
A Four Seasons Residences at The Surf Club condo in Surfside just closed for $17 million, a resale that turned a 2020 purchase into a more-than-triple return and confirmed that hotel-serviced beachfront living along Collins Avenue is still very much a thing.
According to Realtor.com, unit S-305 at 9001 Collins Avenue closed on January 30, 2026, for $17,000,000. The listing billed the residence as an approximately 4,323-square-foot ocean walk-through with four bedrooms, multiple terraces and full Four Seasons services.
Unit history and the price jump
Public MLS history shows S-305 previously traded in 2020 for about $5.2 million, meaning the resale more than tripled in value over six years, per Redfin. Listing records show the apartment was brought back to market in mid-2025 at roughly $18.75 million before ultimately closing below that asking price.
How the sale fits local trophy deals
The closing slides in alongside other headline grabbers in the Surf Club pocket, including a unit that hit the market with a $38.2 million asking price in January and found a buyer, as reported by The Real Deal. It also follows record-setting penthouse activity at the neighboring Seaway development chronicled by The Wall Street Journal, a combination that has kept Surfside in the national luxury-market spotlight.
Why buyers keep paying a premium
Part of the draw is the blend of private-residence scale with hotel-style services. Owners at The Surf Club tap into restaurant, spa and private-beach offerings along with staffed amenities that appeal to buyers who want a turnkey beachfront setup. The property website for Four Seasons describes the project as two condominium towers paired with a 72-room hotel and multiple dining venues, all set on gardened oceanfront grounds that brokers say help justify the premium pricing.
The transaction also caught the attention of regional business press. The South Florida Business Journal flagged the closing, putting the deal squarely on the radar of local market trackers and MLS watchers. Public listing records and broker filings show the sale as closed, with buyers and sellers often recorded through LLCs in this slice of the trophy condo market.









