Property details·Miramar Beach, Walton County, Florida·35-2S-21-42150-000-1012
515 Topsl Beach Boulevard
Unit 515 Topsl Beach Blvd 1012
Miramar Beach, FL 32550
Walton County
35-2S-21-42150-000-1012
30.371502, -86.324530
| Category | Amount | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Tax value | $4,432.29 | 2026 |
| Market value | $485,210 | 2025 |
| Assessed value | $485,210 | 2026 |
| Building value | $485,210 | — |
Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.
County context
Walton County sits along Florida's Emerald Coast — home to Seaside, the pastel-hued town that inspired The Truman Show, and 30A's string of sugar-white beaches that have become some of the most photographed real estate in the American South. But behind the Instagram-perfect dunes lies a housing market with a structural contradiction so sharp it deserves serious attention: nearly half the county's homes sit empty at any given moment, yet the renters who actually live here year-round are being squeezed harder than almost anywhere in Florida.
That 44.5% vacancy rate isn't a sign of economic distress — it's a sign of economic capture. Walton County's housing stock has been systematically colonized by short-term rental investment and second-home ownership. The Alys Beach and Rosemary Beach developments along 30A aren't built for permanent residents; they're built for peak-season visitors paying $1,000+ a night. When you strip away that vacation overlay, the county has roughly 32,600 occupied households serving a permanent population of under 80,000 — a genuinely small-town community living in the shadow of a luxury tourism machine.
This explains why a county with a median household income of $79,281 — slightly above the national benchmark — still produces a rent burden rate of 51.1%, with nearly one in five renter households in severe burden. The vacation-rental economy has inflated baseline rents to $1,674 median, pricing out the hospitality and service workers who keep the whole ecosystem running.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Vacancy Rate | 44.5% | One of the highest in Florida; driven by vacation/second-home ownership |
| Rent Burden Rate | 51.1% | Far exceeds the 30% threshold; suggests a service-worker housing crisis |
| Median Home Value | $376,400 | 17.6% above national median, despite modest local incomes |
| Gini Index | 0.510 | Exceptionally high inequality — above most Florida counties |
A Gini coefficient of 0.510 is striking. For context, most Florida counties cluster between 0.43 and 0.48. Walton County's score approaches levels typically associated with major urban metros with large wealth gaps — yet this is a low-density county of fewer than 80,000 people. What explains it? A dual economy: wealthy retirees and property investors sitting alongside a working-class service population with limited educational attainment (only 22.6% hold bachelor's degrees, well below Florida's 32%+ average). The child poverty rate of 18.0% against an adult median income above $79,000 tells that story in a single data point.
The 14.1% uninsured rate and relatively low labor force participation (59.0%) reinforce this: many permanent residents are older, lower-income, or working irregular hours in tourism-adjacent jobs with few benefits.
What makes Walton County, Florida unique? Walton County contains some of the most valuable beachfront real estate in the Southeast — the 30A corridor — while simultaneously functioning as a working-class Gulf Coast county. That tension between vacation-home wealth and service-worker poverty shapes almost everything about its housing market, from sky-high vacancy rates to severe rent burdens.
Is Walton County affordable to live in year-round? For renters, increasingly no. Despite incomes slightly above the national average, the vacation-rental economy has pushed median rents to $1,674 and left more than half of renter households spending beyond the recommended 30% of income on housing. Homeownership (77.2%) remains a viable path for those who got in early, but entry-level buyers now face a market heavily distorted by investor demand.
Why is the vacancy rate so high in Walton County? Nearly 45% of the county's housing units are unoccupied at any given time because a substantial share of the housing stock — particularly along the 30A beachfront — functions as short-term vacation rentals or second homes rather than primary residences. This isn't economic decline; it's the structural consequence of building a real estate market around tourism.
Miramar Beach has 17,831 properties in our comprehensive database.
Properties in Miramar Beach average $961,945, reflecting a competitive market.
The price per square foot of $499 reflects strong property valuations in this area.
Home prices in Miramar Beach are 12% lower than the Walton County average.
| Metric | Miramar Beach | Walton County | vs County |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $961,945 | $1,087,699 | -12% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 1,926 | 2,089 | -8% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $499 | $521 | -4% |
| Properties | 17,831 | 112,462 | -84% |
Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.
The average home price in Miramar Beach, FL is $961,945, based on analysis of 17,831 properties in our database.
Our database includes 17,831 properties in Miramar Beach, FL, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Miramar Beach, FL is $499. This is calculated from an average home price of $961,945 and average size of 1,926 square feet.
Homes in Miramar Beach, FL average 1,926 square feet, with an average price of $961,945.
Miramar Beach, FL is one of many cities in Walton County, FL with property data available. Browse other cities in the county to compare market conditions and pricing.
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