Impact Window & Door Permit Leads in Miami-Dade: 1,537 Filings a Quarter in the Hurricane Zone (2026)

By PermitGrab Team • 2026-06-24
Quick Answer

Miami-Dade sits inside Florida's High-Velocity Hurricane Zone, where impact-rated windows and doors are code. PermitGrab tracks 1,537 window-and-door permits filed in the last 90 days across 448 distinct firms, plus 636 window contractor profiles carrying 545 verified phone numbers.

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Few markets in the country file as many window and door permits as Miami-Dade. The county sits inside Florida's High-Velocity Hurricane Zone (HVHZ) — the strictest wind-load section of the Florida Building Code — so every replacement window, sliding door, and entry door has to be impact-rated and permitted. That combination of code pressure and an aging, storm-exposed housing stock turns window-and-door work into one of the most reliable, repeatable trades in South Florida. PermitGrab indexes it newest-first, with the contact data attached.

In the last 90 days, Miami-Dade recorded 1,537 window-and-door permits400 of them in the trailing 30 days — spread across 448 distinct contractors. On top of the permit stream, PermitGrab maintains 636 window-and-door contractor profiles for the county, and 545 of them carry a verified phone number (86%) — one of the highest phone-coverage rates of any trade in any market we track, because Florida's DBPR publishes a bulk contractor-licensing file we match against.

Why Miami-Dade Window Work Never Slows Down

Three forces keep this category busy year-round. First, the HVHZ code: when a homeowner replaces a window or door in Miami-Dade, it must meet large-missile impact standards, which means a permit and an inspection every time. Second, insurance: carriers price hurricane-mitigation credits into premiums, so impact-window upgrades pay for themselves and owners keep buying them. Third, the housing stock: a huge share of the county's homes predate modern impact code, leaving a deep, recurring pool of retrofit demand. The result is a permit feed where window-and-door filings run in the thousands every quarter, not the dozens.

Who Is Actually Pulling These Permits

The firms filing Miami-Dade window-and-door permits are exactly who you would expect in a hurricane market — dedicated impact-window and storm-protection specialists, not incidental remodelers. The most active over the last six months include Lock Tight Impact Windows, Doors & Roofing, American Storm Protection (ASP SuperHome), Prestige Windows & Doors, Reylos Glass, A & M Hurricane Protection, AA Glass & Windows, and national retrofit operators like Renuity, Power Home Remodeling, and The Home Depot, alongside production builders such as Lennar Homes. For a supplier or a competitor, that roster is a live map of who is moving volume and where.

Who Should Be Working This Feed

Impact-window and door installers use the daily filings to find jobs in their service radius before an out-of-area crew does, and to see which neighborhoods are converting. Window, glass, and hardware distributors and manufacturers' reps use the high-coverage contractor profiles to target the installers actually pulling the most permits — not just everyone who once held a license. Roofing and exterior companies work the bundled storm-hardening overlap, since Miami homeowners frequently re-roof and re-glaze in the same insurance-driven cycle. And general contractors and restoration crews use the cross-trade activity to coordinate full exterior renovations.

Miami-Dade Is a Full-Trade Market

The window feed sits next to the rest of the county's permit and contractor picture on the same daily delivery. Across all trades, Miami-Dade's last 90 days were led by electrical (2,210 permits), general construction (2,017), windows and doors (1,537), roofing (1,378), HVAC (1,077), and plumbing (874). If you sell into more than one trade, the same subscription covers the parallel streams — see our breakdowns of Miami-Dade roofing leads, electrical leads, HVAC leads, and plumbing leads.

How PermitGrab Sources Miami-Dade Window Leads

Every permit we publish carries the property address, the permit type, the filing date, and the contractor of record — pulled straight from the county's official permit feed and refreshed daily. Because Florida publishes a bulk DBPR licensing file, the window-and-door contractor profiles ship with a verified business phone number 86% of the time, so this feed works as a call list, not just a research tool. You can filter by trade and by recent activity to reach the installers and owners while the job is still current.

Getting Started

Size the opportunity first with our free permit lead estimator, then compare the parallel South Florida storm trades like Tampa-Hillsborough roofing. When you are ready to put Miami-Dade window-and-door permits and verified contractor phones in your inbox every morning, see PermitGrab pricing — one flat monthly subscription covers permits, violations, and contractor data with no per-lead fees and no bidding wars. Or jump straight to the Miami-Dade data page.

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