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Miami-Dade County · Florida
Hialeah is Miami-Dade's second-largest city, offering affordable single-family homes and condos with a vibrant Cuban cultural heritage.
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Communities in Hialeah
Venetian Gardens At Count
Community
Hialeah 13th Addn Amd Pl
Community
Villa Bellini Condo
Community
Aquabella Section Two
Community
Bonterra
Community
Aquabella North
New Construction
Aquabella North Replat
New Construction
La Hacienda Country Club
Community
Bellagio Villas
Community
Coral Gate East Condo
Community
Aquabella Section One
Community
Bellagio
Community
Century Gardens
Community
Country Club Of Miami Est
Luxury Enclave
Imperial Terraces Condo
Community
Shoma Homes At Country Cl
Community
Villa Rustica I Condo
Community
Hialeah 14th Addn Rev Pl
Community
Las Brisas Country Club
Community
Los Suenos Condo
Community
Mirassou Condo
Community
Amend Plt El Prado Countr
Community
Countryside Village Condo
Community
Harbour Sub
Community
Browse by Zip Code in Hialeah
About Hialeah Real Estate
Browse Hialeah homes for sale across every neighborhood and price point in Miami-Dade. Available homes span single-family, townhome, and condo segments throughout the city. Hialeah includes gated golf communities, 55+ active adult neighborhoods, waterfront estates, and newer master-planned subdivisions. HOA fees vary by community type, from modest maintenance fees in non-gated subdivisions to higher dues in full-amenity country clubs. The city sits within Miami-Dade, offering access to South Florida beaches, major employment centers, and healthcare hubs. For current Miami-Dade market data, see Florida Realtors' monthly statistics. Browse the latest Hialeah listings below. Then connect with a Pure Equity Realty agent to schedule a private showing.
Hialeah is an active market for investment buyers in Miami-Dade County. DSCR loans, short-term rental financing, and conventional investment programs are available. Pure Equity Realty lists investment properties for 1% commission and offers free buyer representation.
There are 782 active listings for sale in Hialeah right now. The median list price is $450,000, or about $319 per square foot. Listings span $120,000 to $2,500,000, so there is inventory across most budgets. Homes are averaging 112 days on market. These figures update from the MLS as the market moves.
Hialeah is Miami-Dade's second-largest city and one of the most affordable major-city markets in South Florida, built around dense, practical single-family neighborhoods rather than waterfront or high-rise glamour. The housing is overwhelmingly modest single-family homes, duplexes, and low-to-mid-rise condos and townhomes, much of it built from the 1950s through the 1980s, with newer construction concentrated in the western expansion areas and in Hialeah Gardens. This is a working-family market with deep Cuban and Latin American roots, where multigenerational households are common and value is the headline. Entry-level buyers can still find one of the more affordable houses or condos in Miami-Dade, mid-range money buys an updated single-family home, often with the duplex or in-law potential that is common here, and the upper end is the newer construction and the larger homes in the western and Hialeah Gardens neighborhoods.
The geography breaks into recognizable areas. The older core around East and West Hialeah, near the historic Hialeah Park Racing and Casino with its famous flamingos and Mediterranean architecture, holds the classic mid-century housing. The area around Amelia Earhart Park and the Miami Lakes border offers a mix of homes and recreation. West Hialeah and Hialeah Gardens, a separate incorporated city woven into the same fabric, contain much of the newer single-family and townhome construction. Palm Springs North and the Country Club area near the Palmetto Expressway add more suburban-style options. Because Hialeah is landlocked and dense, buyers seeking newer or larger homes often push west into Hialeah Gardens and Miami Lakes, while those prioritizing price stay in the established core, where the city's walkable commercial corridors along Palm Avenue, West 49th Street, and Okeechobee Road put shopping and services close at hand.
The appeal is affordability, community, and location: a central Miami-Dade position with the Palmetto (826), the Gratigny, and I-75 all close, Tri-Rail and Metrorail connections, Amelia Earhart Park for green space, and one of the strongest small-business and cultural scenes in the county. The practical notes differ from the coastal cities. Flood exposure is generally lower than on the barrier islands, though parts of the city near canals and the western edge can carry flood-zone designations, so checking the specific flood map for a given address is still worth doing. Insurance cost here is driven mostly by roof age, wind-mitigation features, and the older housing stock, so an updated roof and impact windows meaningfully help premiums. Many homes are sold with permitted (or sometimes unpermitted) additions and second units given the multigenerational demand, so verifying permits, the legal use, and any HOA or condo rules where they apply is an important part of due diligence in this market.
Hialeah Market Stats
Live MLSHialeah at a Glance
Frequently Asked Questions
Buying in Hialeah
The buying process in Hialeah is the one used across Miami-Dade County. Getting a mortgage pre-approval first tells you your real budget and lets you move quickly when the right home comes up. Property taxes factor into the monthly payment: the median annual property tax in Miami-Dade County is about $3,516. Florida's homestead exemption lowers the taxable value of a primary residence, and the Save Our Homes cap limits how fast that assessed value can rise from year to year. Budget for homeowners insurance as well. Rates in Florida reflect wind and flood exposure, so gather quotes early and check whether a specific address sits in a FEMA flood zone. Once you are under contract, plan for a home inspection and, if you are financing, a lender appraisal, both of which fall inside the inspection period. Working with an agent who knows Hialeah means you see new listings here the day they reach the market.
Selling in Hialeah
Selling a home in Hialeah starts with pricing it correctly for current conditions. List prices in Hialeah currently center around $450,000, which is a starting reference for where a comparable home might be positioned. Homes that are decluttered, professionally photographed, and priced to recent comparable sales tend to draw the most interest in the first two weeks, when a listing is newest and gets the most views. Florida sellers usually pay the documentary stamp tax on the deed, currently $0.70 per $100 of the sale price in most counties, along with prorated property taxes and, by local custom in many areas, the owner's title insurance policy. We provide a no-obligation home valuation for Hialeah owners, so you can see what your property could sell for before you commit to listing.