Code Violations & Unpermitted Work in 10670
2 open violations across 1 properties — cross-referenced with 1 building permits, recent sales, and tax assessments.
Permit Cross-Reference
Property Value Impact
Ownership of Violated Properties
Recent Sales on Properties with Violations
Transactions since 2023 on properties that currently have open code violations
| Address | Sale Price |
|---|---|
| 10670 CORAL WAY, Tamiami, FL 33165-0000 | $3,940,000 |
Unknown (2)
| Case # | Address | Market Value |
|---|---|---|
| 200103003972 | 10670 CORAL WAY, Tamiami, FL 33165- | $3,349,000 |
| 200303003946 | 10670 CORAL WAY, Tamiami, FL 33165- | $3,349,000 |
What Do These Violations Mean for 10670?
10670 has 2 open code violations across 1 properties. Of these, 0 are expired building permits — meaning someone pulled a permit to do construction work but never completed the final inspection required to close the permit. The work may or may not meet current building codes.
Of the 1 properties with violations, 0 are individually owned and 2 are corporate-owned (LLC, trust, or corp). The higher corporate ownership rate suggests many of these may be investment or rental properties where maintenance has been deferred.
Frequently Asked Questions
What happens if I buy a property with an expired permit in 10670?
Under Florida law, code violations and open permits transfer with the property. You become responsible for bringing the work into compliance, which may require hiring a licensed contractor, scheduling inspections, and potentially undoing or redoing work that doesn't meet code. Always request a permit search before closing.
Can I get a mortgage on a property with code violations?
It depends on the violation type. FHA and VA loans typically require all open violations to be resolved before closing. Conventional loans may allow some minor violations but not "unsafe structure" designations. Cash buyers have no such restrictions, which is why investors often target these properties.
How do I resolve an expired permit in Miami-Dade County?
Contact the Miami-Dade Building Department to request a re-inspection. If the original work meets current code, you may be able to close the permit with a single inspection visit. If the work doesn't meet code, you'll need to hire a licensed contractor to bring it into compliance before re-inspection.