Mar-a-Lago's Value is Set to Soar

mar-a-lago's value is set to soar

The Mar-a-Lago Club, home of former US President Donald Trump, is seen on April 4, 2023 in Palm Beach, Florida.

Home prices in Palm Beach, home to Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort, have jumped four times more than in the rest of Florida, according to recent data.

And experts told Newsweek they expect to see the rises continue through 2024, as wealthy buyers continue to find the area appealing.

Statewide prices in Florida increased 4.5 percent year-on-year to January, reaching a median of $404,000. Palm Beach properties climbedby 18.8 percent to a median of $1.9 million, according to Redfin.

Trump’s Palm Beach resort is likely to appreciate over the year, though it’s hard to get an exact number as the property is not for sale. John Pinson of the Palm Beach Board of Realtors, told Newsweek that if it was on the market, “it would command a huge price, much more than the judge in New York ruled.”

Judge Arthur Engoron, who was overseeing the New York Attorney General Letitia James’ civil fraud case against Trump, found that the former president wildly exaggerated the value of Mar-a-Lago by claiming it was worth up to $1 billion when, according to the Palm Beach County tax appraiser’s valuations, its value was between $18 million and $37 million.

Dorothy Jacks, elected property appraiser of Palm Beach County, said that home values in the county have been appreciating “by over 10 percent a year” for the last three years.

In the town of Palm Beach—which counts about 9,000 parcels, or portions of land up for sale, lease or development—the rate was even higher, Jacks said, climbing as much as “between 15 and 20 percent a year for the last two to three years.

That’s because there’s been “a great deal of renovation and revitalization of older properties [in Palm Beach] and there’s also a number of new properties being built on existing land where they tore a house down and built a much bigger one,” Jacks told Newsweek.

In the case of some individual properties, Jacks said, home values have risen by as much as 25-30 percent a year.

“Lots of people are moving to our area. We had a massive influx of people during COVID-19, certainly because we’re a year-round outdoor community and people were able to work from home more,” she said.

While sales have dropped slightly because of rising interest rates in Palm Beach County, Jacks said “properties have not declined in value. They just may not be going up quite as much as they’ve gone up in the last 2 to 3 years.”

“We’re kind of a quarter of the way through 2024, and we’re not really seeing any kind of slowdown occurring in the town of Palm Beach, we’re still seeing sales that are indicating that values are still going to rise significantly this year—maybe not quite as much as the last two years, but probably close to it,” Jacks said.

Matthew Walsh, Moody’s Analytics housing economist, told Newsweek that the company expects “low affordability and lean supply” to remain the dominant forces in Florida’s housing market over 2024, “slowly restoring the balance between median house prices and median incomes,” but he thinks that Palm Beach will “fare a bit better” than the rest of the state.

“While slowing from its frenzied post-pandemic pace, net migration will continue to support the local housing market. Palm Beach remains an attractive destination for many, especially retirees, due to its relative affordability compared to other major feeder markets, including the New York City metro area,” he said.

A rise in the value of properties in Palm Beach this year, including Mar-a-Lago, could potentially help Trump pay the huge fines he’s currently facing as a result of his many legal troubles, should he decide to sell—a decision that has never been on the Trump’s family horizon so far.

Last month, the former president was ordered by Engoron to pay $355 million plus interest in penalties for lying about his wealth, inflating the value of his assets to get more favorable terms from banks and insurers. The sum piled up to another fine worth $83.3 million that Trump was ordered to pay in Jean. E. Carroll’s defamation case.

Trump is currently facing 91 felony counts in four different criminal trials. The former president, who’s currently the frontrunner of the Republican presidential primary, maintained his innocence in all cases, including the New York civil fraud trial.

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