After syndicating over $7.5 billion in real estate deals and selling his previous company with $1 billion in assets under management, Michael Anderson, Founding Member of PREIshare, could ha...
Buying a Home in Florida Now Means Competing With an Algorithm




If you’ve been buying or selling a home in Florida recently, the process may feel smoother than ever: sharper listings, more relevant search results, and property matches that seem almost intuitive. But that efficiency comes with a trade-off. Increasingly, artificial intelligence is shaping which homes buyers see — and which listings sellers struggle to surface.
“AI visibility is becoming critical,” says Laurie Andrews, president of Cotton & Company, a Florida-based real estate marketing firm. She notes that luxury buyers increasingly rely on AI tools to research properties, and projects that aren’t positioned correctly risk being overlooked.
For both buyers and sellers, these shifts remain largely invisible. But their effects are not, and in a market where visibility can determine outcomes, understanding how AI filters the landscape is becoming essential to making informed decisions.
How AI Is Shifting Visibility in the Housing Market
The most significant change is in how homes are found — and how they are presented. Traditional keyword searches are being replaced by conversational AI tools that interpret intent, preferences, and trade-offs. Instead of filtering listings manually, buyers are increasingly shown a curated set of properties based on inferred priorities — from lifestyle factors to price sensitivity. While this makes searches more efficient, it also means visibility is no longer neutral.
For sellers, this shift raises the stakes. Listings must now be written and structured in ways that AI systems can easily interpret — with clear, descriptive language, relevant features, and high-quality visuals. Properties that lack this optimization, or that fall outside the patterns AI tools are trained to prioritize, risk being filtered out early in the search process. In competitive markets like Miami, Naples, and Sarasota, that can mean losing visibility before a buyer ever sees the listing.
At the same time, AI is transforming how properties appear online. Photos can be enhanced for lighting and perspective, rooms digitally furnished, and listing descriptions generated to highlight key selling points. The result is a more polished and standardized presentation — but one that can blur important details. Layout constraints, noise exposure, or signs of wear are easier to minimize or exclude, making it harder for buyers to fully assess a property without visiting it.
AI is also shaping pricing. By analyzing large volumes of recent transactions, neighborhood dynamics, and buyer behavior, algorithms help agents and developers set prices closer to real-time market conditions. This reduces guesswork, but also compresses negotiation margins, particularly in segments where data is abundant and frequently updated.
Together, these changes are reshaping how buyers evaluate homes and how sellers compete — with visibility, presentation, and pricing increasingly mediated by AI systems that operate largely out of view.
Where Human Expertise Still Matters
AI can process vast amounts of data and identify listings faster than any person, but it cannot replace local knowledge or negotiation judgment. A seasoned agent understands factors that rarely show up in datasets — how traffic patterns shift throughout the day, which buildings have ongoing maintenance issues, how short-term rentals affect turnover, or why two streets a block apart can attract very different buyers. They also know when a property is strategically underpriced to trigger bidding, or when it has lingered long enough to justify a more aggressive offer.
“AI can’t tell you why a street just feels off, or why a house gets no offers,” Andrews says. Local expertise remains critical for interpreting the signals behind the data — from reading seller motivation to identifying risks that aren’t visible in a listing.
The most effective buyers and sellers use AI as a tool, not a substitute. Technology can streamline search, surface comparables, and track market shifts in real time. But key decisions still rely on human judgment — assessing a property’s true livability, spotting inconsistencies, and structuring an offer that reflects both market data and on-the-ground reality.
What Buyers and Sellers Should Watch For
AI is changing who has the advantage in real estate deals. Here’s how:
For buyers: Don’t assume the first properties an AI tool surfaces are the best options. These systems rank listings based on signals that aren’t always visible — including how well a property is described, the quality of its images, and, in some cases, how much developers or agents invest in digital marketing. That means you may be seeing the most optimized listings, not necessarily the most suitable or best value. To counter this, compare results across platforms, refine your prompts, and work with an agent who can point out overlooked properties that may not rank highly in AI-driven searches.
For sellers: In crowded markets, visibility increasingly depends on how well your listing is structured for AI systems. This goes beyond good photos. It includes detailed, natural-language descriptions, clearly stated features (views, amenities, HOA terms), and complete listing data that algorithms can easily parse. High-resolution images, accurate tagging, and even the order in which information appears can affect whether your property is surfaced — or skipped. Listings that aren’t optimized risk being filtered out before buyers ever encounter them.
For both: Be cautious with AI-generated price estimates. While they draw on large datasets and recent transactions, they often miss hyper-local variables — such as traffic noise, upcoming construction, building reputation, or even the “feel” of a specific block. These tools can anchor expectations, but they shouldn’t define them. A local expert can identify nuances that data alone doesn’t capture, helping avoid overpricing, underbidding, or misreading a property’s true position in the market.
About the Expert: Laurie Andrews is president of Cotton & Company, a Florida-based real estate marketing firm specializing in luxury residential developments and country club communities. With four decades of experience in real estate marketing, Andrews works with developers across Florida’s coastlines, focusing on pre-construction sales, branded residences, and repositioning strategies.
This article is based on information provided by the expert source cited above. It is intended for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or real estate advice. Readers should conduct their own research and consult qualified professionals before making any real estate or financial decisions.
This article was sourced from a live expert interview.
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