Public Records Requests However, if you are unable to locate the records online, you may submit a Public Records Request form. This form may be submitted by mail to Records Management, Miami-Dade County Clerk of Courts, P.O. Box 14695, Miami, FL 33101 or by email to cocpubreq@miamidade.
From front property line, seventy-five (75) feet. From rear property line, seven and one-half (7½) feet. Between buildings on same lot, parcel or tract of land, twenty (20) feet. From interior side property line, twenty (20) feet.
Mortgage Foreclosure: The foreclosure rate for Miami-Dade is the highest of the seven Sun Belt counties included in this report. More than 26,000 households were foreclosed upon in Miami-Dade County over this three-year period, a foreclosure rate of 3.1 percent.
By dialing 311 or 305-468-5900 (outside Miami-Dade County), you can receive personalized customer service in English, Spanish or Haitian Creole. The 311 Contact Center is open Monday through Friday from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. and Saturday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., while closed on Sundays and holidays.
Homeowners Rights to Surplus Foreclosure Sale Proceeds You, as the former homeowner, may be eligible to file a claim for any surplus funds. Please contact the Clerk of the Court's Foreclosure Unit to find out if there are surplus funds from the foreclosure sale and, for assistance in filing your claim for those funds.
Contact Clerk of the Court and Comptroller For general information, call 305-275-1155 for the Interactive Voice Response System.
The folio number is a means by which properties are identified in Miami-Dade County. It is also referred to as the parcel identifier and represents a unique number that computer systems use to associate to a property. The folio number is formatted as a 13 digit number (99-9999-999-9999).
Illegal multi-family use is the illegal subdivision of residences into separate living units – such as apartments, rooming houses or efficiencies – beyond what is permitted under the zoning district where the property is located in unincorporated Miami-Dade County.
Miami and Miami Beach have clear-cut protocols for property owners operating short-term rentals. To legally offer a property as a short-term rental, owners must obtain a certificate of use, a business tax receipt, and a vacation rental dwelling license.