Waldorf Astoria Residences Miami brings America's most iconic hospitality name to the city's first supertall: 300 Biscayne Boulevard, in the heart of Downtown. It is preconstruction —there is no resale yet, you reserve from the developer— and the best lines are allocated in the first rounds, at the project's lowest price list.
At roughly 100 floors and 1,049 feet, it will be the tallest residential tower south of New York and Miami's first supertall skyscraper: 387 residences above a 205-key Waldorf Astoria hotel, with ground-floor retail. The design is by Carlos Ott —concept— with Sieger Suarez Architects, and its silhouette —nine stacked, offset glass cubes, each one distinct— already redefines the bay's skyline.
For today's buyer what matters is the entry point: reserving early, securing the best exposure —bay, city or high floor— the budget allows, before inventory thins out toward the 2027 delivery. This page orders that —how the pre-sale is allocated, how to choose a line, and the buying process— so you enter with judgment.
What makes the project different
Waldorf Astoria Miami's value is not just the brand: it is combining Hilton's hotel service, an unrepeatable architectural silhouette and record height at the city's most central address. Among what defines the offering:
- The Waldorf Astoria brand Florida's first Waldorf Astoria residence and hotel —a five-star Hilton operation— with a service standard that supports future resale value.
- The tallest tower south of NY roughly 100 floors and 1,049 feet: Miami's first supertall, a skyline landmark that does not repeat and anchors the asset as a market reference.
- Carlos Ott + Sieger Suarez design nine stacked glass cubes —each with its own floor plan— and floor-to-ceiling windows over Biscayne Bay, a differentiator against Downtown's generic towers.
- Developed by PMG + Greybrook a team with a track record of execution in Miami, backed by Mohari Hospitality and Hilton's hotel operation.