If you own a business in Miami, your company is likely your most valuable and most vulnerable asset. Without a plan, an ownership interest can stall in probate, lose value during a leadership gap, or trigger conflict among heirs and partners. Florida offers several tools, and choosing well protects both your family and the enterprise. Here is how they compare.
The Probate Problem for Business Interests
If your ownership interest passes through your will under Fla. Stat. §732.502, it travels through the Miami-Dade probate court. Formal administration can take months, during which authority over your share may be uncertain. For an operating company, that delay can mean missed contracts, frozen accounts, and anxious employees. Florida summary administration is faster but only available for smaller estates or after a longer waiting period, so most active businesses face formal administration.
Option 1: A Revocable Trust Holding the Business
Titling your ownership interest in a revocable trust under Chapter 736 keeps the business out of probate. Your successor trustee can step in immediately, preserving continuity. This is often the cornerstone of a Miami owner’s plan because it eliminates the court delay that can erode a company’s value at the worst possible moment, and it keeps the transfer private.
Option 2: A Buy-Sell Agreement
If you have co-owners, a buy-sell agreement is essential. It sets, in advance, what happens to your interest when you die, retire, or become disabled: who can buy, at what price, and how the purchase is funded, often with life insurance. This prevents your heirs from becoming unwanted business partners and gives your family liquidity instead of an illiquid stake. A buy-sell works alongside, not instead of, your trust.
Option 3: Family Transfer and Succession Structures
Owners who want to keep the business in the family may use lifetime gifting of membership or stock interests, sometimes through a family LLC, to transition control gradually. Because Florida imposes no state estate or inheritance tax, the tax pressure here is federal, so for many Miami owners the priority is governance and a clear successor rather than aggressive tax engineering.
Don’t Forget Incapacity Authority
Death is not the only risk. A durable power of attorney under Chapter 709, drafted to include business powers, lets a trusted person sign contracts and manage the company if you are incapacitated. A general POA may not be enough; the business authority should be explicit.
Which Combination Fits?
A solo owner usually needs a revocable trust plus a robust durable POA. An owner with partners needs a buy-sell agreement on top of that. A family business planning a generational handoff layers in gifting and succession documents. Most Miami owners need more than one tool working together.
Talk With a Florida Attorney
Business succession touches probate, trust, contract, and entity law at once. Before relying on any single document, consult a licensed Florida estate planning attorney to coordinate a plan that protects your Miami business and your family.
Have a question about your estate?
Talk it through with Russel Morgan — free 30-minute consult.


