South Florida is a boomtown, and this time it isn’t gold, cheap land, or even a pandemic luring homebuyers—it’s the plethora of corporations moving in.
The national office vacancy rate hovers around 17.6%, which means there’s abundant office space sitting empty.
But the West Palm Beach-Boca Raton market is at a low 11.3%, with Miami coming in a close second at 12.8%, according to Miami Realtors.
The biggest office deal in West Palm Beach-Boca Raton is cloud-computing company ServiceNow’s leasing of a massive 200,000 square feet of space at 10 CityPlace. And at One Flagler, Wells Fargo took over 50,000 square feet.
In Miami, not all neighborhoods are created equal. The Brickell neighborhood—home to such corporations as Citadel, Microsoft, and Banco Santander (all at 830 Brickell)—boasts a mere 3.7% vacancy rate.
Thanks to mild weather, a strong pro-business environment, and major tax incentives such as a corporate tax rate of only 5.5% (by comparison, New Jersey‘s is 11.5%), and the elimination of sales tax on commercial rent, South Florida has lured dozens of high-profile companies to its shores.
Big office deals have included Amazon’s 50,000-square-foot lease and Peter Thiel‘s AI company Palantir’s headquarters, both in the Wynwood neighborhood, formerly known for being mostly a neighborhood of artists and galleries. Other companies that have clustered into the market include Apple, Uber, and Verizon.
And all these employees need a place to live.
Which neighborhoods are the hottest with corporate employees
“Miami’s office market and housing market are moving hand in hand right now,” Miltiadis Kastanis of Compass tells Realtor.com®, reporting the hottest neighborhoods as Brickell, Coconut Grove, Miami Beach, Downtown, Key Biscayne, Coral Gables, and Wynwood.
“Younger professionals tend to rent high-end apartments and condominiums close to work, while senior executives are often buying homes in areas that offer more privacy, larger lots, waterfront access, and top schools,” she says.
Chris Wands, founder of The Wands Team at Douglas Elliman, has been helping relocate major players from Boeing, Bank of America, and Amazon.
“They rent first while they get settled,” he tells Realtor.com.
But soon, the lure of Miami real estate wins them over and they invest in their own slice of Sunshine State paradise.
“A $5 million budget in Miami can still go very far compared with other big cities out of state, so buyers coming from those markets are recalibrating pretty quickly once they arrive,” says Wands.
Whether they go for a trendy high-rise or a gated, single-family home near the beach usually depends on their age and family situation, he adds.
“Younger employees usually want the sleek and amenity-driven condos near work, restaurants, and nightlife, so Brickell, Downtown, Edgewater tend to make sense,” says Wands. “They want convenience, parking, fitness, security, and the ability to plug into the city quickly.”
A new boutique residential development in the artsy area of Wynwood—across the street from Amazon’s offices—is meeting the demand of these younger corporate employees.
The Rider, an 80-unit building with cutting-edge amenities and a young, rock ‘n’ roll edge—the facade will sport giant photographs of music icons such as Bruce Springsteen, Mick Jagger,Bob Dylan, and Madonna—is already half sold out.
For families, Wands says they tend to prefer areas with proven schools, homes with more space and yard, and neighborhoods with a “residential feel.” So, he steers them to Coconut Grove, Coral Gables, Pinecrest, or Miami Beach.
Coconut Grove is more than family friendly—it has also attracted its fair share of billionaires, including Ken Griffin and Google co-founder Larry Page.
Wands says the bulk of buyers are looking at the $3 million to $7 million range, but founders and senior executives are able to stretch their budgets further.
Luckily for buyers, even the Miami-West Palm Beach metro residential market is softening, changed by -2.2% for a median list price of $499,000, according to the Realtor.com® May 2026 Monthly Housing Report. And its share of price-reduced listings is 15.3%—a bit less than last year but still pretty healthy.
And even at this level, buyers are excited to get what they consider a deal.
“South Florida still feels like value to many people relocating from New York, California, or Chicago,” says Wands.
Get real estate news in your inbox