly building-specific. Two comparable listings a block apart can justify different prices depending on structural certification status, reserve funding adequacy, and view. For buyers comparing Surfside with Bay Harbor Islands, the primary trade-off is oceanfront access versus price point and school proximity. For buyers comparing Surfside with Bal Harbour, the distinction is building scale, amenity level, and address positioning.

Understanding how individual buildings perform in this market — including their reserve funding status and structural compliance history — is often more useful than comparing neighborhood-level statistics. For a detailed comparison of the two markets, see the Surfside vs Bay Harbor Islands page.