Fueled in part by a
continuing construction boom, a new report shows Miami-Dade County’s total
property values spiked by 8.6 percent to a record high of more than $250
billion.
The report, issued by
Miami-Dade Property Appraiser Pedro
Garcia, takes a look at all taxable properties in
the county, by municipality, and estimates how values have grown between June
2015 and June 2016.
It shows new
construction has brought an additional
$5 billion worth of taxable property values to
Miami-Dade over the past year, and every one of the county’s municipalities has
experienced growth — some by leaps and bounds.
“Like Miami-Dade’s
skyline, property values continue to go up,” Garcia wrote in the report. “The
construction boom that is visible across the county has yet to peak and will
continue to fuel this growth.”
Leading the pack for
rising property values is North Miami Beach, which is seeing a renaissance of
new development as builders seek affordable waterfront land outside of
already-hot neighborhoods like Miami Beach and Edgewater.
Total taxable real
estate values in North
Miami Beach spiked 16.6 percent from $2 billion to
$2.3 billion year-over-year, according to the appraiser’s report.
Not far behind was the
ritzy islands of North Bay Village, where estimated values rose 14.7 percent
from $911 million to $955 million.
Miami Beach boasted
the largest cache of new
development of any Miami-Dade municipality, with
$1.156 billion worth of buildings going up on the barrier island over the last
year. The city’s total real estate values hit $34.438 billion this year, up
12.2 percent from 2015.
Even
Doral, once known only for its industrial sites and
sprawling suburbs, is getting some love from developers. Roughly $476 million
worth of new construction was recorded over the last year, helping push
property values there up 9 percent to $11.075 billion.
Interestingly, Bal
Harbour was the only neighborhood to report a negative value for new
construction, losing $1 million worth of real estate value year-over-year due
to demolition.
The appraiser’s report
is preliminary and meant to help Miami-Dade’s municipalities balance their
budgets, meaning the figures here are subject to change over the next half of
2016.
Even so, Miami-Dade’s
total taxable property values have blown past their 2008 peak by roughly $4
billion. These rising figures will be a boon for Miami-Dade’s municipalities as
they command higher property taxes from homeowners and landlords.
The report follows
news that Miami-Dade’s
housing market has begun to slow, which is putting
downward pressure on price growth for condos, single-family homes and rentals.
That trend could end up impacting future growth for Miami-Dade’s total taxable
real estate as home valuations become more realistic.
Check out the appraiser’s full chart of
property values by municipality below (click to enlarge)
Original Content The Real Deal
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