Florida condo owners are waking up to a brutal new reality: their homes are becoming virtually worthless.
The property problem across the state has been triggered by a tough new safety law brought in after the 2021 deadly Surfside condominium collapse that killed 98 people, forcing aging buildings to undergo inspections and fund massive repairs.
Florida-based real estate expert Katrin Pfitzenreiter told the Daily Mail that, for many owners, this has meant repair bills in excess of $100,000, soaring HOA fees – which averaged $135 per month in 2025 – and a market flooded with listings no one wants.
Worse still, hundreds of buildings have effectively been blacklisted by mortgage giants, meaning buyers can’t even secure loans to purchase them.
The scale of the crisis is enormous.
More than half of Florida’s condo stock is now over 30 years old, placing millions of units under stricter post-Surfside regulations. And in some cases, prices appear to have collapsed.
On Zillow, the Daily Mail found dozens of properties listed in Florida at around the four-figure price mark, ranging from standalone plots to high-rises and multi-unit structures.
The condos were over priced from the beginning.
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