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All investor lists > Solo angels, Angel groups in Miami
Discover Miami angel investors funding pre-seed and seed startups across fintech, crypto, SaaS, and consumer tech. Connect with solo angels and fast-growing angel networks in South Florida.
Last update: July 7, 2026
List author: Lucas Roquilly
Shortlist investors, submit pitch decks, and get replies
Use code "OpenVC". Conditions apply.
Miami founders often look beyond the local market when raising angel capital.
Save investors, manage outreach, and run your fundraising in one platform.
Miami’s angel scene is a mix of local networks and investors with footprints both in the Southeast and beyond. Unlike some older hubs where angels are tied to decades-old traditions, a lot of Miami’s angel activity revolves around newer angel groups and individual founders who came in fast with cross-border or sector experience. Starting with known networks and then branching into founders who invest individually often opens up the best pipelines. OpenVC’s investor database lets you search Miami angels, angel groups, and syndicate activity in one place — and OpenVC’s master angel investor list lets you expand outward when you’ve exhausted local opportunities.
In Miami, context beats volume. Angels expect founders to be specific about why Miami, why now, and why you — especially given the mix of local, national, and international investors who participate. Warm intros through founders, operators, or accelerators help, but targeted cold outreach with a clear narrative around traction and fit still gets responses. The tactical edge comes from tracking outreach and engagement — cut the noise, stay systematic, and follow up with a cadence that shows discipline. OpenVC’s fundraising CRM helps you map and manage these conversations from first message through deck share and follow-up without losing track of who’s interested.
Miami angel investor checks vary with investor type: solo angels often write $25k–$100k, while syndicate leads and groups may participate in larger structures or commit bigger allocations when co-investing. Many rounds here are assembled from several angel checks rather than a single lead, particularly at pre-seed and early seed, so founders should factor in the number of commitments as much as size. The hybrid nature of Miami’s ecosystem means it’s common to see local angel capital paired with distant U.S. or Latin American investors in the same round.
For well-prepared founders, Miami angel rounds usually run around 8–12 weeks when outreach is proactive and disciplined. If you treat fundraising like a side task — or run investor conversations sequentially — timelines stretch into months with minimal progress. Founders who batch conversations, track engagement, and follow up based on real interest consistently shorten the process.
Miami’s angel ecosystem includes both established networks and a growing number of solo angels who invest actively across pre-seed and seed rounds. On the network side, groups like Miami Angels, New World Angels, Gold Coast Angel Investors, and Black Angels Miami are among the most visible and consistently active, backing founders across SaaS, fintech, climate, and consumer. The city has also attracted prominent individual angels and operator-investors, including founders, executives, and family office principals who invest personally and often co-invest through syndicates rather than publicly branding themselves as angels. Because many of the most active investors operate quietly, founders tend to get better results by focusing on recent investing behavior and stage alignment rather than chasing a fixed list of names.
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