The Renter's Guide
From first search
to keys.
Everything you need to rent an apartment in Miami.
Six steps, one timeline, and the unwritten rules of renting in Miami. Built from a decade of signing leases for renters at every price point.
The timeline
8 weeks, end-to-end.
Set budget, list must-haves, browse neighborhoods, and start talking to a locator
Start here, talk to a locator up to 8 weeks before your move date. The earlier you connect, the more options you'll have.
Tour day. Decide on your top options, Miami inventory moves fast
Submit application, pay deposit, sign lease
Set up FPL, internet, renter's insurance, schedule movers
Reserve elevator, walkthrough, and get keys
Set the real budget.
Most Miami buildings require gross household income of 2.5x – 3x rent. Build your budget around that. Ranges below are ballpark estimates only, actual fees, deposits, and move-in costs are set by each building and vary widely.
Checklist
- ●Rent + parking ($0–$300+/mo)
- ●Renter's insurance ($15–$25+/mo)
- ●Electricity FPL ($80–$200+/mo depending on use)
- ●Internet ($60–$100+/mo)
- ●Pet rent ($25–$75+/mo per pet)
- ●Amenity fees in some buildings ($20–$100+/mo)
Pick the right neighborhood.
Where you live shapes your day far more than which building. Match neighborhood to lifestyle, commute, and budget, then narrow buildings. We share neighborhood info for lifestyle and logistics purposes.
Checklist
- ●Brickell - walkability, nightlife, finance
- ●Edgewater - bay views, new construction, quieter
- ●Wynwood - creative, mid-rise, food scene
- ●Miami Beach - ocean lifestyle, varied stock
- ●Coconut Grove - village feel, marina
- ●Coral Gables - tree-lined streets, Mediterranean architecture
Tour smart.
Plan a half-day. Tour 3–5 buildings back-to-back so you can compare while it's all fresh.
Checklist
- ●Take videos/photos of the units to reference back
- ●Picture your daily routine in the space
- ●Notice the natural light at tour time
- ●Visit the amenities you'd actually use
- ●Ask what's included and what timing looks like
Apply with everything ready.
Application speed matters in Miami, popular units are gone in 24–48 hours. Have docs ready before you tour.
Checklist
- ●Government ID
- ●Pay stubs (or tax returns if self-employed)
- ●Bank statements
- ●Prior landlord references
- ●Visa or work authorization if applicable
- ●Pet records (vet, breed, weight) if applicable
Read the lease, actually read it.
Every Miami lease is different. The boilerplate sections matter most.
Checklist
- ●Lease break clause (typically 2 months rent + 60-day notice)
- ●Renewal & rent escalation clause
- ●Guest policy
- ●Pet addendum (deposits, breed limits)
- ●Move-out & cleaning expectations
Move in without surprises.
Miami buildings are strict on move-in logistics. Schedule everything in advance.
Checklist
- ●Reserve the freight elevator (most buildings require 2-week notice)
- ●Confirm move-in window (often M-F, 9–5 only)
- ●Set up FPL 5+ days before move-in (deposit required for new accounts)
- ●Schedule internet install for move-in day
- ●Walkthrough with leasing, document everything
Moving from out of state?
Rent Miami without flying in.
Half of our clients sign a lease before they ever land. We tour on FaceTime, walk you through the building, and handle the application end-to-end while you're still packing.
Start from anywhereLive video tours
We walk every unit on FaceTime or WhatsApp in real time.
100% remote applications
Sign, pay, and verify income digitally. No in-person visit required.
International renters welcome
Whether you are moving from out of state or internationally, we are here to help. 15+ languages offered.
Move-in day handoff
Keys, elevator reservation and everything handled before your flight lands.
Frequently asked
Renting in Miami, answered.
The one most people ask last
Do I need a locator to rent in Miami?
No, but it's free and your rent doesn't go up because of it. Miami apartment locators are paid a referral fee by the building, not by you, and that fee doesn't change your quoted rent, deposit, or lease terms. A free 10-min call narrows hundreds of apartments to the five you'll love, books tours, and walks your application through to lease signing.
How much do I need to make to rent an apartment in Miami?
Most Miami buildings require gross household income of 2.5x to 3x the monthly rent. For a $3,000/month apartment, expect to show $7,500 to $9,000 in monthly gross income, plus 3+ months of reserves in your bank statements.
How far in advance should I start looking?
Start 6 to 8 weeks before your move date. You can talk to a locator up to 8 weeks out. The earlier you connect, the more options you'll have. Miami inventory moves fast and the best units lease in 24 to 48 hours.
What documents do I need to apply?
Government ID, pay stubs (or tax returns if self-employed), bank statements, prior landlord references, and pet records if applicable. International renters should also have visa or work authorization ready.
What's the average rent in Miami in 2026?
Rents vary by neighborhood. Brickell and Edgewater high-rises typically run $2,800 to $5,500 for a one-bedroom. Wynwood and Little Havana skew more affordable. Miami Beach and Coconut Grove sit in the middle to upper range depending on the building.
Which Miami neighborhood is best for renters?
It depends on your lifestyle. Brickell for walkability and nightlife. Edgewater for bay views and quieter new construction. Wynwood for the food and art scene. Coconut Grove for a village feel. Coral Gables for tree-lined streets and Mediterranean architecture.
Or skip all of it
We'll do the
whole thing for you.
A locator handles every step above - for free. You tour, you decide, you move in. We handle the rest.
A free 10-min call narrows thousands of listings to the ones you'll love.
Call (786) 305-7761