For those searching for an exclusive area to live in, look no further. The town of Golden Beach is unique area comprised of 364 single family homes. Golden Beach is located in the northern top of Miami and just south of the Broward County border. It is one of the only areas in Miami where homeowners can have a home directly on the beach. Just down the street, in Sunny Isles Beach, there are many luxury condos which have been built and continued to be built. But, for those looking for a home, Golden Beach can truly make a statement.
Several homes located on Ocean Boulevard have their own backyards directly on the beach giving an upscale resort environment from the comfort of your home. Many other waterfront homes are in the community and on the canals or the intracoastal. For boat enthusiasts, the community offers the ability to have an estate with a yacht parked in the backyard on your own private dock.
Over the past several years, many homes have been knocked down and rebuilt with more spacious, contemporary architecture. Estates with various designs including Spanish styles, ultra modern and architectural design which catches your eye will be seen on Center Island, Golden Beach Dr, S Island Dr, S Parkway, and Ocean Blvd.
When entering the community, residents and visitors will enter and exit through a police gated entryway. Furthermore, the community is unique in that Golden Beach residents will have their own police department directly in the community. Residents will also be able to utilzie the various parks in the community, playground, tennis and pickleball courts, and have beach access to the beach.
The community's location is just minutes away from some of the best shopping in the United States including Aventura Mall and Bal Harbour Shops. For additional information pertaining to homes in Golden Beach, please contact us.

Golden Gate Estates Home

Golden Gate Estates & Marina Beach Homes

Golden Gate Estates & Marina Tennis Court

Golden Gate Estates Pool and Backyard

Chic Beach Home

Golden Gate Estates Pool Home

Open Kitchen

Home Gym

Golden Gate Estates Guesthouse Home

Two Story Foyer

Courtyard Area

Contemporary Home

Private Backyard and Pool

View of Golden Gate Estates

Private Marina and Boat Slips
The town of Golden Beach is comprised only of single family homes and no condos, townhomes or any other types of dwellings. The town was incorporated in 1929 and since its inception has been known as an upscale community located between Fort Lauderdale and Miami Beach. The town continues to provide its residents with capital improvements as it recently implemented high speed 5G fiber for faster interest connectivity, rebuilt its amenities areas as well as a brand new Civic Center and Landfall Team Bunker.
Yes, residents of Golden Beach can utilize the newly renovated tennis and pickle ball courts.
Many homes are located on a canal or directly on the intracoastal and can accommodate larger boats and yachts. These homeowners are permitted to have a dock and/or boat lift for their vessels. Boat lovers enjoy this as there are no fixed bridges and its a short trip through the intracoastal to reach open waters in the Atlantic Ocean. If the home is on a dry lot, there is no where to keep a boat in the water. Homeowners can also consider a local marina to store their vessel if their home is not a waterfront lot.
Yes, the town of Golden Beach has their own police force. Patrol is comprised of SUVs throughout the stretch along Ocean Boulevard, inside the community, boat(s) in the intracoastal as well as patrol on the beach along the 2+ mile stretch.
The homes in Golden Beach are zoned for Miami-Dade school district. Specifically, children can attend Norman S Edelcup for K-8. For upper school, students will be zoned for Alonzo & Tracy Mourning Senior High School. These schools are the default public schools that residents of Golden Beach will be zoned for; however, families may also consider schools including Virginia Boone Highland Oaks Elementary School, Highland Oaks Middle School and Dr. Michael M. Krop Senior High School for public schools as well as various private schools in the area.
Yes, many residents in Golden Beach have dogs.
Residents of Golden Beach will have access to a private beach area. There is a private parking lot, covered pavilion and staff who can help set you up with lounge chairs and umbrellas. The beach area, deemed exclusively for residents and their guests, also has bathrooms and showers.
Throughout the year, residents will have the opportunity to attend a handful of events. Past events have included Labor Day celebrations, 4th of July barbeques, Halloween carnivals, tea parties and more.
View and learn about nearby communities.
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Relocation, Miami Lifestyle, Real Estate Trends
Miami has always had a certain pull including sun drenched beaches, Latin flair, and a nightlife scene that rarely sleeps. In the last few years, that attraction has grown into a full blown migration wave, especially from high tax, high cost states. Even as Miami‑Dade County wrestles with rising costs and a recent dip in overall population, thousands of newcomers are still choosing Miami as their next home. What is it about this city that keeps drawing people in?
For many movers, Miami starts as a daydream about lifestyle. The city offers warm, tropical weather year round, which means your daily routine can easily include paddleboarding in Biscayne Bay before work, jogging on the boardwalk at lunch, and dining al fresco in the evening. For people relocating from places such as New York, Chicago, San Francisco or Boston, the idea of trading snow shovels and jackets for flip flops is powerful.
But, it’s more than sunshine. Miami’s neighborhoods each offer their own flavor of everyday life. Brickell gives you a fast paced, walkable, high rise experience; Coconut Grove feels leafy and laid back; areas such as North Miami Beach, Aventura and Sunny Isles Beach offer more suburban comfort. That mix lets new arrivals choose a version of Miami that matches their personality, whether that’s rooftop cocktails, quiet cul‑de‑sacs or something in between.
Another reason people are moving to Miami is its remarkable cultural diversity. The city is a crossroads of Latin America, the Caribbean, and the United States. You’ll hear Spanish, English, Portuguese, Hebrew and Haitian Creole in a single day, and you can taste the world in a few blocks. Cuban ventanitas for coffee, Peruvian ceviche bars, Colombian bakeries and fine dining restaurants led by global chefs are all around.
This diversity translates into a steady calendar of festivals and cultural events including Art Basel, Calle Ocho, film festivals, music weekends and neighborhood block parties. For many newcomers, especially young professionals and creatives, Miami’s global energy feels more like an international capital than a traditional American city which is a big part of its appeal.
Behind the lifestyle story, there’s hard data. In the first quarter of 2026, out of state driver’s license exchanges in Miami‑Dade County rose 24% year‑over‑year, with 19,918 exchanges recorded, a key signal of people relocating from other states (Miami Association of REALTORS®, 2026). New York, California and Texas continue to be the top “feeder” states, but there’s growing interest from the Midwest and other nontraditional regions as well.
These movers tend to bring higher incomes and strong demand for housing. Between 2019 and 2023, Florida as a whole gained about $137 billion in net income from domestic migration, with Miami capturing a large share of that inflow. For individuals, that means you’re arriving in a city where new restaurants, services, co‑working spaces and amenities are constantly opening to serve a more affluent, mobile population.
One of the most concrete reasons people are moving to Miami is money. Florida has no state income tax. For high earning professionals and business owners leaving states such as New York or California, that can translate into tens of thousands of dollars saved every year. Over a decade, the difference is enormous, and it’s a major factor in relocation decisions (Investopedia, “The Economic Impact of No State Income Tax in Florida”).
Add to that a business friendly environment, relatively light regulation and growing access to investors and capital, and Miami starts to look very attractive for entrepreneurs, remote workers and companies looking for a new base. This is part of why you are seeing more finance, tech, and professional services workers in neighborhoods that used to be dominated by tourism alone.
Miami’s reputation as a serious business city has grown dramatically since the pandemic. City leaders and investors actively courted tech founders and venture capital, branding Miami as a new kind of “Wall Street South” and “Silicon Beach.” According to coverage in Forbes Tech Council, the city’s mix of cultural diversity, quality of life and favorable business climate has helped it evolve into a meaningful tech hub, not just a seasonal hotspot.
For individuals, this means more opportunities in sectors like fintech, crypto, logistics, hospitality tech and creative industries. Remote workers, as well, find Miami appealing for reasons such as the airport is a major international gateway, and time zones line up well with both Europe and the rest of the U.S., making it easier to collaborate with teams around the world while still enjoying a beachfront lifestyle.

Brickell’s growth as a finance and tech hub is drawing talent from across the country.
Real estate is another magnet. Miami’s housing market has been tight and competitive, but that’s exactly what appeals to many investors. In late 2025, the median price of a single family home in Miami‑Dade reached around $620,000, up about 8% year over year, with only 3.4 months of supply on the market (Miami Real Estate Journal, Q1 2026). Cash purchases made up an impressive 38% of transactions, far above the national average, and the luxury segment set multiple sales records.
For buyers, this can be a double edged sword. On one hand, it signals strong long term demand and the potential for appreciation and rental income, especially in desirable neighborhoods or properties suitable for seasonal rentals. On the other, it means you’ll face competition, higher prices, and the need to plan carefully around insurance and carrying costs. Still, for many domestic and international investors, Miami remains a cornerstone of their real estate strategy.
Not everyone moving to Miami is new to South Florida. There’s also a noticeable “second wave” of migration within the county. Families and long time residents are leaving dense urban cores such as Brickell and downtown Miami for more spacious, suburban neighborhoods with single family homes, yards and quieter streets. Reports from local real estate analysts highlight growing interest in areas further from the waterfront but closer to schools, parks and community amenities.
If you’re considering a move, this internal reshuffling matters. It suggests that you don’t have to choose between Miami’s energy and a more traditional family lifestyle. Instead, you can live in a residential area and still be a short drive from beaches, cultural venues, and employment centers, especially as infrastructure and suburban retail options continue to improve.
With all this momentum, it might be surprising to learn that Miami‑Dade County actually recorded a population decline in 2025. Axios reports that between July 2024 and July 2025, the county lost about 10,000 residents, one of the largest numeric drops among U.S. counties. That decline is largely tied to a slowdown in international immigration and rising outflows of local residents who can no longer afford to stay.
Affordability is a serious concern. By 2025, roughly 54% of Miami‑Dade households could not afford basic necessities, up from 51% in 2023. High home prices, steep insurance premiums and rising everyday costs are pushing many working class and middle income residents to seek more affordable communities, either elsewhere in Florida or out of the state. In other words, while high income newcomers are arriving, many long time residents are being priced out, reshaping the city’s social fabric.
A key takeaway is that Miami continues to attract wealthier domestic migrants even as affordability challenges push many local families to leave, creating a city that is simultaneously booming and strained.
Another important trend is that many people leaving Miami are not leaving Florida altogether. Instead, they’re moving to more affordable inland markets such as Central Florida where housing is cheaper and space is easier to find. For some, Miami becomes a place to build a career or business before eventually relocating to a quieter, lower cost city within the state. This internal reshuffling is changing Florida’s overall housing market and may, over time, ease some of Miami’s pressure while boosting other regions.
Why are so many people moving to Miami? Because it offers a rare combination: year round sunshine, a vibrant, global culture, strong economic and tax advantages, and real estate opportunities that continue to attract capital from around the world. For many professionals, entrepreneurs and investors, that mix is irresistible.
At the same time, it’s essential to look beyond the postcard image. Rising housing costs, insurance premiums, and overall living expenses mean that Miami can be challenging for middle income households. Before you pack your bags, take a close look at your budget, job prospects, and the kind of neighborhood that fits your lifestyle. If you’re relocating with a family, research schools, commute times, and insurance options as carefully as you would research the nearest beach.
Ultimately, Miami is a city of contrasts including booming and shrinking, glamorous and hard working, local and global all at once. That tension is exactly what makes it so compelling. For many people, the chance to live where most others vacation, build a career in a growing economic hub, and immerse themselves in a rich, multicultural community outweighs the challenges. If you’re drawn to big energy, bold opportunities, and endless summer, it’s easy to understand why so many people are still choosing to call Miami home.
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Ocean Miami Real Estate, a division of Global Luxury Real Estate, offers the opportunity to buy and sell properties across South Florida. We help connect buyers and sellers not only from the local market, but across the country and around the world.
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