Miami

Rolling Loud Boss Quietly Cashes Out On $17.7 Million Miami Beach Party Palace

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Published on March 04, 2026
Rolling Loud Boss Quietly Cashes Out On $17.7 Million Miami Beach Party PalaceSource: Google Street View

Rolling Loud co-founder Matt Zingler has slipped out of Miami Beach with a serious payday, quietly closing on the sale of his Biscayne Point waterfront compound for roughly $17.7 million. The half-acre spread combines a new main residence and a separate guesthouse, about 150 feet of bay frontage, and an infinity-edge pool that visually runs right into Biscayne Bay. The closing caps a multiyear project in which Zingler bought neighboring parcels in 2016 and 2020 and fused them into one entertainment-focused estate.

According to Traded, the two-lot property at 1155 and 1165 North Biscayne Point Road traded for $17,720,000 and totals about 7,690 square feet, or roughly $2,304 per square foot. Mansion Global notes that Zingler paid $1.85 million for the first parcel in 2016, added the neighboring lot in 2020 for $2.195 million, and wrapped the main house in 2022 with design by François Frossard Design Studio.

Inside The Biscayne Point Compound

The interiors are built for drama: a double-height entry, walls of floor-to-ceiling glass, and a marble-clad chef’s kitchen that opens into a waterfront entertainment salon. The listing also called out a bank-vault-style closet that reportedly cost more than $250,000, while the older secondary structure has been reworked into a guesthouse and wellness pavilion. Those details were spotlighted in the listing coverage by Miami New Times.

A Hometown Exit As Rolling Loud Heads To Orlando

The timing lines up with a shift in Rolling Loud’s U.S. strategy. The festival’s official 2026 site lists Camping World Stadium in Orlando as the only U.S. edition, scheduled for May 8 to 10. For Zingler, who co-founded Rolling Loud in Miami in 2015, the sale lands as the brand pivots this year to a single, larger Orlando event aimed at reaching a broader footprint of attendees, according to the festival’s 2026 site.

Biscayne Point Market In Focus

Brokers say the deal fits a growing Biscayne Point pattern in which deep-pocketed buyers grab neighboring properties and stitch together private compounds and waterfront retreats. Listing agent Dina Goldentayer told Miami New Times there are “so many pending sales in the $12 million to $18 million range” and that the neighborhood “is popping off.” Zingler’s sale adds one more data point to a fast-moving luxury market on one of Miami Beach’s most tucked-away islands.

Miami-Real Estate & Development