
Buying Telluride Real Estate from Florida
Florida buyers are increasingly pairing their coastal base with a Colorado mountain home, and Telluride is a natural fit. The appeal is seasonal balance: dry, cool San Juan summers that offset Florida's heat, humidity, and storm season, plus winter skiing and a mountain-town culture that contrasts with coastal life. For many Florida owners — from Miami and Palm Beach to Naples and the Gulf Coast — Telluride becomes the warm-weather-months retreat and the second home that diversifies a single-climate lifestyle.
Telluride, CO (destination) active listings as of May 31, 2026 · Mountain Rose Realty IDX (Telluride / REcolorado MLS feed)
Why Florida buyers choose Telluride
The driver for most Florida buyers is climate complementarity. Florida summers are hot, humid, and storm-prone, and a growing number of owners want a cool, dry place to spend June through September — exactly Telluride's strongest season, when the town fills with festivals, hiking, and 70-degree days at altitude. Telluride also offers winter skiing, giving Florida owners a true four-season alternative to a single coastal climate. There is a tax angle that buyers should review with an advisor: both Florida and Texas have no state income tax, while Colorado has a flat state income tax, so Florida residents typically keep Florida as their domicile and treat Telluride as a second home. The decision is usually about lifestyle diversification and the desire for elevation, scenery, and mountain culture rather than a relocation of primary residence.
Getting from Florida to Telluride
Florida buyers reach Telluride through Montrose Regional Airport (MTJ), roughly 65 miles away, which carries seasonal nonstop service from select hubs and easy connections from the major Florida airports through Denver, Dallas, or Houston. Telluride Regional (TEX) handles limited regional flights. Driving is impractical from Florida — it is a multi-day cross-country trip — so Florida owners are fly-in buyers almost without exception. That makes property type an important early decision: a lock-and-leave condominium or a professionally managed home suits a long-distance owner far better than a property requiring hands-on, year-round attention, particularly given Telluride's winters.
What your money buys in Telluride
As of May 31, 2026, the median Telluride list price was about $3,175,000, ranging from roughly $395,000 for an entry condominium to $29,990,000 for a trophy estate, per the Mountain Rose Realty IDX feed. Florida buyers comparing Telluride to coastal luxury will find a different value equation — scarcity and mountain position rather than waterfront frontage — and pricing per square foot that reflects a landlocked resort. Buying remotely from Florida is routine in this market; a local broker manages video showings and the transaction across the distance. Begin with the Telluride market overview, then explore condos and luxury homes.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Why do Florida buyers want a home in Telluride?
- The main reason is climate balance: dry, cool Telluride summers offset Florida's heat, humidity, and storm season, while winter adds skiing. Telluride gives Florida owners a true four-season mountain alternative to a single coastal climate. Festivals and outdoor recreation peak in the summer months Florida buyers most want to escape.
- How do you get from Florida to Telluride?
- Florida buyers fly into Montrose Regional Airport (MTJ), about 65 miles from Telluride, connecting through hubs like Denver, Dallas, or Houston, with some seasonal nonstop options. Driving is impractical given the cross-country distance. Florida owners are almost always fly-in buyers.
- Should Florida residents change domicile to Colorado?
- Most do not — Florida has no state income tax while Colorado has a flat state income tax, so Florida residents typically keep Florida as their domicile and treat Telluride as a second home. Buyers establishing any Colorado tax footprint should consult a professional advisor. The decision is usually lifestyle-driven rather than tax-driven.
- What can I buy in Telluride coming from Florida?
- As of May 31, 2026, listings ranged from about $395,000 for an entry condominium to $29,990,000 for a trophy estate, with a median near $3,175,000. Coming from coastal luxury, expect to pay for scarcity and mountain position rather than waterfront. Lock-and-leave condos and managed homes suit long-distance owners best.
- Can I buy a Telluride home remotely from Florida?
- Yes — remote purchases are routine in Telluride's second-home market. A local broker conducts video showings, vets the property, and manages the closing across the distance. Many Florida owners finalize a purchase before ever visiting in person.
