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šø Ruthless Rental Reality
Miami's cutthroat rentals; underpaid lawyer homes; more building!
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Happy Saturday Highest & Best! Today weāre talking apartments and rent. Hereās the rundown:
š¤¼āāļø Miami is the nationās āmost competitiveā rental market
š¤ Rentals for underpaid Miami lawyers
š A wave of Miami super-sized apartment towers
Letās get to it!:
Miami is the Nationās Sharpest-Elbowed Rental Market
Renting an apartment in Miami requires a fair bit of jostling and pushing.
Thatās according to a report this week that lists Miami-Dade County as the nationās most competitive rental market:
š² Nineteen prospective renters compete for every one vacant apartment in Miami, the highest anywhere in the U.S., according to the study by RentCafe.
š It takes an average of 36 days for a vacant unit in the Miami area to find a tenant ā the shortest time frame in the country.
š² Only 3.5% of Miamiās total rental units are actually available to apartment seekers, as more tenants stay put and renew their leases, the firm said.
š 76% of Miami tenants choose to renew their leases instead of finding another place.
š„ Miami is going through a multifamily construction boom, but itās unclear how much that will alleviate the rising costs of rentals at the current pace of in-migration by young professionals, at a time when home purchases are also becoming out of reach.
By the end of this year, 10,538 newly built apartments will be added to Miamiās rental market, according to commercial real estate data firm Yardi Matrix. Thatās a 6.4 increase in new supply, based on the current housing stock.
Another 19,500 newly built units will come to market in 2025 and 2026 combined.
Data chart by RentCafe
āŖ Catch up on recent Highest & Best issues:
Going Full Floridian, June 22 2024
Miami Mega-Loan Mania, June 14, 2024
Foreclosure, Fines and Forklifts, June 7, 2024
A MESSAGE FROM VALUE INVESTOR DAILY
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How to House Poorly Paid Miami Lawyers
AI-generated Miami lawyer
Miamiās public defenders ā and prosecutorsā canāt afford to live in Miami.
About 156 lawyers left the Miami State Attorneyās office in the past two years. And the Miami-Dade public defenderās office lost nearly 60 lawyers in the same time period.
Their starting salary, as set by state law, is $68,000 annually ā which is 14% less than the area median income for Miami, according to a report by Miami Today. And young lawyers carry an average of $160,000 in student debt.
Add to that: the median rent for a Miami one-bedroom apartment is $2,800, which works out to nearly half their salary going toward rentā should they find a place at that price.
So what can one do? If youāre a zoning commissioner in Miami-Dade County, you might try, strong-arming , ok, enticing a developer to give preference to public attorneys when renting out (a limited supply of) affordable housing.
In a meeting this month to consider approval of a new 39-story apartment tower, Miami zoning officials promised to greenlight the project ā- IF the Chicago-based developer could guarantee that public-salaried attorneys would get first dibs on the future buildingās 26 āworkforce housingā apartments, priced below market.
The Chicago-based developer, Focus, readily agreed to the deal, and got unanimous approval for the 517-unit apartment project in the Brickell neighborhood, called Miami Starlite.
Turns out several commissioners on the zoning board were once public attorneys themselves, and knew the burdens of living in Miami on that salary, even before the pandemicās mass migration sent rents to the stratosphere.
āI can tell you that those units will be rented in four hours,ā said Commissioner Eileen Higgins, according to a report by Miami Today.
āWe may be able, at least with this private-sector project, to plug the attrition drain on the experienced attorneys,ā she said.
The building, at 128 SW 7th St., will rise on the site of a former motel. The tower is expected to be complete in 2028, according to the developerās website.
A new Brickell apartment tower will reserve units for underpaid lawyers (Photo: Focus)
More, More, and More Rentals Coming (Some Affordable)
A 48-story tower is proposed for Wynwood, where buildings are capped at 12 stories
Itās been a month of supersized apartment tower plans in Miami.
Developers, seizing on the apparent need for more (and possibly less expensive) rental housing, have unleashed a wave of high density proposals.
Theyāre taking advantage of Floridaās new Live Local Act, which allows builders to bypass certain zoning restrictions ā like limits on a buildingās height ā so long as they designate 40% of their projectās units as āaffordableā to people of certain income thresholds.
Hereās whatās proposed:
1,050 rentals proposed for a former Sears site in Miami. (Photo: Miami UDRB)
š Last Sears standing: A 1,050-unit rental project on the site of South Floridaās last Sears department store got the go-ahead this week from a Miami urban review board. The Miami project calls for 995 rental apartments, 55 rental townhouses, and 420 āaffordableā units (which is exactly 40% of the buildingās total). The development, spread out across three separate buildings, includes 1,070 bike storage spaces sand 1,924 parking spots. The developer is RK Centers, which is led by Miami Heat minority owner Raanan Katz.
š® From 12 stories ā to 48: A developer is proposing a 48-story tower in Miamiās Wynwood neighborhoodā a place where building heights are capped at 12 stories by local law. The builder, Bazbaz Development, is seeking to erect a building thatās four times higher in exchange for designating 40% of the projectās 544 units as affordable, and priced slightly below market.
At least three other tall towers surpassing Wynwoodās 12-story height limits have been proposed, for a combined 1,730 new rentals to the neighborhood, the Miami Herald reported this week. Theyāre all seeking to invoke the new Live Local Act.
š®3,200 Rentals: In Miamiās West Little River neighborhood, a developer has submitted plans for a 3,233-unit mega project that calls for six apartment towers ranging from 26 stories to 37 stories, plus garages with 4,200 parking spaces. The project, dubbed alternately as Holland Park or HueHub in site plans, would be built on properties now occupied by single-story buildings. It would be the biggest Live Local project yet in Miami-Dade County, and would pretty much dwarf any other building in the largely single-family home neighborhood.
To qualify for such high scaling towers, 40% of the projectās apartments would have to be set aside for tenants who earn no more than 120 percent of the area median income, which today comes out to $95,400 for a single-person household.
A 3,200-rental mega complex proposed in Miami (Photo: Miami-Dade Co.)
Thatās it for today!
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