The Condo Queen of Miami: How Maile Aguila Built a Billion-Dollar Career and What New Agents Can Learn
Miami has a reputation for producing outsized personalities and breathtaking real estate success stories, but even in a city known for high-flying brokers, Maile Aguila stands in a league of her own. In 2024 alone, she closed over 1 billion dollars in luxury condo sales across Brickell and downtown Miami. Her ascent from daughter of Cuban exiles to one of the most influential brokers in Florida real estate reads like a modern American success story built on grit, expertise, and passion.
In an exclusive conversation, Aguila revealed how she built her empire, how she helped reshape Brickell into a global luxury hub, and what new agents can learn if they want to break into Miami’s booming high-end condo market.
Primary Lead Gen Strategy: High-end luxury brokers, referrals
Follow the Money, Then Follow Your Passion
Aguila did not begin her career imagining she would one day lead record-shattering sales for global developers. She began in accounting, eventually managing financials for a real estate developer. That curiosity about how deals really worked pushed her to earn both her real estate and mortgage broker licenses. Not to sell, but simply to understand the business at a deeper level.
But one lunch changed everything. A persistent sales director watched her negotiate, translate, and explain complex deals and saw what she did not yet see in herself: the instincts of a natural closer.
Her advice for new agents is bold and simple: find the projects in your market that genuinely excite you. Whether it’s waterfront towers, boutique residences, or golf communities, passion matters. In luxury real estate, buyers can feel authenticity instantly.
Become a Hyper-Local Market Expert
Luxury buyers are not just purchasing square footage. They are investing in sunlight, lifestyle, culture, and atmosphere. No AI tool can replace what a truly hyper-local agent knows about a building’s morning light, front desk culture, or long-term desirability.
Aguila puts it clearly: It is all about knowledge. Deep, irreplaceable, hands-on knowledge of your market.
New agents should tour every building possible. If you cannot yet represent multimillion-dollar buyers, attend broker open houses or take established agents out for coffee. Each interaction builds confidence and credibility.
Start at the Bottom and Learn Everything
Luxury in-house sales teams are competitive spaces. Everyone wants one of those coveted seats. Aguila believes the smartest entry point is through a traditional brokerage, learning every step from contract to close, before aiming for a developer sales team.
Starting as an assistant may not sound glamorous, but Aguila insists it is the fastest path to mastery. Her own daughter followed this route, learning every department before blossoming into a successful salesperson.
And if you are just entering the industry, your first step is clear: get licensed. If you are in Florida, Cameron Academy offers streamlined, exam-focused licensing courses created specifically for aspiring agents ready to break into competitive markets like Miami, Brickell, and Wynwood.
Make Yourself Indispensable
Assistants who simply want a paycheck get exactly that. But assistants who treat the position as education build six- and seven-figure careers.
Aguila became indispensable by filling gaps no one else could. As the only Spanish speaker in the office, she connected with international buyers at a level others could not. Soon, opportunity accelerated.
For new agents, the blueprint is clear: master technology, embrace AI, enhance efficiency, and become the person who makes the entire team better. Value inspires mentorship and growth.
Master the Soft Sell
Luxury buyers value experience, convenience, and lifestyle as much as the property itself. Many already own multiple homes and are purchasing a feeling.
This is where the soft sell shines. More listening than talking. More rapport than scripts. More hospitality than pressure.
Before every meeting, Aguila recommends reviewing everything you know about your client so you can show up prepared. In luxury, thoughtful attention is everything.
A Final Word
Stories like Maile Aguila’s remind us that real estate success is built on years of discipline, learning, and mastery. Whether you are entering the industry, expanding your skills, or targeting luxury markets, every skill you sharpen brings you closer to becoming indispensable.
If you are ready to begin your real estate journey in Florida or across the United States, Cameron Academy offers licensing, exam prep, and continuing education designed to help you excel in competitive markets like Miami.
Getting licensed or staying ahead in your career can be a journey—but it doesn’t have to be overwhelming. Grab your favorite coffee or tea, take a moment to relax, and browse through our articles. Whether you’re just starting out or renewing your expertise, we’ve got tips, insights, and advice to keep you moving forward. Here’s to your success—one sip and one step at a time!
In the sun-drenched locale of Palm Beach, South Florida, a compelling narrative is unfolding in the world of real estate. The "Palm Beach State of the Market" event, hosted by Bisnow, offers a panoramic view of the current dynamics shaping the region's real estate landscape.
In a riveting discussion at the Fortune Future of Finance conference, real estate experts explored the durability of the housing market despite numerous economic pressures, likening it to "defying gravity."
The affordable housing crisis in the United States is a complex issue, and no single solution can address it entirely. However, many cities are increasingly looking to zoning reform as a pivotal strategy to boost housing supply.
Steamboat's identity as a small-town Western haven is at risk. The town, once known for its affordability compared to places like Vail, is now facing a real estate crisis.
The American housing market is grappling with a crisis of affordability that is reshaping the landscape of homeownership and renting. With median house prices now six times the median income—up from four to five times two decades ago—the dream of homeownership is slipping away for many.