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πŸͺ Business Licensing & Operations/Secondhand Dealers

Secondhand Dealers: Homestead vs Miami

How do secondhand dealers rules compare between Homestead, FL and Miami, FL?

Miami has fewer restrictions than Homestead.

Homestead, FL

Miami-Dade County

Heavy Restrictions

Secondhand dealers in Miami-Dade must register with the Sheriff under Florida Statute 538, hold a county Local Business Tax Receipt, and report all transactions daily to the LeadsOnline electronic database used by MDPD detectives.

View full Homestead rules β†’

Miami, FL

Miami-Dade County

Some Restrictions

Secondhand dealers in Miami must register under Florida Statute Sec. 538.04 and report transactions through the state's electronic LeadsOnline database. Miami-Dade County also requires a local certificate of use, and items must be held at least 15 days before resale.

View full Miami rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactHomesteadMiami
State lawFL Chapter 538-
Hold period15 days minimum15 days minimum
ReportingLeadsOnline daily-
ID requiredPhoto plus thumbprint-
State statute-FL Ch. 538
Reporting system-LeadsOnline daily
Local requirement-Miami BTR + COU
First violation-1st-degree misdemeanor

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Homestead FAQ

What counts as a secondhand dealer?

Any business buying used jewelry, electronics, tools, sporting goods, or precious metals from the public for resale, including consignment shops handling such goods.

Why the 15-day hold?

It gives police time to match items against stolen-property reports before they enter resale. Selling earlier is a misdemeanor under Florida law.

Miami FAQ

What businesses count as secondhand dealers in Miami?

Pawn shops, used-electronics buyers, precious-metal dealers, scrap-metal recyclers, and resale shops that buy goods from the public. Charitable thrift stores are typically exempt under Sec. 538.03.

How long must a Miami dealer hold purchased goods?

At least 15 days for general goods and 30 days for some precious-metal categories. Selling, altering, or melting items inside the holding window is a misdemeanor under Florida Sec. 538.15.

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