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Miramar starts 2026 with surge in home sales, condo slump. 5 things to know

Miramar home sales rose year-over-year while condo and townhouse sales fell in January, according to data from the MIAMI Association of Realtors.
Miramar home sales rose year-over-year while condo and townhouse sales fell in January, according to data from the MIAMI Association of Realtors. USA TODAY NETWORK

Single-family home sales in Miramar rose sharply in January compared to a year ago, bucking a slight countywide decline in Broward County.

But condo and townhome sales in the south Broward city told a very different story, plunging 46% year-over-year.

FULL STORY: Miramar home sales rise year-over-year as condo sales slump, January data shows

Miramar home sales rose year-over-year while condo and townhouse sales fell in January, according to data from the MIAMI Association of Realtors.
Miramar home sales rose year-over-year while condo and townhouse sales fell in January, according to data from the MIAMI Association of Realtors. Matias J. Ocner mocner@miamiherald.com

Here are the highlights:

  • Miramar recorded 41 single-family home sales in January, a 24% increase from the same month last year — though that’s a steep drop from 75 closed sales in December 2025.
  • Condo and townhome sales in Miramar cratered, falling 46% year-over-year to just 13 sales in January. Across Broward, condo prices fell 8% year-over-year to $250,000.
  • The median home price in Miramar hit $645,000 in January, above Broward’s countywide median of $620,000. Buyers paid a median 97% of the original listing price, leaving little room for deals.
  • Miramar’s inventory sits at a five-month supply, keeping conditions tilted toward sellers. Countywide, Broward single-family sales dipped 1.1% and condo sales fell 2.8% year-over-year.
  • Broward’s luxury segment bucked the slowdown: home sales above $1 million rose 14% year-over-year in January, from 184 to 209. MIAMI Realtors Chief Economist Gay Cororaton said momentum could build as mortgage rates fall and “wealth migration from New York and California accelerate due to potential tax policy changes.”

The summary points above were compiled with the help of AI tools and edited by journalists in the Miramar News newsroom. The full story in the link at top was reported, written and edited entirely by Miramar News journalists.

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