It's 9 PM on a Saturday night on Ocean Drive. A matte-black Lamborghini Huracán just pulled up to Casa Tua, its V10 echoing off the art deco facades. Every head in the courtyard turned. That's the thing about Miami — the city doesn't just tolerate luxury cars. It celebrates them.
I've lived in Miami for over a decade, and I've driven every route worth driving in this city. From the neon-lit chaos of South Beach to the serene ocean roads of Key Biscayne, Miami reveals itself differently depending on where you sit behind the wheel. But here's what most visitors miss: the city is designed for a supercar. The roads are smooth, the weather is predictable, and the scenery shifts every fifteen minutes from tropical paradise to urban jungle to waterfront glamour.
This isn't a generic travel guide. This is the route I take friends through when they want to experience Miami the way locals do — from the driver's seat.
Wynwood: Start Here for the Culture Hit
Most people hit Wynwood for the murals. That's fine — the walls are incredible, and the Instagram opportunities are endless. But here's the secret: Wynwood is best experienced before the crowds.
The move: Grab your rental at 8 AM and head straight to Wynwood Walls. The street is empty, the light is soft, and you can actually get a photograph without fifteen influencers in the frame. A Ferrari Portofino parked in front of the giant Keith Haring mural? That's the shot.
After you've explored the galleries, pull into Zak the Baker for an espresso and a avocado toast that costs more than your first car payment. It's worth it. Grab a table outside and watch the neighborhood wake up — locals on espresso runs, artists heading to their studios, the occasional Rolls-Royce Ghost gliding past.
Pro tip: The best time to shoot a supercar in Wynwood is 7:30-9 AM on a weekday. Saturday mornings work too, but expect company.
South Beach: The Main Event
If Miami is America's exotic car capital, South Beach is the showroom. Ocean Drive, Collins Avenue, the beach roads — this is where the culture lives.
The route: Start on Ocean Drive at Lincoln Road and drive north. Stop at Big Pink (the restaurant, not the car) for coffee if you need it, but keep driving. The real magic happens when you hit Collins and keep going toward the Fontainebleau and the SLS. This stretch is where you'll see — and be seen.
Here's what most people get wrong: they try to do South Beach at night. Yes, it's electric. Yes, the cars line up outside clubs. But the best South Beach experience is actually at golden hour. Find a spot near South Pointe Park, park facing the water, and watch the sky turn pink while the city lights start to flicker on. A white Bentley Continental GT parked next to you? That's not a coincidence. That's the Miami tax for showing up.
The evening play: Come back after dark. Start with dinner at Carbone or Prime 112 — both have valet that understands the assignment. Then drive down Ocean Drive with the windows down. The sound of a McLaren 720S echoing off the art deco buildings at midnight is something you feel in your chest. It's not about showing off. It's about feeling the city respond to you.
Key Biscayne: The Hidden Gem
Here's where the itinerary shifts. South Beach is Miami at its most theatrical. Key Biscayne is Miami at its most peaceful — and honestly, it's where the driving experience gets real.
The route: Take the MacArthur Causeway out of South Beach. This bridge alone is worth the rental — Biscayne Bay on one side, the Miami skyline behind you, and smooth asphalt that invites you to use the full capabilities of whatever you're driving. A Lamborghini Huracán on the MacArthur at sunrise? I've seen it. It's cathedral-level stuff.
On the island, follow Crandon Park Boulevard toward the beach. The road winds through mangroves and tennis clubs, past the famous Biltmore Hotel (worth a stop just to see the architecture), and toward the state park.
The destination: Park at Bill Baggs Cape Florida State Park. Walk down to the lighthouse. The water here is that impossible turquoise that belongs on a postcard. A Rolls-Royce Cullinan parked in the lot looks like it belongs in Monaco, not Florida — and that's exactly the point.
Pro tip: Key Biscayne is best on weekday mornings. The beach is empty, the restaurants are quiet, and you can actually relax. Bring a towel and swim — the water is cleaner than anything you'll find in South Beach.
Brickell: Miami's Secret Skyline
Most visitors skip Brickell. That's their loss. This is the financial district, yes, but it's also home to some of the best restaurants and the most impressive architecture in the city.
The move: Drive up Brickell Avenue and just look around. The skyscrapers are genuine — this is real urban density, the kind Miami rarely offers. Pull into Mandarin Oriental for a drink on the terrace. The view of the bay from up there is worth the price of admission.
For driving, the best route through Brickell is a loop: Brickell Avenue down to the Rickenbacker Causeway, around the bay, and back through the financial district. A Porsche 911 Turbo S on the Rickenbacker at sunset with the skyline in your mirrors? That's a memory.
Where to eat: Zuma for Japanese, Café La Trova for Cuban, Mandarin Oriental for Sunday brunch. All three have valet that won't flinch at a supercar.
Sunset: The Ultimate Miami Moment
If you do one thing on this itinerary, make it this: watch the sunset from a boat, then drive through South Beach afterward.
The yacht play: Charter a small yacht through Miami Exotic Rents for a two-hour sunset cruise. Anchor near the bay islands, champagne in hand, watching the Miami skyline turn gold. This is the moment that makes people realize why they came to Miami.
The drive after: Here's the magic trick. Sunset in Miami is around 7:30 PM in summer, 5:30 PM in winter. After the sun goes down, the city comes alive. Drive from the bay back toward South Beach. The temperature drops, the lights come on, and the streets fill with people who are ready.
This is when you want to be in the car. Not at a club. Not at a restaurant. In the car.
A Ferrari Roma gliding down Alton Road with the windows down, the bay on your left, the skyline behind you — that's Miami. That's the version of the city that doesn't make it into guidebooks because it's too simple to explain.
The Cars That Make the Route
Let's talk about what to drive. Here's the honest breakdown:
For the culture route (Wynwood + South Beach): A Lamborghini Huracán or Ferrari Portofino. You want the attention. These cars are made for Ocean Drive. The sound, the lines, the way people react — it's part of the experience.
For the scenic route (Key Biscayne + the bay): A Rolls-Royce Ghost or Bentley Continental GT. You want comfort and presence. The softest ride, the smoothest drive, the kind of car that makes a two-hour cruise feel like fifteen minutes.
For the evening route (post-sunset South Beach): A McLaren 720S or Porsche 911 Turbo S. You want performance. You want to feel the road, hear the engine, and understand why people pay $500 a day to drive these machines.
The honest truth: Miami Exotic Rents has the most diverse fleet in the city. Lamborghinis, Ferraris, McLarens, Rolls, Bentley — if you can dream it, they probably have it. And their delivery is fast. I've seen friends land at MIA and have a car waiting at their hotel within an hour.
Where to Actually Eat (Not Just Where to Say You Ate)
Here's the real talk on restaurants:
- Prime 112: The classic. Best steak in the city. Valet knows supercars by sight.
- Carbone: Retro Italian vibe. Great for people-watching.
- Zuma: Best Japanese in Miami. Book ahead.
- Casa Tua: Hidden gem on Ocean Drive. Incredible Italian, no signage, members only vibe.
- Café La Trova: Cuban food that actually lives up to the hype. Live music, great mojitos.
- Mandarin Oriental: For the view. Sunday brunch is legendary.
The Nightlife Equation
You don't need me to tell you where to party. But here's what I will say: arrive at a club in a supercar and skip the line. That's not hype — that's just how it works. The door teams at Liv, Story, and Basement have seen everything, but they still notice a Lamborghini pulling up.
The alternative: Don't go to a club. Drive. That's the Miami secret most visitors miss. The city at 2 AM, empty streets, the ocean breeze through the windows, a V12 singing behind you — that's better than any club.
Making It Happen
Here's the thing about Miami: the city rewards the bold. You can do this town on a budget and have a fine time. Or you can do it the way the city was meant to be experienced — from the driver's seat of something extraordinary.
You don't need to own a supercar. You just need to know where to rent one. Services like Miami Exotic Rents handle everything: delivery to your hotel, full insurance, 24/7 support. You show up, drive, and return. That's it.
The city is waiting. The roads are ready. And the version of Miami that people fly in from Dubai, London, and Singapore to experience? It's all right here, waiting for you to turn the key.
Ready to make your Miami trip unforgettable? Miami Exotic Rents delivers in 1 hour, anywhere in the city — hotel, airport, venue. Your luxury experience starts the moment you land.
Miami Exotic Rents Team
The crew behind Miami Exotic Rents — South Florida's premier exotic car, yacht, and luxury property concierge. Founded by Jachai Hargrove in 2021.
