When a $500,000 condo costs $724,000 to own, the appraisal is measuring something that no longer exists.
Christy Rojas has lived in the same Southwest Miami-Dade condo for about 20 years. She now pays over $600 a month in HOA dues and special assessments. That's double her mortgage. "You either pay for it," she told NBC Miami, "or you sell and leave."
The publicly available reporting on Rojas is thin. We don't know her unit's appraised value, her building's name, or whether she's already made that choice. What we know is the math: a woman who bought into ownership as stability now spends more on the obligations attached to her home than on the home itself. And the formal valuation of her unit doesn't acknowledge that reality exists.
She is not unusual. Half of all condo units sold in Miami-Dade in 2024 were priced below $300,000. These were the affordable units, the entry point for working-class families, retirees, people who came to Florida and stayed. Two-thirds of Miami's condo buildings are over 30 years old. The people inside them are the ones least likely to have somewhere else to go.
The backward-looking machine
Residential appraisals run on comparable sales. An appraiser looks at what similar units sold for within the last 12 months, adjusts for differences, and arrives at a value. Fannie Mae's Selling Guide requires that adjustments reflect "market reaction" to differences between properties. Market-supported data, not projections.
The methodology assumes carrying costs are stable and visible. In South Florida's aging condo market, the costs reshaping ownership are building-specific, forward-looking, and invisible to the comp-based system. A $134,000 special assessment voted on six months after the last comparable sale doesn't appear in the data an appraiser uses. A master insurance policy that spiked nearly 1,000% doesn't register as a line item. The tool measures where the market has been. It has no mechanism for costs that haven't closed a sale yet.
What salt air and withdrawn carriers built
After the 2021 Surfside collapse killed 98 people, Florida passed structural inspection mandates requiring buildings three stories or higher to fund reserves for the repairs those inspections reveal. For decades, condo boards had voted to waive reserve requirements, keeping monthly dues artificially low. As of January 2026, that option is gone.
An estimated 900,000 condo units in buildings over 30 years old now face these requirements. The inspections are revealing what decades of salt-air corrosion and deferred maintenance have done to concrete and rebar, and the bills are landing as special assessments ranging from $10,000 to $400,000 per unit.
The structural crisis has company. Even buildings in good shape face a secondary hit: the insurance crisis driven by carriers withdrawing from hurricane and flood exposure across Florida. Individual condo premiums are up over 50% since Surfside. FEMA flood insurance continues rising 15 to 18% annually. The average monthly assessment for a Miami-Dade high-rise hit $1,900. Salt corrodes these buildings faster as seas rise. Storms reprice their insurance as water warms. The structural bill and the climate bill arrive on the same invoice.
At the Cricket Club in North Miami, each owner's share of a $30 million repair bill comes to $134,000. Some units there have sold for $110,000. The assessment exceeds the sale price.
One documented case makes the gap precise: a 79-year-old owner listed his unit for $500,000, but the buyer inherits his $224,000 remaining assessment, making the true entry cost $724,000. The appraisal captures the $500,000. The other $224,000 lives outside the valuation entirely.
The list nobody gets to see
Then there's the blacklist. Fannie Mae maintains a confidential list of condo buildings ineligible for conventional mortgage backing. In South Florida, that list includes 696 buildings across three counties, nearly half of all ineligible buildings statewide. Owners typically discover their building's status when a buyer's mortgage application gets rejected and the sale collapses. The estimated discount: 15 to 30 percent below comparable properties.
Information arrives in the wrong format, at the wrong time, to the wrong person. The owner finds out their building is blacklisted after they've priced the unit. The buyer finds out after they've applied for financing. The appraiser never finds out at all.
What the numbers already know
Condo listings for buildings over 30 years old surged 56% year-over-year. Nearly 43% of Florida condo sellers cut their asking prices in mid-2025, up from 17% in 2021. Miami-Dade County launched a special assessment assistance program offering loans up to $50,000. It was paused in August 2025 due to overwhelming demand. The cap is a fraction of what most owners owe.
Peter Zalewski, who tracks the market at Condo Vultures, put it plainly:
"Once condo prices start to fall, we go into a doom loop. Think of a plane that's lost power and is circling."
The appraisal says the plane is still climbing.
Things to follow up on...
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The appraisal gap widens: A April 2026 HousingWire analysis documents how insurer withdrawals from high-risk markets are leaving appraisers with fewer and older comps, compounding the disconnect between valuations and actual ownership costs in climate-stressed areas.
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Unequal burden, by design: New Brookings Institution research from April 2026 finds that insurance market instability hits low-income Black and Latino communities hardest, layering climate-driven costs onto neighborhoods already facing the steepest barriers to building wealth through homeownership.
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Eighteen states push back: At least 18 state legislatures have introduced insurance reform bills in 2026, many modeled on Colorado's HB25-1182, which requires insurers to disclose their risk models and credit household mitigation efforts.
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Mortgages under climate stress: New ICE Climate data shows that loans on homes with high flood risk have a roughly 40% higher probability of severe delinquency compared to low-risk properties, suggesting the phantom equity problem is already showing up in loan performance.

