
Former Miami Heat center Hassan Whiteside appears to have a taker for his waterfront Miami Beach estate at 528 Lakeview Court. The five-bedroom, multi-level home, built in 2014, went into contract this week after a lengthy stint on the market and was last asking $14.8 million.
According to The Real Deal, the Lakeview Court property went under contract as the second-priciest of 16 luxury deals tracked in Miami-Dade between June 7 and June 14. That weekly snapshot, compiled by Douglas Elliman’s Eklund-Gomes team and cited in the report, shows that even with plenty of trophy homes sitting, big-ticket buyers are still cutting checks.
What the house includes
Listing materials describe roughly 5,400 square feet of interior space on a gated lot of about 0.4 acres, with roughly 90 feet of water frontage, a private dock and a rooftop lounge. Inside, the home offers a cinema room and a converted gym. The property has been marketed by Jill Eber of the Jills Zeder Group at Coldwell Banker. As detailed by Coldwell Banker Global Luxury, the residence includes a chef’s kitchen, a built-in aquarium and dramatic indoor-outdoor living areas aimed squarely at the waterfront-lifestyle crowd.
Price history and public records
Public records show a trust linked to Whiteside paid $7.3 million for the Lakeview Court property in 2016, so the recent asking price represented a sizable jump from that earlier purchase. Property databases and tax filings reflect the 2016 closing and subsequent listing activity. ATTOM’s property report lists the recorded sale on Sept. 2, 2016 at $7.3 million.
Whiteside’s status and the move overseas
Whiteside, a familiar name to Miami fans from his 2014 to 2019 run with the Heat, is currently playing abroad. The Sporting News reported that he signed with the Shanghai Sharks for the 2025–26 season. With the center based overseas, the Miami Beach property has been on the market while his basketball career continues in China.
Where this fits in the market
The contract on Whiteside’s home hit during a busy period for listings priced at $4 million and up. For that same week, luxury contracts reportedly totaled about $136.8 million in combined asking volume, based on a summary of the Eklund-Gomes weekly luxury snapshot. The numbers suggest that, even as many high-end homes take months to find a buyer, there is still plenty of activity at the top of the market.
Next steps
On public listing feeds, the property now shows as under contract or contingent, meaning the sale is pending but has not yet appeared in county deed records. Listing platforms such as Redfin currently mark the home as pending while the deal moves toward closing and eventual public recording.









