Island neighborhood · 15 min from Brickell · 33149

Key Biscayne

The island that is its own town, fifteen minutes from Brickell over a single causeway. Live inventory —for sale and for rent— across its oceanfront condos and its houses, how value reads, and the buying process for the foreign investor.

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33149ZIP code
one causewayaccess
~15 minto Brickell
the Atlanticfronting

Key Biscayne is the odd one out on the Miami map: a barrier island that is also a town with its own government, fifteen minutes from Brickell over the Rickenbacker Causeway. No ferry, no boat required —you drive across Biscayne Bay— yet on the far side you live on a low-density island, with beaches, two large parks and a public K-8 school, in ZIP code 33149. It is not a building: it is an entire enclave, where condominium towers on the Atlantic sit beside one- and two-story houses, each segment with a resale market of its own.

Key Biscayne incorporated as a Village in 1991 and has zoned ever since to protect what gives it value: low density, a walkable scale and a band of nature that fills half the key. To the south, Bill Baggs Cape Florida State Park with the Cape Florida lighthouse —built in 1825, the oldest standing structure in the county— and to the north, Crandon Park and its beaches. Between them, a town of families with its village green, its grocery and its school, closer to a New England town on the sand than to a Miami neighborhood.

For today's buyer what matters is not the postcard but the secondary market: which units owners are reselling in the oceanfront communities —from Ocean Club and Key Colony to Grand Bay and Casa del Mar—, which houses come up inland, at what price per square foot, and what the island offers for rent. This page orders that —live inventory for sale and for rent, how to read value, and the buying process— so you reach the offer with judgment.

What makes the island different

Key Biscayne's value is not just the address: it is being an island that works as a town of its own, one bridge from the city. Among what defines it:

The differentiator · Live MLS

Live building inventory

These are the units available for sale RIGHT NOW, filtered to the building on the MLS. The list updates on its own. Each card opens the full MLS detail with photos and data.

Inventory provided by the MLS through MIAMInmobiliario's IDX platform, with its notices and terms. If you see no units, there is currently nothing listed on the MLS for that filter: leave your details and we'll alert you the moment one comes up.

How the value reads: view, floor and line

In a one-of-a-kind building, two units of the same size can be worth very different amounts. Three variables explain almost the entire price difference:

The view

On Key Biscayne value splits first by product —a house does not trade like a condo— and then by the water. Among the condos, the line facing the Atlantic commands the premium; those facing the bay or the interior of the island trade below. Among the houses, it matters whether they front the bay with a dock or sit inland. Floor and line matter within each tower, but on this island what sets the number is the community and whether you have the ocean in front of you. Before comparing prices, you have to compare product and exposure.

The floor

Price per square foot rises with height: more light, less obstruction and, on the high floors, the best view. The value jump between the mid-rise and the upper floors is usually larger than the square footage suggests.

The line

Each line —the stack of units sharing a position on the floor plate— has its own terrace and exposure. Knowing which line you're looking at, and its resale equivalent, is the difference between paying market and overpaying. This is where an advisor who knows the building adds real value.

Want us to compare the available lines and floors against your objective?

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The resale thesis

Buying in resale, rather than preconstruction, is almost the only way on Key Biscayne: the island barely builds new. Low-density zoning and a barrier island already largely built out leave little ground, and what trades is the existing inventory. The scarcity is structural —no new towers, and half the key is protected parkland—: you compete for a thin stock of a place that cannot be replicated, fifteen minutes from Brickell.

The right question is not whether Key Biscayne is good —ZIP code 33149, the schools and the safety answer that on their own— but whether the specific unit or house is well bought: price per square foot against recent sales in its own community, ocean versus bay exposure, and the margin against what it would ask in rent. For the family dollarizing into a safe, walkable, well-schooled island that still connects to the city by land, a well-chosen unit combines scarcity, lifestyle and rental liquidity.

Key Biscayne is a one-of-a-kind island neighborhood on the Miami map; to compare it against the mainland waterfront, see how Coconut Grove trades, the neighbor on the mainland and all residential inventory for sale on the hub.

Buying process for the foreign buyer

You need no visa, residency or citizenship to buy in Miami. What's worth understanding before you make an offer:

Structure: in your name or through an LLC

In your personal name there is exposure to U.S. estate tax —an exemption of only US$60,000 for non-residents— which is why many foreign buyers acquire through a Florida LLC, sometimes with a holding company above. It is not always worth it: it depends on the amount, the use and your estate. Define it with your accountant before closing, and it helps to first understand buying in Miami as a foreigner.

Financing: the non-resident does qualify

You can buy all-cash or with a foreign national loan —typically 30%–40% down, a slightly higher rate and documentation your bank or accountant can assemble—. Many buy cash and weigh refinancing later.

FIRPTA: the withholding when the seller is foreign

In resale, many sellers are also foreign. FIRPTA requires the buyer to withhold a percentage of the price (typically 15%) toward the seller's tax. It costs you nothing as the buyer, but it affects closing and is a negotiating lever best handled with the closing agent.

Price trend and recent sales

Coming soon

We're integrating the price-per-square-foot trend and the building's recent closed sales straight from the MLS. In the meantime, the active inventory above already shows current pricing.

Frequently asked questions

Can you buy resale on Key Biscayne? Yes. The island barely builds new, so almost everything trades on the secondary market: owners reselling condos and houses, plus units for rent. Available inventory shows live above, filtered to the island's ZIP code, 33149.

How do you reach the island? By car. Unlike other Miami islands, no ferry or boat is needed: you cross the Rickenbacker Causeway, a single toll span over the bay, in about fifteen minutes from Brickell.

Can a foreigner buy? Yes — no visa or citizenship, all-cash or with non-resident financing, and often through a Florida LLC.

Is it good for a family or for renting? Key Biscayne is among the most sought-after areas for families: low density, beaches, parks and a K-8 school on the island. It also has a rental market of its own; the rental inventory above gives you a real reference of rents before you buy.

See all of Miami's inventory

This building is one piece of the map. The full Miami resale inventory —and the preconstruction projects— lives on the hub.

See the full inventory at miaminmobiliario.com →

Let's talk about Key Biscayne

We compare the available lines and floors against your objective, alert you to every new unit, and walk you through closing. Independent advisory, no obligation.

Trademark notice. This is an independent site operated by Carlos Balart, a licensed Florida real estate broker (MIAMInmobiliario). We are not affiliated with, authorized, sponsored or endorsed by the Village of Key Biscayne, by the owners associations of the island's communities (Ocean Club, Key Colony, Grand Bay, Casa del Mar or others), or by their developers. "Key Biscayne", "Ocean Club", "Key Colony", "Grand Bay", "Casa del Mar" and the other community names are trademarks of their respective owners and are used here solely for descriptive and reference purposes, to identify the island and the communities whose resale and rental units are marketed through the MLS. We use no logos or brand materials. This page is informational and does not replace specific legal, tax or financial advice. Equal Housing Opportunity. Imágenes del edificio: © Giuseppe Milo / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 3.0).