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πŸͺ Business Licensing & Operations/Secondhand Dealers

Secondhand Dealers: Miami vs Miami Gardens

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

Miami has fewer restrictions than Miami Gardens.

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†’

Miami Gardens, 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 Miami Gardens rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactMiamiMiami Gardens
State statuteFL Ch. 538-
Hold period15 days minimum15 days minimum
Reporting systemLeadsOnline daily-
Local requirementMiami BTR + COU-
First violation1st-degree misdemeanor-
State law-FL Chapter 538
Reporting-LeadsOnline daily
ID required-Photo plus thumbprint

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

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.

Miami Gardens 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.

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