Surfside · Oceanfront Town · Miami-Dade

Surfside
Miami

Surfside sits between Bal Harbour to the north and Miami Beach to the south — with its own town government, its own beach, and an ownership base that is almost entirely end-users. One square mile. Genuinely underpriced for what it delivers.

86
Active Condo Listings
43.0
Months of Supply · Condos
$995K
Median Active List · Condos

Surfside is oceanfront — that's where most buyers start. But buyers who arrive expecting a seasonal retreat or a quieter alternative to Bal Harbour usually find something different. It has become a full-time residential market, more active and community-driven than its size suggests, and the people who choose it tend to actually live there.

What matters early is understanding how the market separates. The Four Seasons Surf Club operates at a completely different level — with current listings starting in the high single digits and reaching into the $30M+ range — and attracts a very specific buyer profile. The rest of Surfside — established oceanfront buildings, most built before 2010 — operates with a much broader entry point and a different set of expectations.

Those are not comparable options. They're different decisions, with different buyer profiles, pricing logic, and how the property is actually used. Knowing which segment applies to your decision is the first thing to get right.

How to Think About This Market

Surfside works best for buyers who are looking for oceanfront living without the scale and formality of Bal Harbour. It's a smaller, more lived-in environment — and that's the point. The buyers who fit here are usually choosing it because of how it actually functions day-to-day, not because it was the only option in the price range.

The most important thing to understand before evaluating any specific property is which segment you're in. The Four Seasons Surf Club is its own market — different buyer profile, different pricing logic, different holding patterns. The established oceanfront buildings are a separate decision entirely. Treating them as comparable options at different price points leads to the wrong analysis. Once that distinction is clear, the right buildings become much easier to identify.

New Developments in
Surfside

New and recently delivered buildings currently selling in Surfside. Contact Tamara for current availability.

Delivered 2020 · Oceanfront

Arte Surfside

Surfside · Oceanfront

16 ultra-luxury residences by Antonio Citterio and Bodas Miani Anger. Half-floor and full-floor layouts. At 16 units, resale is rare — but when units trade here, they set the pricing ceiling for Surfside's ultra-luxury segment.

Units16
SizeHalf and Full Floor
Delivery2019

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New Development

Ocean House Surfside

Surfside · Oceanfront

Oceanfront new construction in Surfside. Contact Tamara for current inventory and availability.

Units25
Size2,093 – 6,279 sq ft
Delivery2027

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New Development

Surf Row Surfside

Surfside

New construction in Surfside. Contact Tamara for current inventory and availability.

Units24
Size888 – 2,004 sq ft
Delivery2027

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Established Luxury

Surf Club Four Seasons Residences

Surfside · Oceanfront

The primary ultra-luxury transaction address in Surfside. 2017 delivery. Five recent closings ranging from $9.8M to $44M. Sets the price ceiling for the market.

Units144
Size1,800 – 7,800 sq ft
Delivery2017

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New Development · Surfside

Seaway at The Surf Club

9149–9165 Collins Avenue · Surfside · Oceanfront

34 residences by Fort Partners — two towers at the northern end of the Surf Club campus. Design by Joseph Dirand. Residents access Four Seasons facilities directly. Contact Tamara for current availability.

Units34
Size1,200 – 8,000 sq ft
Delivered2024

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View All Surfside New Developments →

What makes Surfside
worth a closer look

Surfside is a one-square-mile oceanfront town that most Miami buyers overlook — which is precisely why value still exists here. The town borders Bal Harbour to the north and 87th Terrace to the south, with direct Atlantic Ocean frontage and Biscayne Bay on the west side. The housing stock is dominated by mid-century and newer oceanfront condos, with a handful of single-family homes on the bay side. Because Surfside attracts end-users rather than investors, you get a stable, community-oriented ownership base that tends to maintain buildings well and sell rationally. The price gap between Surfside and Bal Harbour is real — and historically, it narrows over time.

The buildings along Collins Avenue — from the original co-ops of the 1960s to the Four Seasons towers — face the Atlantic directly. Bay-side homes and newer single-family construction sit on the intracoastal side of the grid. What Surfside doesn't have is significant investor activity: the ownership profile here skews toward primary residents and long-term holders, which tends to produce buildings with better-maintained reserves and sellers who price more rationally than speculative markets allow. The flip side is that motivated sellers are rarer, and buildings with heavy active inventory at any given time often have specific building-level reasons for the concentration — worth investigating before assuming broad market softness.

Proximity to Bal Harbour is immediate — the Shops are roughly half a mile north on Collins. The Surfside town center along Harding Avenue has restaurants, a farmers market, and a walkable grid that is genuinely uncommon in Miami-Dade. The beach here is public and runs along the full Collins Avenue frontage, without hotel infrastructure on the Surfside portion of the shore. For buyers evaluating Surfside against Bay Harbor Islands, the distinction is oceanfront access versus intracoastal — two different living experiences at different price levels.

The Surfside Community Center sits directly on Collins Avenue, oceanfront. The pool complex has lap lanes, a plunge pool, a waterslide, a children's activity pool, and a Jacuzzi. More than 90 health and wellness classes run year-round — beach yoga, Aqua Zumba, Pilates. A short distance away on Bay Drive, the remodeled Surfside Park has a kids playground, basketball court, and football field. The town runs year-round family events and resident beach parties with live music and food — the kind of programming that makes Surfside feel like a real community.

On weekends, the Town of Surfside sponsors a farmers market on the beach at 96th Street and Collins Avenue — Saturday and Sunday, 9:30am to 3:30pm. Locally grown produce, farm fresh eggs, local honey, baked goods, artisanal soaps, handmade jewelry, coffee, pottery, pet treats, knife sharpening. Free beach yoga on Sunday mornings.

Buyers relocating from cities where this kind of community infrastructure costs extra — private clubs, paid programs, membership fees — are often surprised to find it included in Surfside simply by living here.

Surfside Miami oceanfront neighborhood

Quick Facts · Surfside

  • Incorporated town · own municipal government
  • 1 square mile · direct Atlantic Ocean frontage
  • Public beach · predominantly residential shoreline
  • Walkable town center · Harding Ave dining & market
  • 0.5 miles to Bal Harbour Shops
  • Primary condo stock: 1960s–2020 · SF homes: 1940s–2026
  • Schools: Ruth K. Broad Bay Harbor K-8 Center is the closest public K-8 option · Mater Beach Academy under 2 miles · Miami Country Day School 5–7 miles · Scheck Hillel Community School 6–7 miles

Surfside
by the numbers

June 2026 · MLS Data

Two condos closed in June — one at the Surf Club for $6.2M and one at Surfside Towers for $850K. The median of $3.525M between them tells you almost nothing: with the two sales sitting at opposite ends of the market, the median reflects what happened to trade, not where inventory is. The real signal is in the 86 active listings, where the median ask is $994,500. The Surf Club operates in its own world at roughly $2,500 per square foot; everything else trades well below it.

Eighty-six condos are currently active. At June's absorption pace, that inventory represents roughly 43 months of supply — among the most oversupplied condo markets in the area. Buildings with the heaviest concentration of active listings — The Waverly, Solimar, Azure — have buyers who can wait, compare, and negotiate without urgency.

Single-family is the more active side of Surfside: six closings in June at a median of $3.33M and 77 days on market, against 19 active listings and three that were canceled or withdrawn. The range was wide — an Altos Del Mar new-construction home at $8.75M down to a 1935 house on Harding Avenue at $1.275M. One data point worth flagging: a still-under-construction spec home at 700 88th Street closed at $8M after 433 days on market — a pre-sale that confirms patient buyers are present at the right price. For a full breakdown, see the Surfside Market Report.

Current Activity · June 2026

The fastest-moving condo in June was an established waterfront unit priced for its building: Surfside Towers — a 1970 building — closed in a single day at $850K. Speed in this market reflects pricing decisions, not building age. Even the Surf Club's $6.2M closing took only eight days when the number matched the building's own comps.

New construction produced no condo closings in June. Surf Row — a 2027 delivery at 8800 Collins Avenue — along with Arte Surfside, Ocean House, and Fendi Chateau Residences, all carried active inventory without a June sale. Buyers in the $1.4–$6 million range continue to choose established buildings over boutique pre-construction at these price points.

The Surf Club remains the ceiling for ultra-luxury condo volume — its single June closing at $6.2M, eight days on market, was the highest condo trade of the month. On the single-family side, the Altos Del Mar enclave did most of the work: new-construction homes at $8.75M and $5.15M alongside older Normandy-side houses clearing between $1.275M and $1.51M. 8875 Abbott Avenue, which had previously tested the market and pulled, finally closed in June at $1.32M after 74 days — a reminder that in Surfside the price that clears is usually the one anchored to recent comps, not the prior ask.

Free — Q1 2026

The Surfside
Market Report

A thin June for condos — just two closings, both at opposite ends of the market, which is exactly why the median misleads. Building-level breakdown across price tiers, velocity signals, and where buyers have leverage right now.

  • ✦ Every June closing analyzed — by building, price, and days on market
  • ✦ How to read the data without Surf Club skewing everything
  • ✦ Buildings with velocity vs. buildings with overhang
  • ✦ New construction asking prices vs. what's actually closing

Download the report

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Surfside?

Surfside is a market where the difference between a good deal and a bad one often comes down to which floor you're on, which direction the unit faces, and what the building's reserve study says. I know those details. Let's talk.