Three Man-Made Islands, 360° Bay Views, and Miami Beach Is Your Backyard
North Bay Village exists because someone in the 1940s looked at empty Biscayne Bay and thought: what if we just made land here? Three man-made islands — Harbor Island, Treasure Island, and North Bay Island — dredged from the bay floor and stitched together by causeways. The result: a tiny municipality of 8,159 people floating between Miami and Miami Beach with water views in every direction.
| Population | 8,159 (2020 Census) |
|---|---|
| Land Area | 0.8 square miles (3 islands) |
| Demographics | 58% Hispanic, 32% White, diverse |
| Cost of Living | 27% above national average |
| Location | 79th Street Causeway — Miami to Miami Beach |
The Location Play
Pull up a map. North Bay Village sits on the 79th Street Causeway, which means you're equidistant from mainland Miami and Miami Beach. Five minutes to either. That's the entire value proposition distilled: Miami Beach views and proximity without Miami Beach prices or property taxes.
The islands are connected to the mainland by the JFK Causeway (79th Street). Morning commute to Brickell? You're going against traffic. Weekend at the beach? You're already halfway there. Airport? Twenty minutes flat.
The Real Estate Picture
North Bay Village is a condo market. The islands are small enough that high-rise development makes sense, and the bay views from upper floors are the whole point. You'll find everything from 1960s-era low-rises with renovation potential to newer glass towers with floor-to-ceiling windows and direct bay panoramas.
The inventory skews toward:
- Waterfront condos — The dominant property type, ranging from starter units to penthouse level
- Bay-view townhouses — Limited but coveted on Treasure Island
- Single-family homes — Rare on the islands, mostly on North Bay Island, often with private docks
Island Life, Urban Proximity
Living on a man-made island in Biscayne Bay sounds exotic until you realize you're five minutes from a Target. That's the North Bay Village paradox: it feels like an escape but functions like a neighborhood. The sunsets over the mainland skyline are genuinely spectacular — and they're free from your balcony every night.
- Shuckers Waterfront Grill — Casual waterfront dining, a local institution on the causeway
- The Crab House — Bayside seafood with Downtown Miami views
- Pelican Harbor Marina — Adjacent marina and Seabird Station (pelican rescue)
- Miami Beach — Lincoln Road, the boardwalk, and the beach are a 5-minute drive
Compared to Nearby Island Communities
| North Bay Village | Miami Beach | Bay Harbor Islands | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vibe | Quiet island, urban access | Tourist-heavy, nightlife | Residential, family |
| Price Level | Entry to mid | Premium | Upper-mid |
| Views | 360° bay | Ocean + bay | Bay |
| Tourist Traffic | None | Heavy | None |
| Property Tax Rate | Lower | Higher | Moderate |
Who Should Buy Here
Buyers who want water views and Miami Beach proximity at a lower price point. Remote workers who want a balcony overlooking Biscayne Bay without the South Beach circus. Investors targeting the causeway rental market — 79th Street connects two of the most in-demand zip codes in Florida, and tenants know it.
Browse every unit in North Bay Village on brokerone.io — ownership history, assessed values, permit activity, and flood zone classification.