South Florida Emerges As Epicenter Of Housing Weakness

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South Florida Emerges As Epicenter Of Housing Weakness

Rising inventory and softening demand — key indicators of a broader housing slowdown — suggest that South Florida’s pandemic-fueled real estate boom continues to lose steam.

South Florida is the epicenter of housing market weakness in the United States,” said Redfin analyst Chen Zhao, as quoted by Bloomberg.

Zhao asked, „The question for the rest of the country is, will this spread? Florida is uniquely bad right now.”

Redfin data shows that April home-purchase contracts in Miami, West Palm Beach, and Fort Lauderdale fell sharply from a year earlier — the steepest declines among the 50 largest U.S. metro areas. Pending sales dropped 23% in Miami, 19% in Fort Lauderdale, and 14% in West Palm Beach. Homes in all three markets also recorded the longest listing times nationwide.

Source: Bloomberg

Zhao warned, „I think you’re seeing a really long, slow deflation of that bubble” in the South Florida market, which just a few years ago boomed with low interest rates and inbound migration trends from blue states.

In March, Florida’s median home sale price decreased 1.7% from the same time last year. For the three metro areas in April, 5% of sales closed below the listing prices as rising inventory pressured prices lower.

Source: Bloomberg

As we’ve previously reported in our coverage of Florida’s housing downturn:

  • Florida Housing Downturn „Keeps Getting More Intense By The Day”

  • Miami Housing Market Hit By „Breathtaking” Collapse In Demand

Additional color on the downturn from Nick Gerli, CEO and Founder of real estate analytics firm Reventure Consulting:

Florida investor bought for $550k in 2022.

Just sold it for $391k.

28% loss in 3 years.

Market turning down fast. pic.twitter.com/PJBtLPqfbn

— Nick Gerli (@nickgerli1) May 30, 2025

8) Domestic migration to Florida has plummeted by 80% from its peak in 2022.

Back then, a net 314k people moved into the state.

By 2024, it was down to 64k.

The 5th lowest domestic migration level in Florida going back three+ decades. pic.twitter.com/dhxxHhrR7C

— Nick Gerli (@nickgerli1) May 30, 2025

What could possibly go wrong?

The question for the Sun Belt states is whether this downturn will spread.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 06/03/2025 – 20:30

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