Where to stay in Miami
Base in walkable Brickell for the best first-trip value, and save pricey South Beach for when the sand and late nights are the whole point.
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In short
Where to stay in Miami
For a first Miami trip, base yourself in Brickell unless the beach is the entire point of the holiday. It is the most walkable part of the city, rooms run roughly 20-30% cheaper than comparable South Beach hotels, and the free Metromover plus a short rideshare put the sand within reach. Choose South Beach if you came for Ocean Drive and all-night clubs and accept the premium, Mid-Beach for a calmer stretch of the same barrier island, Wynwood for street art and food over beach mornings, and Coconut Grove for a leafy, family-paced base.
The short version
- Best all-rounder: Brickell.
- Best beachfront value: Mid-Beach (Collins Avenue, 24th-44th Streets).
- Best atmosphere away from the sand: Wynwood.
- Best for beach-and-nightlife: South Beach, but only if you accept the highest rates and the noise.
- Avoid using Ocean Drive as your hotel filter; it is a deco landmark to walk, not a base strategy.
Best areas to book
Brickell
ยฃยฃ mid-rangeMiami's high-rise financial district and its most walkable base: glass towers, rooftop bars, Brickell City Centre for food and shops, and the free Metromover linking it to Downtown. Rooms run roughly 20-30% cheaper than equivalent South Beach hotels, with the beach a 20-25 minute bus or rideshare hop. The strongest first-trip choice for anyone who wants the beach as one of several things rather than the whole point.
Best for: First-timers, value, walkability, couples
South Beach (SoBe)
ยฃยฃยฃ premiumThe beach-and-nightlife flagship: the Ocean Drive deco strip, the wide white-sand beach and Lincoln Road pedestrian mall on the doorstep, with clubs that genuinely run all night. The trade-offs are the highest room rates in the city, crowds, and a 20-30 minute trip back to the mainland sights. Pick it only if waking up by the sand and late nights out are the reason for the trip.
Best for: Beach-first trips, nightlife, first-timers who came for the sand
Mid-Beach (Collins Avenue, 24th-44th St)
ยฃยฃ mid-rangeThe calmer stretch of Miami Beach north of SoBe, running up Collins Avenue past the Faena District and the Eden Roc and Fontainebleau resorts. You get the same wide beach and ocean swims with fewer crowds and often better room value than South Beach, traded against a quieter scene and a longer walk or trolley to Lincoln Road nightlife.
Best for: Beach value, couples, a quieter island stay
Wynwood
ยฃยฃ mid-rangeThe former warehouse district turned street-art, brewery and restaurant hub around the Wynwood Walls and NW 2nd Avenue. It is Miami's most fun base for evenings out, with murals, craft beer and strong dinners, and the free trolley links it to Downtown and the beach. Fewer big-brand hotels and a less polished, edgier feel, so it suits character-and-food trips over beach mornings.
Best for: Food, art, nightlife away from the beach crowds
Coconut Grove
ยฃยฃ mid-rangeMiami's oldest and leafiest neighbourhood: marina views, a tropical tree canopy, the CocoWalk shops and Vizcaya nearby. Quieter, greener and more family-friendly than the rest, with a calmer pace and good restaurants, traded against a 20-30 minute drive to South Beach. Better for a slower, family or repeat-visit trip than a first beach-and-nightlife week.
Best for: Families, quieter stays, repeat visitors
Downtown Miami
ยฃ valueThe business core around Bayside Marketplace and the Brickell-linked Metromover, with the cheapest mainland room rates and the best transit connections, including the Metrorail straight from MIA airport for $2.25. It is functional rather than charming and quiet at night once offices empty, so treat it as a budget, transit-led base rather than an atmosphere pick.
Best for: Budget, transit access, short stays
The simple choice
If you are booking in a hurry, filter for Brickell first, then compare Mid-Beach if you decide the beach matters more than walkability. That single rule keeps most first-timers out of the two common Miami traps: overpaying for a small room on or just off Ocean Drive, or stranding yourself on the barrier island when most of your plans (Wynwood, Little Havana, the Everglades trip) start on the mainland. South Beach is a wonderful place to spend your days; it is an expensive place to sleep.
Compare Brickell and Miami Beach hotelsSafety and noise
GOV.UK notes that violent crime in the US is concentrated in specific neighbourhoods rather than tourist areas, so the practical move is to check the block, not the city. For where to sleep, that means Brickell, Mid-Beach and Coconut Grove are calm, well-lit bases, while a room directly on Ocean Drive or above a Wynwood bar will be loud well past midnight. If you are travelling with children or arriving jet-lagged off the 9.5-hour flight, a quiet Brickell or Mid-Beach street beats a club-strip address.
Budget vs splurge
Mid-range hotels in Brickell or Mid-Beach typically land around ยฃ130-220 a night in the dry winter peak, dropping noticeably in the May and November shoulder. South Beach commands the premium for the same standard of room. Two cost catches apply wherever you stay: many Miami Beach resorts add a daily 'resort fee' of $25-45 on top of the quoted rate, so check the total before booking, and restaurant bills routinely add an 18-20% service charge before any tip. Downtown is the cheapest mainland base if you are happy to trade charm for the Metrorail and Metromover.
Always check whether a Miami Beach quote includes the resort fee and parking valet before you compare it with a Brickell rate.
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