Buyer's Guide · Luxury & Waterfront Real Estate

How to Buy a Luxury Home in South Florida

By Thomas Daly, Luxury Real Estate Advisor · Updated July 2026 · 10 minute read

Buying a luxury home in South Florida is a lifestyle pivot, a financial decision, and a homework problem, all at once. Get it right and it anchors family memories and portfolio strength for decades. This guide covers the neighborhoods I work in, the market data behind them, and how I represent buyers from the first call to the closing table.

The Short Answer

  • 49% of Palm Beach closings in June 2026 were cash. Cash buyers move fast on the right price and walk from stretched ones.
  • Median $2M+ homes close in about 45 days once a signed contract is in place.
  • The best opportunities sit in softer submarkets - Broward non-waterfront in the $1.2M-$2M band and select inland Boca product.
  • Waterfront homes need four diligence items a standard inspection skips: seawall, dock permits, elevation certificate, flood zone.
  • Off-market inventory is real here. Many recent buyer closings in Delray, Lighthouse Point, and Boca never touched the MLS.

Why South Florida attracts luxury buyers

Florida has no state income tax, which reshapes the math on a $3M-$10M purchase for anyone relocating from a high-tax state. Add homestead protection - shielding primary-residence equity and capping annual property tax increases through the Save Our Homes provision - and the case builds itself. Layer in 200+ days of boating weather, walkable downtowns, and waterfront access most of the country does not have. The result is a steady feeder pipeline from New York, New Jersey, Boston, Chicago, and Toronto, all asking the same question: which neighborhood fits my life, and what does the water actually cost me to own.

The neighborhood breakdown

I work six core submarkets across Palm Beach and Broward counties, each solving a different problem. Here is the honest read on where they land on price, water access, and vibe.

Delray Beach rewards buyers who want walkability with water

Tropic Isle delivers deepwater Intracoastal access on quiet finger canals, minutes from the inlet, and a short walk to Atlantic Avenue's restaurants and shops. It is where I point buyers who want the boat and downtown energy in the same zip code. Inventory is tight and trades quickly when priced right.

Boca Raton fits buyers who want country club structure

Royal Palm Yacht & Country Club and Boca Bay Colony are the two names buyers ask for by name. Both are gated, more formal than Delray, and come with golf, deepwater canals, and HOA-run privacy. Boca draws buyers who want an established, manicured community with a strong resale track record.

Highland Beach and Manalapan are for buyers who want to disappear

These are the most private oceanfront addresses I sell. Highland Beach is a slim barrier island strip with direct ocean and Intracoastal frontage and almost no through-traffic. Manalapan is smaller still and largely estate-scaled. Buyers here want a gate, a beach, and a view nobody else shares.

Lighthouse Point solves the no-bridge problem

For buyers with a real boat, bridge height is often the whole decision. Lighthouse Point's canals run to the Intracoastal with no fixed bridges to clear, which matters above 45 feet of vessel length. It is quieter and more residential than Fort Lauderdale, with genuinely deep water behind almost every home.

Fort Lauderdale offers the deepest luxury inventory

Las Olas Isles and Harbor Beach are the two submarkets I focus buyers on here. Las Olas Isles gives you finger-island deepwater canals minutes from the beach and downtown. Harbor Beach is gated, oceanfront-adjacent, and holds some of the largest waterfront lots in Broward County. Fort Lauderdale simply has more product at every price point.

Jupiter is the choice for buyers who want golf and water together

Admirals Cove combines a private marina, multiple golf courses, and a full country club inside one gate. Jupiter Island, just north, is one of the wealthiest zip codes in the country and trades almost entirely in estate-scale privacy. Jupiter draws Northeast buyers who want fairway and dock without leaving the community.

Luxury neighborhood comparison across Palm Beach and Broward counties, 2026 market data
Neighborhood Median Luxury $ Waterfront Access Vibe Best For
Delray Beach $2.4M Intracoastal, finger canals Walkable, social, downtown-adjacent Buyers who want the boat and Atlantic Ave in one zip code
Boca Raton $3.1M Deepwater canals, golf-course lakes Formal, gated, country club Buyers who want structure and strong resale history
Highland Beach / Manalapan $6.8M Direct ocean + Intracoastal Ultra-private, estate-scaled Buyers who want privacy above all else
Lighthouse Point $3.6M Deepwater, no fixed bridges Quiet, residential, boat-first Serious boaters with vessels over 45 feet
Fort Lauderdale $4.2M Finger-island canals, oceanfront Broad inventory, cosmopolitan Buyers who want the most product to choose from
Jupiter $5.5M Private marina, deepwater, ocean-adjacent Golf-and-water, estate privacy Buyers who want fairway and dock in one gate

Median figures are directional, blended across recent closings and active listings, and move with inventory month to month. The pattern holds regardless: water access, privacy, and walkable downtown proximity all carry a real premium, and submarkets combining two or three of those traits command the deepest buyer demand.

The Daly Group Real Estate Buyer's Advisor Guide - 18-page PDF playbook cover

Download the full Buyer's Guide (PDF)

The playbook I hand every buyer:

  • Full neighborhood comparison worksheet
  • Buyer's discovery worksheet - use before we meet
  • Waterfront inspection checklist
  • Total cost of ownership framework
  • Off-market sourcing playbook

Direct download appears here after submit and a backup copy lands in your inbox. Zero spam - Thomas responds to inquiries personally.

How I represent buyers

As of August 2024, buyers sign a Buyer Broker Agreement (BBA) before touring a home with an agent. It sounds bigger than it is. We start with a short, property-specific agreement covering just that day's showings - no long-term commitment. If we are a good fit after a few showings, we move to one broader agreement covering the full search, so you are not signing something new every weekend. Compensation is disclosed in writing before we tour a home. This is now standard practice nationwide, not a Daly Group preference.

Where I find the best homes

The right home is often not the one trending on Zillow. I work five channels: full MLS coverage with saved searches tuned to your criteria, active off-market outreach to owners before they list, pocket and coming-soon listings inside broker offices, a decade-deep broker network that hears about price drops early, and a referral circle of past clients and title/finance partners. For boat buyers, I track which streets and marinas fit which vessels, since bridge height rules out entire canals for larger yachts.

What to know about waterfront

Waterfront homes carry four diligence items a general inspection skips. Seawall and dock condition - age, cap material, tie-backs, any bulge or fracture - with repairs running $1,500-$3,500 per linear foot. Dock permits, since grandfathered lengths do not always survive a sale. An elevation certificate establishing flood zone (AE, VE, or X) and Base Flood Elevation, which drives insurance and lender requirements. And bridge height and water depth for your boat, since some canals rule out vessels over 45 feet. I hold a USCG Captain's license and walk every waterfront showing with these four items in mind.

About Thomas Daly

Thomas Daly is a luxury real estate advisor and yacht broker based in Delray Beach, Florida. He founded The Daly Group in 2017 to offer a single point of contact for South Florida clients whose lives cross land and sea. With over $100M closed across real estate and yachting, Thomas represents buyers and sellers of waterfront and luxury homes across Palm Beach and Broward counties.

  • FL Real Estate License SL3381369
  • FL Yacht Broker License #11793
  • USCG Licensed Captain
  • $100M+ closed across land and sea
  • Offices: Delray Beach + Pompano Beach
  • Rated 5.0 on Google

Frequently asked questions

How long does the buyer's journey take?

Cash deals typically close in 21-30 days. Financed deals run 30-45 days. Larger estates or complex condo diligence can stretch to 60-90 days.

Do I need to sign a Buyer Broker Agreement?

Yes, as of August 2024 this is standard nationally. I start with a short property-specific agreement, then move to a broader one once we are a good fit.

What percentage of Palm Beach buyers pay cash?

About 49% of Palm Beach closings in June 2026 were cash, which materially changes negotiation dynamics.

How is the buyer's agent paid?

Commission is disclosed in writing under the Buyer Broker Agreement before you tour a home. In a co-brokered sale, the seller's proceeds typically fund it at closing.

What's the difference between Delray, Boca, and Palm Beach for a luxury buyer?

Delray is walkable and social with Intracoastal access. Boca is more formal and country club driven. Highland Beach and Manalapan trade walkability for private oceanfront estates.

What inspections should I do on a waterfront home?

Beyond a general inspection and four-point/wind mitigation, add seawall and dock condition, dock permit confirmation, an elevation certificate, and a bridge height check for your boat.

Can I see off-market listings?

Yes. Many recent buyer closings in Delray, Lighthouse Point, and Boca never hit the MLS, sourced through direct owner outreach and my broker network.

How do I plan for hurricane and flood insurance?

Quote wind, flood, and umbrella coverage early. South Florida is Citizens-heavy, and waterfront premiums can exceed $30,000 a year depending on flood zone and construction.

Also from The Daly Group

Buying a home with a dock? The boat is the next decision.

The Daly Group is dual-licensed for real estate and yachts. If you're eyeing a boat to match the slip, the Yacht Buyer's Advisor Guide walks through the same diligence-first process for vessels - sea trial, survey, and closing, handled by the same team.

Read the Yacht Buyer's Guide →