Sunny Isles Beach sits on a barrier island in northeastern Miami-Dade County, between Bal Harbour and Aventura along the Atlantic coast. The directory holds 978 listings here across 8 ZIP codes. The category mix is the most distinctive in the area. Real estate dominates the top at 190 listings, more than double the second category. Salons follow at 84, and restaurants come in third at 79.
Real estate at 190 in a city of this size is the signature of a high-density luxury condominium market. Sunny Isles Beach has built one of the densest concentrations of oceanfront luxury high-rise development in the country over the past two decades, with several signature towers along Collins Avenue anchoring the skyline. Many of the listed real-estate operators specialize in international and second-home buyers, particularly from Latin America and the former Soviet states, both of which have been long-running buyer pipelines for the area's luxury inventory. Several of the larger practices in the listings work primarily in foreign-buyer transactions and the related legal and tax-structuring services.
The hotel count at 29 and vacation-rental count at 15 sit alongside the residential profile to round out the resort-economy footprint. The landmark count of 56 is high for a city of this size and reflects both the architectural-landmark status of several of the signature buildings and the broader oceanfront public-realm features that anchor the city's geography.
The gym count at 14 and park count at 14 fill out the personal-services and civic block, both running at counts that reflect the resident-density and the higher-income demographic that supports paid wellness services and active waterfront recreation.
Home services in Sunny Isles Beach typically operate at the top of the South Florida pricing range. High-rise condominium work runs at a premium because of building-access requirements, association approvals, and the specialty labor required for high-floor work. Quotes for renovations in the luxury towers run substantially above the broader Miami-Dade market for equivalent square footage.
Florida licenses contractors, electricians, and plumbers through the Department of Business and Professional Regulation. Coastal-construction work may carry additional county and state requirements. Verify at the DBPR and the relevant Miami-Dade offices before signing for major work.