0:00
/
0:00
Preview

Is Bankruptcy Court Best Way For Bulk Buyers To Target Miami's Distressed Condo Associations?

In this episode of Condo Capitalism™, real estate expert Jack McCabe of McCabeResearch.com discusses how differing price opinions make condo terminations difficult for troubled associations.

Condo Capitalism™ is a weekly podcast hosted by Peter Zalewski of the Miami Condo Investing Club™ that provides data-driven analysis on distressed real estate—foreclosures, shortsales and bank-owned REOs—in the tricounty South Florida region of Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach.

The program tracks the Florida Condo Association Financial Cliff, where rising maintenance fees, special assessments and insurance costs are squeezing cash-strapped owners.

On the show, experts analyze how the national “two-sided risk”—rising inflation and falling employment—magnifies these local pressures, potentially forcing a capitulation by owners who can no longer afford condo living.

Join Peter Zalewski at MiamiCondo.Club for a livestream every weekday at 4 pm (Miami time). On-demand recordings of all shows are available here.

Take the tour

Episode Overview

In the Feb. 5, 2026, episode of the Condo Capitalism™ podcast, host Peter Zalewski interviews veteran real estate expert Jack McCabe of McCabeResearch.com regarding why bankruptcy court could become the primary venue for investors to acquire distressed condo associations that are unable to navigate the traditional termination process.

Zalewski cites what looks to be an emerging trend for this shift, pointing to a Delray Beach 55-and-older condo community facing $40 million in debt and the recent Chapter 11 filing of a mixed-use project in Boca Raton as evidence of what could be a mounting crisis.

McCabe explains that as insurance and reserve requirements skyrocket, many associations will find that filing for bankruptcy is the only viable path forward for buildings that can no longer meet their financial obligations.

Attend monthly virtual meeting

A critical takeaway from the exchange is that the South Florida condo market has reached a financial stalemate where the cost of mandatory structural repairs and insurance has outpaced the valuation of many Vintage buildings, effectively forcing the market toward a new phase of bankruptcy filings.

The conversation added color regarding the 30-year Milestone Inspections and the Structural Integrity Reserve Studies (SIRS)—conducted every 10 years—which are acting as a financial “one-two punch” for associations.

While the Milestone Inspection identifies immediate, big-ticket repairs that often trigger a massive special assessment, the SIRS creates a strict savings plan that can permanently hike monthly maintenance fees.

DIY with the club

This shift effectively ends the era of low monthly dues by forcing owners to catch up on years of neglected maintenance through a combination of lump-sum payments and higher monthly fees.

Zalewski said this environment creates a stalemate where individual owners often hold unrealistic price expectations, while McCabe predicts developers will pivot toward court-supervised auctions to bypass these holdouts and secure distressed assets.

Beyond the legal battlegrounds, the discussion delved into the stark reality of the 2026 South Florida Winter Buying Season.

Overall inventory levels in Greater Downtown Miami reached 20.1 months of supply while condo prices fell 7.2% per square foot on a Year-over-Year basis.

Gain a listing advantage

This trend of rising supply and falling prices extends across the Intracoastal Waterway to Sunny Isles Beach where there are 23.1 months of supply and a 5.0% drop in average sale prices on a price per square foot basis.

This post is for paid subscribers