Baccarat Residences Brickell is now delivering. At 99 SE 5th Street, Related Group and SH Hotels & Resorts have completed their 75-story, 324-unit tower — a milestone that validates the branded-luxury thesis while presenting a critical pricing question for Miami buyers in 2026. The data tells us something important: Baccarat is priced for a specific buyer profile, and it isn't for everyone.
The project's completion arrives at an inflection point. Miami's luxury market is experiencing record prices ($1.23 million average) paired with elevated inventory (23 months of supply). International capital continues to flow in — particularly from Latin America — but domestic buyer appetite has softened. Understanding where Baccarat fits in this landscape is essential for making an informed decision.
Baccarat Residences — The Essentials
Let's start with the fundamentals. Baccarat is located in Brickell's central spine, between downtown and the river, where demand for ultra-luxury residences remains concentrated. The tower rises 75 stories with residences beginning on the 15th floor — a layout that maximizes river and bay views while creating clear separation between hospitality and residential programming.
Baccarat Residences — Key Facts
- Location: 99 SE 5th Street, Brickell
- Height: 75 stories with 324 residences (15th floor and above)
- Developer: Related Group + SH Hotels & Resorts
- Design: Arquitectonica (exterior), Meyer Davis (interiors), Enzo Enea (landscape)
- Signature feature: Crystal-inspired chiseled glass facade
- Status: Delivered 2026
- Unit mix: Tower residences, river flats, duplexes, penthouses
The design is the story Baccarat wants you to hear first. Arquitectonica's crystal-inspired glass facade is visually distinctive — intentionally designed to differentiate the tower from the growing cluster of glass-box luxury condos in Brickell. Meyer Davis interiors and Enzo Enea's landscape design signal a commitment to amenity quality that extends beyond lobbies and swimming pools.
The question is whether that design premium justifies the pricing. Let's look at the numbers.
Pricing Breakdown — What You're Actually Paying
Baccarat's unit pricing is stratified by type and elevation:
- Tower Residences (1BR+den): $2.5M–$6M (~$1,600–$1,800 per sq ft)
- River Flats & Duplexes (2BR+den to 3BR+den): $2.3M–$5.3M (~$1,500–$1,700 per sq ft)
- Penthouses: $9M–$27M ($2,500–$3,000 per sq ft)
Those penthouse prices need context. Resale listings for delivered units are trading at a significant premium — $5.6M to $31.8M depending on location and finishes. That premium signals two things: (1) early buyers at delivery are capturing immediate appreciation, and (2) those early positions are tight and require cash or strong financing.
The broader data picture: Miami's average luxury sold price stands at $1,214,067, with pricing per square foot at $1,030. Baccarat's entry pricing at $1,600–$1,800 per sq ft is well above market average. That's a 55–75% premium over median luxury pricing — which is justified by location, brand, and design, but not guaranteed to perform for buyers entering near peak pricing.
The Competitive Landscape — How Baccarat Stacks Up
Brickell's branded luxury pipeline is deep. Baccarat doesn't operate in isolation — it competes directly with four other major branded developments that define the segment:
Brickell Branded Luxury — Competitive Comparison
- Baccarat: $1,600–$3,000/sq ft, 75 stories, 324 units, delivered 2026
- St. Regis Brickell: $1,700–$2,400/sq ft, 50 stories, 154 units, pre-construction
- Cipriani Residences: $1,200–$2,500/sq ft, 80 stories, 405 units, under construction
- Mercedes-Benz Places: ~$1,000–$1,200/sq ft (Tower 1), 67 stories, 791 units, 2027 delivery
What does this table tell us? Cipriani offers lower entry pricing with greater unit count — appealing to investors and value-buyers. Mercedes-Benz Places is priced aggressively at $1,000–$1,200 per sq ft, leveraging its automotive brand and scale to capture price-sensitive international buyers. St. Regis is the ultraluxury play at 154 units — exclusivity at a premium.
Baccarat sits in the middle: premium pricing, moderate unit count (324), and design differentiation via the crystal facade. It appeals to buyers who want branded pedigree without the lifestyle-heavy programming of Mercedes or the ultra-limited tier of St. Regis. The positioning is defensible but dependent on maintaining pricing power as competing supply ramps.
Market Context — The Supply Paradox
Here's where the analysis gets nuanced. Miami's luxury market is experiencing a contradiction: record prices paired with elevated inventory. The numbers:
Miami Luxury Market — April 2026
- Average luxury sold price: $1,214,067 (+12.4% YoY)
- Luxury price per sq ft: $1,030 (all-time record)
- Months of supply (luxury): 23 months (vs. 6 for balanced market)
- Brickell supply specifically: 20.5 months
- Downtown Miami supply: 20.5 months
- Miami Beach supply: 18.9 months
- Sales volume: Down 38.4% YoY despite record pricing
- Mortgage rates: ~5.98% (down from 6.85% a year ago)
What this means: Sellers are holding firm on pricing even as buyer volume declines. The market has bifurcated. Cash buyers and well-capitalized international investors are active and setting prices. Mortgage-dependent domestic buyers are sidelined by rising inventory and rate uncertainty.
For Baccarat specifically, this environment is mixed. Delivered inventory has appeal — it eliminates construction risk and timeline uncertainty that pre-construction projects carry. But at $1,600–$1,800 per sq ft, Baccarat requires either substantial cash positions or jumbo financing at 5.98% rates. That buyer pool is narrower than it was two years ago.
The International Buyer Angle
Foreign capital is the real story. In 2025, international buyers invested $4.4 billion in South Florida residential real estate, with 49% of all luxury condo sales over the last 18 months completed by international purchasers. Geography matters:
- Colombia: 15% of international buyer volume
- Argentina: 11%
- Mexico: 7%
- Brazil: 7%
- Venezuela: 5%
For these buyers, the Baccarat brand and Related Group's track record (100,000+ units delivered globally) function as trust signals. A Brazilian family hedging against inflation, or a Colombian entrepreneur seeking a Miami base, will evaluate Baccarat differently than a domestic buyer focused on resale appreciation. The branded pedigree, design, and hospitality integration matter more than per-sq-ft comparisons to Cipriani.
A weaker U.S. dollar in early 2026 has further accelerated inbound capital, providing a tailwind for priced-in-dollars luxury real estate.
Gerardo's Take — Who This Building Is For (And Who It Isn't)
Baccarat works for: International buyers seeking brand-affiliated real estate with design differentiation, no construction risk, and immediate occupancy. End-users comfortable with $1,600–$1,800 per sq ft pricing. Investors betting on continued international capital inflows and branded-luxury outperformance versus non-branded inventory.
Baccarat doesn't work for: Domestic buyers prioritizing per-sq-ft value or maximum square footage. Investors betting on price appreciation in a market with 23 months of supply. Buyers uncomfortable with fixed-rate financing at 5.98% jumbo rates. Anyone comparing Baccarat on pricing alone to Cipriani or Mercedes — you'll lose that battle.
The delivery milestone is legitimate validation. Related Group + SH Hotels executed the project on timeline with architectural distinction. The question isn't execution — it's whether you're the buyer this building is designed for.
The data supports continued international demand for branded Miami luxury, but it also shows elevated inventory and softer domestic buyer volume. Baccarat's positioning is defensible. But pricing power depends on maintaining the international capital flows that have defined the market since 2023.
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Market data as of April 2026. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice.