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Zip Code 12300

Code Violations & Unpermitted Work in 12300

9 open violations across 8 properties — cross-referenced with 141 building permits, recent sales, and tax assessments.

9
Total Violations
2
Expired Permits
0
Unsafe Structures
8
Properties
141
Building Permits

Permit Cross-Reference

Properties with violations + permits 6
Properties with violations, no permits 2

Total permits in zip 141
Issued (active) 0
Final (completed) 0
Expired / voided 25
Total permit value $7,656,763

Property Value Impact

Avg assessed (properties with violations) $5,192,881
Avg assessed (violation-free properties) $1,101,718
371% higher
assessment gap for violated properties

Properties with violations 8
Violation-free properties 137

Ownership of Violated Properties

Corporate-owned 3
Individual-owned 6

All Other Code Violations (6)

General building code, zoning, and property maintenance violations.

Case # Address Market Value
20260247094 12300 SW 75 ST, Kendall, FL 33183-0 $1,097,999
20260246402 12300 NW 22 CT, North Miami, FL 331 $372,050
20250239355 12300 SW 202 AVE, The Hammocks, FL $849,046
20250236441 12300 SW 127 AVE, Kendall West, FL $10,750,000
20140162548 12300 SW 228 ST, Palmetto Bay, FL 3 $360,083
20130159329 12300 NW 22 AVE, North Miami, FL 33 $287,086

Expired Permit (2)

Building permits that were pulled but never received final inspection — work may not meet code.

Case # Address Market Value
A2026001826 12300 NW 32 AVE, North Miami, FL 33 $29,303,700
A2017002843 12300 SW 228 ST, Palmetto Bay, FL 3 $360,083

Unknown (1)

Case # Address Market Value
200112007566 12300 SW 51 ST, Kendall, FL 33175-0 $2,693,921

What Do These Violations Mean for 12300?

12300 has 9 open code violations across 8 properties. Of these, 2 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.

2 properties in this zip have code violations but no building permits on record at all — a strong signal that work was done entirely without permits. This is a significant risk factor for buyers, as unpermitted work can affect insurance coverage, financing eligibility, and resale value.

Of the 8 properties with violations, 6 are individually owned and 3 are corporate-owned (LLC, trust, or corp). Most violated properties are individually owned, suggesting owner-occupied homes where renovation or maintenance projects stalled.

Frequently Asked Questions

What happens if I buy a property with an expired permit in 12300?

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.