The Kol GroupSouth Florida Advisory

Market Report

South Florida New Construction Statistics (2026)

A source-inventory snapshot of South Florida luxury new construction coverage across Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach for 2026 buyer research.

The Kol Group's Project Atlas source inventory currently tracks 164 South Florida new-construction records across Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach. The strongest coverage concentration is Miami-Dade, with Miami alone accounting for 66 source records in the reviewed inventory. These figures describe Project Atlas coverage, not the total universe of every development in the market.

  • South Florida New Construction
  • 2026 Project Atlas source-inventory snapshot
Published
June 4, 2026
Written by
Gal Kol
Real Estate Agent & Co-Founder
Reviewed by
Adi Kol
Real Estate Agent & Co-Founder

Key Findings

  • Project Atlas currently tracks 164 South Florida new-construction source records: 120 in Miami-Dade, 25 in Broward, and 19 in Palm Beach.
  • Miami is the largest city concentration in the reviewed inventory with 66 source records, followed by Miami Beach with 17, West Palm Beach with 14, and Fort Lauderdale with 11.
  • Readiness signals are uneven: 121 records include rental-policy notes, 40 include starting-price text, 77 include broker-tool or source-material links, and 49 are marked as having information gathered.

Methodology

This statistics page summarizes the local Project Atlas source inventory used for new-construction research and publication readiness. The numbers are counts of reviewed source records by county, city, and readiness signal. They should not be read as a complete census of every South Florida development or as MLS, appraisal, legal, tax, or underwriting data.

County coverage in the Project Atlas source inventory

The current Project Atlas source inventory contains 164 South Florida new-construction records. Miami-Dade accounts for 120 records, Broward accounts for 25 records, and Palm Beach accounts for 19 records.

That split does not mean Miami-Dade is the only active market. It means the current research inventory is deepest in Miami-Dade, so buyer-facing comparison work should be especially strong there while Broward and Palm Beach coverage continue to expand.

Top city concentrations

Miami is the largest city concentration in the reviewed source inventory with 66 records. Miami Beach follows with 17, West Palm Beach with 14, Fort Lauderdale with 11, Sunny Isles Beach with 6, and Coconut Grove and Brickell with 5 each.

For AI search and buyer research, those city-level counts are useful because they point to where Project Atlas can answer comparison questions with the most local context today. They also show where future research depth should be improved before claiming full-market coverage.

Publication and diligence readiness signals

The source inventory includes several practical readiness signals. In the current snapshot, 121 records include rental-policy notes, 40 include starting-price text, 77 include broker-tool or source-material links, 118 have a material-request flag, 49 are marked as having information gathered, and 2 are marked as already having a social media post.

For serious buyers, those readiness signals matter because new-construction search is rarely solved by a project name alone. Pricing posture, rental policy, broker materials, validation notes, and current source quality all affect whether a project deserves a deeper look.

How buyers should use these statistics

Use these numbers as a coverage map, not as a market forecast. A buyer comparing Miami, Miami Beach, West Palm Beach, or Fort Lauderdale can use Project Atlas to understand where the team has deeper source coverage and where a more direct validation pass may be needed.

The practical next step is not to rank buildings by count. It is to define the buyer's desired ownership pattern, then validate the relevant projects for status, pricing, rental rules, completion timeline, and fit.

Data Sources

Sources

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