Bal Harbour is the smallest and most exclusive enclave in north Miami Beach: a gated village of barely half a square kilometer at the tip of the barrier island, between the Atlantic and Biscayne Bay. It is not a building: it is an entire town —incorporated in 1946— with its own police, its own gate and a row of oceanfront towers that sets the ceiling for residential luxury in the corridor. Its ZIP code, 33154, groups the most sought-after oceanfront addresses in the area.
What defines Bal Harbour is not just the beach: it is the pairing of a tiny gated village with the Bal Harbour Shops, the luxury mall Stanley Whitman opened in 1965 on the site of a World War II barracks, and which sixty years on still ranks among the highest sales per square foot in the country —it was the one that brought Neiman Marcus outside of Texas in 1971—. That anchor of international demand, steps from the towers, is hard to replicate anywhere else in Miami.
For today's buyer what matters is not the postcard but the secondary market: which units owners are reselling in the oceanfront towers —from the St. Regis and Oceana to the classic Collins Avenue buildings—, at what price per square foot, and what the enclave offers for rent. This page orders that —live inventory for sale and for rent, how to read value, and the buying process— so you reach the offer with judgment.
What makes the enclave different
Bal Harbour's value is not just the address: it is being a gated, minuscule oceanfront village with Miami's finest luxury retail at the door. Among what defines it:
- A gated village on the ocean Bal Harbour is its own municipality, incorporated in 1946, with controlled access and its own police and gate; barely half a square kilometer at the northern tip of the barrier island, between the Atlantic and the bay.
- The Bal Harbour Shops at the door the luxury mall Stanley Whitman opened in 1965 —among the highest sales per square foot in the United States—, an anchor of international demand steps from the residential towers.
- Trophy oceanfront towers from the St. Regis Bal Harbour (2012) and Oceana Bal Harbour —built on the former Bal Harbour Club, with Jeff Koons artworks— to the Collins Avenue classics such as Majestic, Bellini, Balmoral, Palace and Plaza.
- Scarce inventory by definition the oceanfront land is built out and the municipality is tiny: there is no new ground to add, so resale supply is thin and the address premium is already in the price.