The waterfront guide

Waterfront homes for sale in South Florida

Anyone can sell you a house on the water. Very few can tell you whether your boat will ever reach the ocean from it. That difference is the whole point of working with me.

The boater's facts
The real question Can your boat reach the ocean?
The value driver Depth · dockage · bridges
The phrase that matters No fixed bridges
The specialist I map it before you offer

South Florida has thousands of miles of navigable water, and more waterfront homes than almost anywhere in the country. That abundance hides a trap: the listings all say "waterfront," and most buyers assume the word means the same thing every time. It doesn’t. On these canals, the water is half the asset, and it’s the half most agents never learn to read.

I built my business on the other half. Before you fall for a dock, I’ll tell you the depth at low tide, the bridges between you and Port Everglades, the condition of the seawall, and what your flood insurance will actually cost. That’s not paperwork. On the water, it’s the difference between a home you love and a mistake you can’t undo.

A dock is not the same as ocean access. Learn the difference before you write the offer, not after you buy the boat.

Learn the water before you shop

Three short guides cover the vocabulary that decides a waterfront purchase. Read these and you’ll shop like a boater, not a brochure:

Where the water is

Each market trades access, dockage, and price differently. Fort Lauderdale is the flagship, with iconic no-fixed-bridge neighborhoods. Deerfield Beach, Pompano Beach, Lighthouse Point and Dania Beach offer real value with quick inlet access. Hillsboro Beach and Sea Ranch Lakes are the private, top-of-market enclaves. And south of the county line, Miami adds a bilingual, international luxury layer. Pick a place, or tell me your boat and budget and I’ll shortlist the neighborhoods that fit.

Broward waterfront cities

Miami-Dade coastal

These run on the Miami MLS rather than Broward’s, so I work them directly, but the waterfront diligence is identical.

  • Miami, bayfront and island luxury, international and bilingual.
  • Coral Gables, Gables by the Sea and canal estates off Biscayne Bay.
  • Key Biscayne, island living with both bay and ocean frontage.
  • Aventura, Intracoastal towers and gated island communities.
  • Sunny Isles Beach, oceanfront and Intracoastal high-rise living.
FAQ

Waterfront questions I hear a lot

What makes a home "waterfront" in South Florida?

A waterfront home sits on navigable water, the Intracoastal Waterway, a canal, a river, or the ocean. But "on the water" and "can reach the ocean" are different things. The value comes from three variables: water depth at your dock at low tide, the size of dockage you can keep, and whether fixed bridges sit between you and the inlet. I evaluate all three on every home.

What does "ocean access" mean?

Ocean access means there is a navigable path from your dock, out an inlet (usually Port Everglades in Fort Lauderdale), to the open ocean. The best access is "no fixed bridges," meaning nothing permanently caps how tall a boat can pass. Distance to the inlet and water depth still matter, so I map the full route for any home you consider.

Do I need a specialist to buy waterfront?

It pays to. A standard home inspection won’t assess the seawall, the dock permits, the depth at low tide, or the flood-insurance cost, all of which can move the price by six figures. A waterfront specialist checks the water with the same rigor a good agent checks the roof.

Let’s talk

Buying or selling on the water?

Send me the address, or tell me the boat you keep. I’ll map the depth, the dockage, and the route to the inlet, in English o en español.