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🏪 Business Licensing & Operations/Tobacco Retail License

Tobacco Retail License: Miami Beach vs Miami

How do tobacco retail license rules compare between Miami Beach, FL and Miami, FL?

Miami has fewer restrictions than Miami Beach.

Miami Beach, FL

Miami-Dade County

Some Restrictions

Tobacco and vape retailers in unincorporated Miami-Dade must hold a state Tobacco Products Permit and a county Local Business Tax Receipt. Florida preempts most flavor and product bans, but local zoning and age-verification still apply.

View full Miami Beach rules →

Miami, FL

Miami-Dade County

Few Restrictions

Miami issues no separate tobacco-retail license. Florida DBPR Division of Alcoholic Beverages and Tobacco regulates retail tobacco permits statewide under Chapter 569, and Florida Sec. 569.31 preempts cities from imposing additional local tobacco licenses or fees.

View full Miami rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactMiami BeachMiami
State permitFL §569.003 required-
Local codeM-D Ch. 17B, Ch. 8A-
Minimum age21 (federal Tobacco 21)21 (federal T21)
Flavor banState preempted-
City license-None — state preempts
State agency-FL DBPR ABT
State statute-FL Ch. 569
Preemption-FL Sec. 569.31

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Miami Beach FAQ

Can Miami-Dade ban flavored vape products?

No. Florida Statute 877.111 preempts local flavor bans. Only the state legislature may restrict flavored tobacco or vape sales.

Do I need both state and county licenses?

Yes. A Florida tobacco permit covers the product sale, while a Miami-Dade Local Business Tax Receipt authorizes operating the business in the county.

Miami FAQ

Does Miami issue its own tobacco retail license?

No. Florida Sec. 569.31 preempts local tobacco licensing. Retailers obtain a single state retail tobacco permit through DBPR. Miami can regulate location through zoning but cannot demand a separate license.

Can Miami ban flavored tobacco or vape sales?

Likely no. Florida preemption (Sec. 569.31, 386.212) and 2022 amendments generally bar local flavor or product bans. Cities may pursue zoning-based location limits but not direct product restrictions.

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