The Present Minds
By Navneet Shukla March 3, 2026 Current

Indian creek island: why the world’s richest men are all moving to one place

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Navneet Shukla
Written By Navneet Shukla Founder · Editor · Systems Architect

Navneet Shukla writes about how people think and how modern life shapes that thinking. The Present Minds is where he explores it.

Indian Creek Island is a 300-acre strip of man-made land in Biscayne Bay, Miami. It has 41 homes. Its own government. Its own police force that patrols by land and by sea. A single guarded bridge to the mainland, where visitors show ID and may have their vehicles inspected before being allowed through.

Yesterday, Mark Zuckerberg paid $170 million to live there.

The deal closed on March 2, 2026, making it the most expensive residential sale in Miami-Dade County history. The property is a 28,000-square-foot, nine-bedroom limestone compound with 200 feet of Biscayne Bay frontage, a jazz lounge, a double-height library behind a hidden passage, a 1,500-gallon aquarium between the kitchen and dining room, and a Himalayan salt-wall sauna.

Three doors down, Jeff Bezos has spent $234 million on three properties and is combining two of them into a single compound.

Tom Brady lives there. Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner live there. Carl Icahn lives there. Larry Page just dropped $173 million nearby in Coconut Grove. Sergey Brin is currently house-hunting in Miami Beach.

The richest people in the world are clustering. And the question worth asking is why.

Indian Creek Island Miami billionaire bunker Zuckerberg Bezos 2026

What Indian Creek Island Actually Is

The island’s interior is dominated by the Indian Creek Country Club and a private 18-hole golf course. The initiation fee is $500,000. Membership is not available simply because you can afford it. You go through a lengthy admissions process. You wait.

The western side of the island, where Bezos and Zuckerberg now both own property, has lots of roughly 80,000 square feet each. The eastern side is considered slightly less prestigious at a mere 50,000 square feet per lot. Properties are traded entirely off-market.

No listings. No Rightmove. One agent talks to another agent, deals are done internally, and the transaction appears in county records weeks later.

Unlike the celebrity islands of South Beach, where tour boats float past celebrity mansions on the regular, Indian Creek’s marine patrol keeps onlookers away. The strategic landscaping ensures that almost no surrounding properties have a clear view of the island at all.

It is a bubble, one real estate agent said. No one gets on or off unless they have a reason to be there.

Indian Creek Island

The Tax Story Behind the Migration

You can frame this as lifestyle. The sunshine, the water, the golf. But the financial reality is more specific.

California is in the process of voting on a proposed 5 percent wealth tax on residents with a net worth over $1 billion, retroactive to January 1, 2026. Florida has no state income tax. For Zuckerberg, whose net worth exceeds $220 billion, the California tax would represent an $11 billion liability. Moving residency before the cutoff eliminates it entirely.

This is described politely as the precise consequence of California’s proposed wealth tax by Miami real estate agents who are having the best quarter of their careers.

It is less politely described as the moment the people who built the platforms and own the infrastructure of modern life decided that the tax bills those platforms generated were someone else’s problem.

Google co-founder Larry Page dropped $173 million on a Coconut Grove estate. His co-founder Sergey Brin is actively searching. Ken Griffin, who bought a $106.9 million Coconut Grove estate in 2022, got there early. The migration did not start yesterday. But it is accelerating.

California has 246 billionaire residents who would be hit by the proposed tax. Even partial migration changes the calculus of the state’s budget significantly. The people who leave take more than their purchasing power with them.

Indian Creek Island Miami billionaire bunker Zuckerberg Bezos 2026

What Clustering at the Top Actually Means

There is a sociological concept called homophily: the tendency of people to associate with others like themselves. It operates at every level of society. Neighbourhoods, schools, social circles. People cluster with people who share their circumstances.

At the scale of Indian Creek Island, homophily becomes something more structural.

When the people who run the largest companies in the world, who own the platforms through which information flows, who employ millions of people, and who collectively control more wealth than most countries, live in the same 300 acres and golf together on Sundays, the decisions they make about their businesses and their money happen in close proximity to each other.

This is not a conspiracy. It is a structural feature of how concentrated wealth organises itself spatially when it reaches a sufficient scale.

The political theorist Sheldon Wolin described this kind of arrangement as the privatisation of sovereignty: the accumulation by private individuals of the attributes once associated with the state. Their own government. Their own police. Their own admissions process for who gets to enter.

Indian Creek Island has all three. And it just got its newest resident.

Bezos Indian Creek Island

The 30 Million to 170 Million Question

One detail in this story deserves a moment.

The sellers of Zuckerberg’s property, a cosmetic surgeon named Aaron Rollins and his wife Marine, bought the land in 2020 for $30 million. They built a mansion on it. They sold it yesterday for $170 million.

That is a $140 million gain in five years on a piece of land in Miami. Before taxes, which in Florida on a primary residence are considerably lower than they would be almost anywhere else.

The lot value increase at Indian Creek is not driven by any improvement in the land itself. It is driven entirely by who wants to be there and how much they are willing to pay to be there. The value of proximity to Bezos and Zuckerberg has been capitalised into the price of the dirt.

This is what extreme wealth concentration looks like when it hits the property market. The numbers become untethered from any relationship to cost, to use, to the labour required to build something. They reflect only the demand created by the presence of other extremely wealthy people.

billionaire bunker Miami

What the Island Cannot Buy

Indian Creek Island offers privacy, security, exclusivity, and proximity to other people with similar levels of wealth and power. It offers a physical separation from the city it floats next to.

What it cannot offer is insulation from the world the people inside it helped build.

Zuckerberg’s platforms reach three billion people. Bezos’s logistics infrastructure employs over a million workers. The decisions made in those 41 homes, or the board meetings and government meetings those 41 homes’ residents attend, shape the conditions of life for hundreds of millions of people who will never see the island.

The bridge with the security checkpoint keeps onlookers out. It does not keep consequences in.

That is not a political statement. It is a structural observation about what happens when the people most responsible for the shape of a society cluster together in a place specifically designed to make them unreachable by it.

The island is beautiful. The Biscayne Bay sunsets on the western side are, reportedly, extraordinary.

And the world that paid for it continues on the other side of the bridge.

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Navneet Shukla
Written By

Navneet Shukla

Founder · Editor · Systems Architect

Navneet Shukla writes about how people think and how modern life shapes that thinking. The Present Minds is where he explores it.

Key Takeaways
  • Indian Creek Island is an exclusive, man-made enclave in Miami where the ultra-wealthy cluster, featuring private governance and strict access controls.
  • The migration of billionaires like Zuckerberg and Bezos to Florida is driven largely by tax considerations, notably Florida's lack of state income tax versus California's proposed wealth tax.
  • Property values on Indian Creek have skyrocketed due to demand from the wealthy elite, reflecting the premium placed on proximity to other powerful individuals rather than intrinsic land improvements.
  • The concentration of global business leaders in a small, secluded area creates a structural dynamic where major economic and political decisions are made in close physical proximity, reinforcing wealth and power clustering.
  • Despite its exclusivity and security, Indian Creek Island cannot shield its residents from the broader societal impacts of their business decisions and wealth concentration.
Glossary
Indian Creek Island
A 300-acre man-made island in Biscayne Bay, Miami, home to 41 ultra-wealthy residents, featuring private governance, police, and exclusive access.
Homophily
The sociological tendency of individuals to associate and cluster with others who share similar socioeconomic status or characteristics.
Privatisation of sovereignty
A concept describing how private individuals accumulate powers traditionally held by the state, such as governance and security, exemplified by Indian Creek Island's self-rule.
Wealth tax
A proposed California tax targeting residents with net worth over $1 billion, motivating some billionaires to relocate to tax-favorable states like Florida.
Off-market property trading
Real estate transactions conducted privately between agents without public listings, common on Indian Creek Island to maintain exclusivity.
Clustering at the top
The phenomenon where the ultra-wealthy live in close proximity, reinforcing social, economic, and political influence through physical nearness.
FAQ
Why are billionaires moving to Indian Creek Island and Miami?
Many billionaires are relocating to Miami, including Indian Creek Island, primarily due to tax advantages like Florida's lack of state income tax and California's proposed wealth tax. The lifestyle, privacy, and exclusivity of the island also contribute to its appeal.
What makes Indian Creek Island different from other luxury neighborhoods?
Indian Creek Island is unique because it is a self-governing, man-made island with its own police force and strict access controls. Properties are traded off-market, and the island offers extreme privacy and exclusivity, unlike more public celebrity areas.
How has the value of properties on Indian Creek Island changed recently?
Property values have surged dramatically, exemplified by a home purchased for $30 million in 2020 selling for $170 million in 2026. This increase is driven by demand from ultra-wealthy buyers seeking proximity to peers rather than improvements to the land.
What does clustering of the ultra-wealthy on Indian Creek Island imply socially and politically?
Clustering facilitates close interaction among the world's wealthiest and most powerful individuals, influencing business and political decisions. This spatial concentration reflects a structural feature of wealth organization, sometimes described as privatization of sovereignty.
Can Indian Creek Island protect its residents from the societal impacts of their wealth and decisions?
While the island offers physical security and exclusivity, it cannot insulate residents from the broader consequences of their business decisions and wealth concentration, which affect millions beyond the island's borders.
Editorial Note

This piece is part of The Present Minds, essays on psychology, identity, and modern life.

Discussion
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