Investing in Florida: All Major Markets
Florida has been the number one destination for domestic migration in recent years, and its real estate market reflects that demand. No state income tax, year-round warm weather, tourism, and a growing tech sector create strong fundamentals across multiple metro areas.
Markets at a glance
| Market | Median Price |
|---|---|
| Tampa Bay | $340K-$380K |
| Jacksonville | $270K-$320K |
| Orlando | $340K-$390K |
| Miami-Dade | $450K-$550K |
| Fort Myers / Cape Coral | $320K-$380K |
| Pensacola | $260K-$320K |
Why invest in this region
This region offers a combination of factors that attract real estate investors:
- Affordability: Housing prices in many markets remain well below the national median, creating accessible entry points for both new and experienced investors
- Rental yields: Lower purchase prices relative to rental rates produce strong cash flow returns. Many markets in this region meet or exceed the 1% rule
- Population dynamics: Some markets benefit from strong growth while others offer stability. Understanding which markets are growing versus stable affects your investment strategy
- Economic diversity: Markets anchored by healthcare, education, government, and military employment tend to be more recession-resistant than single-industry economies
Investment strategies by market type
Growth markets
Markets with strong population and job growth offer both cash flow and appreciation potential. Focus on areas with new employer announcements, infrastructure investment, and positive migration trends. Use ARV analysis to identify properties where renovation can capture the appreciation premium.
Cash flow markets
Markets with lower price points and strong rental demand are ideal for buy-and-hold investors. Focus on properties that meet the 1% rule or better. Use ARR analysis to present compelling rental returns to your buyer list. Cap rate and cash-on-cash return calculations help compare deals across markets.
Value-add markets
Markets with aging housing stock and growing demand offer BRRRR (Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat) opportunities. Target properties where renovation can simultaneously increase rental income and create equity for refinancing. See our BRRRR analysis guide.
Finding deals
Deal sourcing strategies vary by market but the fundamentals apply everywhere:
- Finding motivated sellers through direct outreach, driving for dollars, and targeted marketing
- Inherited properties from aging populations — a consistent lead source across all markets
- Pre-foreclosure outreach to homeowners facing financial difficulty
- Skip tracing to reach property owners with accurate contact information
- Building relationships with local professionals (title companies, attorneys, property managers) who encounter motivated sellers
Building a buyer list
Your buyer list is the foundation of your wholesale business. In this region, your buyers will include local landlords building portfolios, out-of-state investors seeking returns not available in their home markets, flippers targeting renovation opportunities, and BRRRR investors combining cash flow with equity building.
Use Deal Run's investor search to identify active cash buyers and landlords based on actual transaction data. Filter by location, investment strategy, and activity level to build a targeted buyer list for each market you operate in.
Getting started
Choose one market and master it. Learn the neighborhoods, build your buyer relationships, develop your deal sourcing channels, and create systems for accurate comp analysis and professional deal packages. Once your systems are working in one market, expand to adjacent markets using virtual wholesaling techniques.
State and market guides
Related guides
- Complete Wholesaling Guide
- How to Calculate ARV
- ARV vs ARR: Which Matters?
- Building a Buyer List
- How to Wholesale Virtually
- Closing Costs by State
- Florida Wholesaling Laws & Compliance
- How Closings Work in Florida