Miami runs on its own energy — a sun-soaked mix of Latin American culture, global money, and waterfront ambition that draws buyers from every corner of the world. From the art-deco streets of South Beach to the high-rises of Brickell and the murals of Wynwood, this city doesn’t just sell homes. It sells a life.
Miami’s April data signals a real shift in leverage. Homes sat on the market longer, list prices slipped, and sellers were pricing more carefully from the start. If you’re buying now, you have room to negotiate. If you’re selling, right-pricing isn’t optional — it’s the strategy.
Inventory: Fewer Homes to Choose From
Your choices as a buyer narrowed last month — but the homes that remained weren’t moving fast. Active listings fell 7.0% year-over-year to 7,364, even as national inventory grew 4.6%. New listings dropped too, down 9.9% from a year ago while the national count actually ticked up. Sellers held back — but buyers weren’t rushing to absorb what was available either.
Prices: Sellers Are Asking for Less
If you’re buying in Miami, sellers are coming down — and that’s a meaningful shift for one of the priciest markets in the country. The median list price fell 3.8% year-over-year to $625,000, more than double the national drop of 1.4%. About 12.6% of listings carried a price cut in April, and the broader trend suggests sellers are pricing more carefully upfront rather than listing high and slashing later. For buyers, that discipline still leaves room to negotiate.
Time on Market: Miami Homes Sat Far Longer Than the National Average
Patience is paying off for buyers right now. Miami homes sat on the market for a median of 78 days in April — a full 26 days longer than the national median of 52. That pace slowed 10.6% year-over-year, nearly four times the national rate of increase. If a home has been listed for a month or more, you have real leverage.
Miami still commands a serious premium — but April’s data made clear that buyers hold more cards than they have in years. Homes sat for 78 days on average, list prices dropped 3.8%, and sellers priced more strategically from day one. For buyers shopping now, extended time-on-market means negotiating power is real, especially on older listings. For sellers, the market still rewards Miami’s global appeal — but only if your price, presentation, and timeline are grounded in today’s reality, not last year’s.
This market report has been generated with AI tools, with input from Realtor.com Economic Data Manager Sabrina Speianu
Use the Realtor.com housing data portal to get more market data.
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