Miami is not one market. That matters if you are trying to decide whether a short sale is realistic. Brickell condos, Little Havana single-family homes, Wynwood redevelopment properties, and Coral Way pockets do not move the same way. The research for this page shows a market that stays competitive but segmented by property type, price point, and carrying-cost pressure.
City-level estimates still place median home value in the mid-$500,000 range, though methodology varies by source. Days on market often sit around 45 to 75 days depending on the segment. Well-priced inventory can still attract moderate to strong buyer demand. Overpriced homes and older condos with heavy HOA or insurance burdens often move more slowly. That difference matters if you are trying to show a lender that a short sale has real market support.
Miami also benefits from a buyer pool that is broader than most cities in the county. International demand, local move-up buyers, and investor interest still show up across core neighborhoods. Zip codes like 33125, 33127, 33129, 33130, 33131, and 33133 all sit inside different submarkets with different demand signals. A home near Downtown Miami or Brickell may get a different response than one near Little Havana, Coral Way, or Edgewater. That does not hurt your options. It means your pricing and strategy need to match your block, not just your city.
Compared with the county as a whole, Miami often has stronger demand concentration in core urban neighborhoods, but also more volatility in investor-heavy and condo-driven areas. That is why local guidance matters so much here. Your Miami property still has real market advantages working for it, and that can create a better path than the first letter suggests.