Florida’s Ultra-Luxury New Construction Boom: Where the Smart Money Is Moving — and What’s Coming Next

Florida Ultra-Luxury New Construction 2026: The Insider’s Guide to the Boom
2026 Market Intelligence

Florida’s Ultra-Luxury New Construction Boom: Where the Smart Money Is Moving — and What’s Coming Next

The insider’s guide to the hottest markets, the next wave of prime locations, and everything you need to know about ground-up construction financing before you break ground.

📅 Updated June 2026 ✍️ By Stacy Ann Stephens, REALTOR® ⏱ 14-min read

I spent the morning on the phone with a ground-up construction lender and a Central Florida developer who builds in the $3M–$12M range. The question they both kept circling: where is the smart money going in Florida’s luxury new construction market right now? Not where it went in 2021. Right now.

The answer is more nuanced than any single headline will tell you. Florida’s overall housing market has cooled and stabilized — but at the very top, the ultra-luxury new construction market is running on its own engine entirely. And understanding which markets are peaking, which are just getting started, and how the financing actually works? That’s where the real opportunity lives.

Whether you’re a high-net-worth buyer searching for your next primary or second home, a developer scoping your next build, or an investor looking to get in before the curve steepens — this guide is for you.

+31% YoY jump in $5M–$10M single-family home sales, Q1 2026 (Florida Realtors)
426 Projected $10M+ transactions in South Florida by end of 2025 — near all-time record
1,350+ New residents moving to Florida every single day in 2025
$5B+ Projected taxable value of new construction in Palm Beach County in 2025 — an all-time record

Where the Ultra-Luxury New Construction Boom Is Happening Right Now

Let me be direct: Florida’s ultra-luxury new construction market is not a monolith. It’s a collection of micro-markets, each with its own buyer profile, price dynamics, and development pace. Here’s where the action is right now.

Palm Beach County Corridor

🔥 Peak

The stretch from West Palm Beach through Boca Raton to Palm Beach Gardens is the epicenter of South Florida’s branded-residence explosion. Flagship projects — Mandarin Oriental Boca Raton, Ritz-Carlton Residences Palm Beach Gardens, the proposed Aman Palm Beach — are redefining what “luxury” means in this corridor.

Highland Beach, Ocean Ridge, and Manalapan command rarefied attention: new construction here is scarce by zoning design, which makes available inventory intensely competitive. A $39.9M new construction oceanfront estate on S Ocean Blvd in Highland Beach was on the market as we published this.

$5B+ new construction taxable value (2025)
~6,500 new homes on 2024 tax roll (record)

Miami / Brickell / Sunny Isles

🔥 Peak

Miami is no longer just a lifestyle play — it’s a global capital for ultra-luxury real estate. Brickell leads with $950/sq ft luxury condo pricing; Miami Beach commands $1,292/sq ft. The pipeline heading into 2026 is defined by branded, low-density towers — 888 Brickell by Dolce & Gabbana, Missoni, Fendi, Armani/Casa — where the architecture and the lifestyle programming are as important as the square footage.

New inventory at the very top is intentionally scarce and heavily pre-sold. This is not a market where you browse casually — deals happen quietly.

$1,292/sqft Miami Beach luxury condos
2x condo sales above $10M (2025 vs. 2024)

Naples / Gulf Coast

↑ Rising

Naples is the anti-Miami for luxury buyers who want pristine beaches and world-class golf without the density. The Gulf Coast from Sarasota to Naples is growing a serious ultra-privacy luxury brand — deep-water yacht access, fortified smart homes, and exclusive community living.

Naples, Palm Beach Island, and Boca Raton all remain stable even as the broader market cools — a direct function of cash-buyer prevalence and limited inventory. Ultra-prime here behaves differently from the rest of the state.

Cash buyers dominating transactions
Tight supply keeping prices firm

“At the very top of the Florida luxury market, price is no longer the primary differentiator. Buyers are evaluating architecture, privacy, service culture, and lifestyle programming with the same rigor they once reserved for a private yacht.”

Searching for Ultra-Luxury New Construction?

I work with buyers across Central and South Florida — including Palm Beach County, Naples, and the Gulf Coast corridor. Let’s talk about what’s actually available and what’s coming to market.

The Next Wave: Where Luxury New Construction Is Heading Before Everyone Else Arrives

The signals are familiar if you know what to look for: luxury retailers scouting locations, zoning variances being approved, branded hotel flags announcing residences, and private club memberships quietly selling out before the first shovel hits the ground. Here’s where I’m watching.

Sarasota / Venice

↑ Accelerating

Sarasota is quietly becoming the destination for luxury buyers who want the Gulf Coast lifestyle without the Naples price premium — for now. Top-ranked schools, arts infrastructure, and deep boating access make this a genuine primary-residence market, not just a vacation play. Investor saturation is still low here compared to South Florida, which protects long-term asset quality.

Watch: Bonita Springs and Estero, where inventory stabilization is creating entry windows before the next appreciation cycle.

Orlando’s Horizon West / Windermere

↑ Watch Closely

Analysts are projecting 2–3% value growth in Orlando’s Horizon West enclave — modest but meaningful in a market where luxury is still finding its floor. Windermere remains Central Florida’s most prestigious address, and the luxury new construction activity along the Butler Chain corridor is drawing serious attention from North American relocators. The difference between Windermere and South Florida? You can still find a buildable lot.

This is my neighborhood. I know these streets, these builders, and these comps intimately.

Riviera Beach / Jupiter / Palm Beach North

👀 Early Signal

Industry experts have explicitly flagged Riviera Beach as an emerging luxury market. Jupiter and northern Palm Beach County are seeing new-construction single-family and boutique condominium activity that mirrors the early-stage signals we saw in West Palm Beach five years ago. The Ritz-Carlton flag in Palm Beach Gardens is a major leading indicator — branded flags don’t go where the market isn’t going.

Tampa Bay Waterfront Pockets

👀 Selective

The Tampa Bay suburbs overall are seeing post-boom valuation adjustments. But the waterfront luxury pockets — Davis Islands, Harbour Island, Avila — are behaving differently. Affluent relocators from the Northeast and California are still choosing Tampa as a primary destination, and they’re not building modest homes. Selective new construction in these micro-markets continues to command premium pricing.

What Early-Stage Market Signals Actually Look Like

Before a market goes on everyone’s radar, certain precursors appear. Based on patterns visible in markets like West Palm Beach and Brickell before they exploded, watch for:

  • Branded hotel flags announcing residences — Ritz, Four Seasons, Aman, Mandarin Oriental all land in markets they believe will appreciate significantly
  • High-end retail signings — Hermès, Louis Vuitton, Porsche Design stores follow wealthy populations, not lead them
  • Zoning variances for height and density — Boca Raton just approved a height increase for the resort tower from 85 to 100 feet. These votes are meaningful
  • Private club memberships moving fast — golf, yacht, and social clubs in the path of luxury development tend to see membership waitlists form 18–36 months ahead of peak development
  • Family office real estate arms going quiet — when wealthy families stop listing and start accumulating in a market, that’s the most reliable signal of all

Ground-Up New Construction: What Actually Happens from Lot to Certificate of Occupancy

If you’re a developer — or thinking about becoming one — knowing the process in sequence matters as much as knowing the market. Here’s how a ground-up luxury new construction project actually unfolds in Florida.

1

Site Acquisition & Feasibility Analysis

Identify the parcel, confirm zoning and entitlements, assess flood zone designation, utilities access, and any deed restrictions. Run a preliminary pro forma — what’s the land cost, estimated build cost, and projected ARV? This analysis determines whether the deal pencils before you spend a dollar on plans.

💡 Lender insight: Lenders will order their own independent appraisal of After Repair Value (ARV). Build your exit comps conservatively — and in luxury markets, verify that comps are truly comparable (floor plan, finish level, waterfront access, lot size all matter significantly).
2

Design, Plans & Permitting

Engage a licensed architect to produce construction drawings. Plans go to the local building department for permit review — in Palm Beach County, this can take 4–12 weeks depending on complexity and submission quality. Luxury custom homes require full structural, MEP (mechanical/electrical/plumbing), and civil engineering sets.

💡 Lenders want to see permit-ready or near-ready projects — it signals serious commitment and speeds the loan closing timeline significantly.
3

Construction Financing & Loan Closing

This is where you finalize your capital stack: the ground-up construction loan covers a defined percentage of your total project cost (more on this in the next section). The loan closes, a draw schedule is established, and construction can begin. Expect 2–3 weeks for closing with a well-prepared file at the right lender.

💡 Your draw schedule should align with actual construction milestones — foundation, framing, rough-in, drywall, finishes, final. Misalignment here creates cash flow problems mid-build.
4

Foundation Through Framing

Ground breaking, slab pour, stem walls or pilings (required in coastal and flood-zone areas), and structural framing. In Florida, this phase demands particular attention to wind and storm engineering codes — especially post-Ian in Southwest Florida, where code updates have added requirements and costs. Budget for geotechnical surprises.

💡 Third-party inspections happen at each draw. The lender’s inspector confirms work completion before funds are released — this protects everyone.
5

Rough-In: Plumbing, Electrical, HVAC

All systems go in before walls close. For luxury builds, this phase also includes smart home infrastructure (structured wiring, AV pre-wire, security systems), solar or whole-home generator rough-in, and high-efficiency HVAC systems increasingly required for insurance purposes. Material lead times for custom fixtures can significantly affect timeline — order early.

6

Finishes, Fixtures & Punch List

This is where your vision becomes a home — custom cabinetry, stone countertops, flooring, trim work, pool and spa, exterior landscaping and lighting. For ultra-luxury builds, this phase takes as long as — or longer than — structural construction. European cabinetry has 12–16 week lead times. Sub-zero appliance packages have their own timelines. Plan accordingly.

💡 Withhold final contractor payment until the punch list is fully resolved and all inspections are cleared. In Florida, lien law protections matter — make sure your contractor agreements and payments follow proper procedures.
7

Certificate of Occupancy & Exit

The CO is issued, the project is complete, and you execute your exit strategy: sale of the completed spec home, or refinance into a permanent loan (conventional, DSCR, or portfolio product depending on the buyer’s or investor’s situation).

💡 Total timeline for a luxury custom build in Florida: 12–18 months for national builders, up to 24 months for fully custom, ultra-high-end product.

Ground-Up Construction Loans: What Lenders Actually Look For (And What Most Guides Won’t Tell You)

I have conversations with lenders every week. And the single biggest gap I see between developers who get funded and those who don’t isn’t the deal itself — it’s how prepared and how packaged the file is. Here’s what lenders actually care about, straight from the source.

The Capital Stack: LTC vs. LTV — Know the Difference

MetricWhat It MeansTypical Range (2026)Why It Matters
Loan-to-Cost (LTC)Loan amount ÷ total project cost (land + hard + soft costs)75–85% LTCDefines how much equity you must bring to the project — typically 15–25%
Loan-to-Value (LTV)Loan amount ÷ appraised ARV of the completed project65–75% LTVBoth LTC and LTV limits must be met — the lower ceiling controls
Interest RateRate on drawn funds only7.5%–9% (residential luxury); 6.5%–9% (commercial)Interest-only payments; rate is higher than conventional to offset lender risk on an asset that doesn’t yet exist
Loan TermConstruction period duration12–24 months (simple); up to 36 months (complex)Extension options are available but cost money — build in a realistic buffer
Minimum Down / EquityBorrower equity contribution20–35%Some private lenders reduce this for experienced developers with strong exit plans

What Lenders Require — The File Checklist

For a $2M–$10M luxury construction loan, expect lenders to evaluate these elements:

  • Land ownership or executed purchase contract — owned free and clear is ideal; under contract is fine with proof of earnest money
  • Detailed construction budget — line-item by trade, with contingency (typically 10–15% for luxury builds)
  • Architectural plans and permit status — permit-ready projects close faster; preliminary plans acceptable with the right lender
  • Developer/builder experience — past luxury builds, references, licenses, and insurance certificates for the general contractor
  • Exit strategy with comparable sales support — detailed ARV analysis; comps must be truly comparable in finish level and location
  • Personal financials — bank statements, tax returns (for conventional construction lenders); private lenders may prioritize asset-based analysis
  • Completed project value projection — supported by an independent appraisal ordered by the lender

“Private lenders focus on project value, developer experience, and exit strategy — not just your income. For spec and custom luxury builds where traditional bank financing falls short, this is the path forward.”

The Draw Schedule: How Funds Are Released

Construction loans don’t deliver a lump sum — they disburse in stages as verified work is completed. A typical luxury build draw schedule flows like this:

DrawMilestoneApprox. % of Loan
Initial DrawLand acquisition or reimbursement if already owned; site preparation15–20%
Draw 2Foundation complete and inspected15%
Draw 3Framing complete; roof dried in20%
Draw 4Rough-in complete (plumbing, electrical, HVAC) and inspected15%
Draw 5Drywall, insulation, exterior complete15%
Final DrawCertificate of Occupancy issued; all punch list items complete15%

Draw percentages vary by lender and project. Each draw is typically preceded by a third-party lender inspection confirming the milestone is complete.

What About First-Time Builders?

This comes up often — especially in the luxury spec home space, where I work with both seasoned developers and first-time builders who have the capital and vision but not yet a track record. Here’s what you need to know:

  • Some private lenders will work with first-time builders, but they tighten the LTV cap — often to 60–65% of ARV rather than 70–75%
  • A stronger builder/GC on the project (licensed, insured, with documented luxury build experience) offsets borrower inexperience significantly
  • Larger equity contributions — sometimes 30–40% — can unlock programs that experience would otherwise provide
  • A clearly documented, conservative exit plan with strong comp support is non-negotiable

Need Construction Financing for a Florida Luxury Build?

I work directly with ground-up construction lenders in the $500K–$10M+ range — including programs for first-time builders and foreign national investors. Let’s structure your deal right from the start.

🏗️ Your Ultra-Luxury New Construction Readiness Checklist

Tap each item as you complete it. Three tabs: Buyer, Developer, Financing.

  • Define your non-negotiables: ocean vs. intracoastal, primary vs. second home, modern vs. transitional architecture
  • Identify your target markets (hot vs. emerging) based on your timeline and appreciation goals
  • Understand the difference between spec homes (faster delivery) and custom builds (full personalization, longer timeline)
  • Review insurance landscape before committing to a coastal property — high-end coastal homes face elevated premiums
  • Confirm your financing type: conventional jumbo, portfolio, construction-to-perm, or cash
  • Engage a buyer’s agent with demonstrated luxury new construction experience — not just a license and a lockbox code
  • Visit completed projects by the builder before signing a contract — finish quality and project management culture vary dramatically
  • Understand your deposit structure for new construction (typically 10–20% at contract, in stages during construction)
  • Identify and secure the site (owned or under contract with clear title path)
  • Verify zoning, setbacks, FAR, height limits, and flood zone designation
  • Commission preliminary architectural drawings and site plan
  • Build line-item construction budget with 10–15% contingency
  • Pull your ARV comp analysis — only use truly comparable sales (finish, location, waterfront, lot size)
  • Assemble your GC team: licensed, bonded, insured, with documented luxury build experience
  • Confirm your exit strategy: pre-sale contract, listing at completion, or refinance
  • Engage a construction lender for preliminary loan sizing and program terms before breaking ground
  • Order 12–16 week lead-time items (custom cabinetry, European fixtures) as early in the project as possible
  • Gather 12–24 months of personal bank statements
  • Compile last 2 years of personal and business tax returns
  • Document any existing real estate assets (Schedule E, rental income history)
  • Confirm your equity contribution amount and source of funds
  • Pull your credit report — identify and resolve any issues before lender review
  • Assemble your borrower package: ID, proof of income, net worth statement
  • Understand the difference between bank construction loans vs. private/hard money lenders — each has its role
  • Plan for interest-carry costs during construction in your cash flow projection
  • Identify your permanent loan exit: conventional jumbo refi, DSCR (if investor rental), or sale proceeds
0 of 8 complete

Frequently Asked Questions: Florida Ultra-Luxury New Construction

Several forces are converging simultaneously. Florida added nearly 27,500 wealthy households in a recent measurement period while high-tax states like New York saw major outflows. Florida is projected to have more than 1,350 new residents per day in 2025. The absence of state income tax remains a primary driver for high-net-worth buyers. At the same time, truly scarce ultra-luxury inventory — especially waterfront and branded-residence product — has kept prices firm or rising even as the broader market stabilizes. Miami is hosting the FIFA World Cup and G20 Summit in 2026, bringing unprecedented global visibility that further accelerates demand from international buyers and investors.
The peak activity is concentrated in the South Florida “golden triangle” — Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties. Within Palm Beach County, the corridor from West Palm Beach through Boca Raton and Palm Beach Gardens is experiencing a branded-residence transformation. Highland Beach, Ocean Ridge, and Manalapan command attention for their extreme scarcity and oceanfront positioning. Naples and the Gulf Coast from Sarasota southward are increasingly establishing a competing luxury brand emphasizing privacy and deep-water access. Emerging markets to watch include Riviera Beach, Jupiter, Orlando’s Windermere / Horizon West corridor, and select Tampa Bay waterfront pockets.
A ground-up construction loan is a short-term financing product that funds building a new structure from scratch — land acquisition through construction completion. Unlike a traditional mortgage that finances an existing property, a construction loan finances a property that doesn’t yet exist. Funds are disbursed in stages (called draws) tied to verified construction milestones. Borrowers pay interest only on drawn funds during the construction period, keeping monthly payments manageable. The loan is typically repaid either by selling the completed property or refinancing into a permanent loan. Terms generally run 12–24 months, with rates currently ranging from 7.5%–9% for residential luxury construction.
Private construction lenders focus on four main areas: (1) Project value — a well-supported ARV analysis with truly comparable sales; (2) Developer experience — past luxury builds, licensed GC team, and documented track record; (3) Exit strategy — a realistic sale price projection or refinance plan supported by market comps; (4) Equity contribution — typically 20–35% of total project cost. The loan must satisfy both LTC (loan-to-cost, typically 75–85%) and LTV (loan-to-value against ARV, typically 65–75%) — and the lower ceiling controls. Lenders also want to see a detailed line-item budget, permitted or near-permitted plans, and proof of land ownership or purchase contract.
Yes — but conditions apply. First-time builders typically face tighter LTV caps (often 60–65% of ARV rather than 70–75%), larger required equity contributions (sometimes 30–40%), and closer lender scrutiny of the GC team’s experience. The key to unlocking programs as a first-time builder: a highly experienced licensed general contractor with documented luxury build history, a larger equity position, a conservative and well-supported exit analysis, and working with a mortgage broker who has established relationships with construction lenders who understand this profile. It’s absolutely doable — it just requires a stronger file.
Build timelines vary significantly by project type. National home builders running production-style luxury product typically deliver in 9–12 months. More custom, boutique builders typically run 12–18 months from permit to CO. Full custom ultra-luxury homes with imported materials, bespoke finishes, and complex architecture can run 18–24 months or longer. Key variables: permitting speed (varies by county and municipality), material lead times (European cabinetry and fixtures can be 12–16 weeks), subcontractor availability, and weather events. Always build a buffer into your construction loan timeline.
Yes. Foreign national investors can access ground-up construction financing in Florida, though the lender pool is smaller than for U.S. citizens and permanent residents. Private and alternative lenders typically focus more on project fundamentals and equity contribution than on immigration status. Expect stricter LTV limits, larger down payment requirements, and documentation of international assets and income. Note that Florida’s SB 264 restricts certain nationals from specific countries (China, Russia, Cuba, Venezuela, and others) from purchasing certain types of real estate in Florida — this law is relevant to both buyers and developers and should be reviewed with a qualified Florida attorney before transacting.
Spec homes are built by developers to their own specifications — they’re often near or at completion, meaning you can see what you’re buying and close faster, but your customization options are limited to what the developer selected. Custom builds start from raw land or a foundation and are designed entirely to your preferences, but require a longer timeline (often 18–24 months) and active involvement throughout the process. In the current Florida luxury market, true spec inventory at the ultra-high end is scarce — which is why many serious buyers are engaging developers earlier in the process, sometimes pre-framing, to secure the home and get some input on finishes before the property is fully committed.
Insurance is one of the most significant and frequently underestimated costs in Florida luxury real estate — especially coastal. High-end coastal homes face elevated wind and flood insurance premiums, and the post-Ian code updates have added construction requirements that both protect and increase the cost of new builds. The good news: newer construction built to current Florida Building Code standards typically qualifies for better insurance rates than older comparable properties. Smart buyers factor annual insurance costs into their total cost-of-ownership analysis before making an offer. For high-value properties, work with an independent insurance broker who specializes in luxury coastal coverage.

Ready to Make Your Move in Florida’s Luxury New Construction Market?

Whether you’re searching for your next home, planning a ground-up build, or need financing structured before you go to contract — I’m the one call that covers both sides of the transaction. 24 years in Central and South Florida. One agent, one lender, no runaround.

SA

Stacy Ann Stephens, REALTOR®

Keller Williams Realty Winter Park · 147 W Lyman Ave, Winter Park FL 32789

📞 (407) 603-1664  ·  ✉️ stacyann@realtorstephens.com

Also licensed as a Mortgage Broker — NMLS #1933745 | Jhenesis Mortgage NMLS #2532705 — for buyers and developers who need both the property and the financing handled by one trusted advisor.

This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or investment advice. Real estate market conditions change rapidly; all statistics referenced were accurate as of publication date, June 2026. Florida SB 264 restricts certain foreign nationals from purchasing specific types of real estate in Florida — consult a qualified Florida attorney before transacting. Construction loan terms, rates, and requirements vary by lender and borrower profile. Equal Housing Opportunity. Stacy Ann Stephens is a licensed Florida REALTOR® with Keller Williams Realty Winter Park and a licensed Mortgage Broker NMLS #1933745, Jhenesis Mortgage NMLS #2532705.

Ready to start your luxury search? One call handles both sides.

Book a Consultation Call (407) 603-1664
Scroll to top