Mamdani win spurs $100M Florida real estate rush as ‘nervous’ New Yorkers flee, developer says. Is the Big Apple over?

Angela Weiss / Getty Images

Moneywise and Yahoo Finance LLC may earn commission or revenue through links in the content below.

How can one city’s election shake up the real estate market 1,300 miles away?

According to Miami developers, it’s all because of one man — New York City’s incoming mayor, Zohran Mamdani.

In the months leading up to the election, Isaac Toledano, CEO of Miami-based developer BH Group, says he’s seen a surge of interest — and money — pouring in from the north. His firm has closed more than $100 million in signed contracts from New York buyers over the past few months — about twice last year’s volume.

“I think the election accelerated how people make decisions, I think people are nervous [for] what’s coming, how it’s going to affect their lifestyle, the quality of life, taxes, potential of crime [or] no crime,” Toledano told Fox News Digital (1).

“This unknown in what’s coming and the fact that Mamdani said loud and clear what he’s going to do and what he believes is the right thing for New York, make[s] a lot of people very nervous.”

Mamdani, the 34-year-old democratic socialist, has defeated former Governor Andrew Cuomo, becoming the first Muslim and first South Asian to serve as New York City’s mayor.

Mamdani campaigned on sweeping progressive promises — including rent freeze, free childcare, government run grocery stores and free buses — all to be funded by “taxing corporations and the 1%” (2).

Toledano said he wasn’t surprised to see fleeing New Yorkers driving Florida’s latest real estate boom — but the scale of the $100 million windfall was still “higher than expected.”

A JL Partners survey for the Daily Mail found that 9% of New Yorkers say they would “definitely” leave the city if Mamdani won (3). With a population of 8.5 million, that would amount to roughly 765,000 potential departures.

One developer said he even contributed to Mamdani’s campaign — not out of support for his platform, but because he expected Mamdani’s policies to hurt the city, creating opportunities to buy later at a discount.

“Mamdani, I think, is probably going to end the city. Being an entrepreneur, I think that in five years we’ll go and pick up all the pieces at a very low price point,” said Kevin Maloney, founder and chief executive officer of Property Markets Group, The New York Times reported (4).