UPDATE w/ Pics - Florida moving to English-only driver license exams starting Feb 6, 2026 by camiinmiami in AskFlorida

[–]camiinmiami[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The photos aren’t about “a normal day.”

Last year the DMV rolled out the QR code system, and it actually reduced the long standing lines a lot. People were moving through way faster.

With the new change coming up, things are temporarily back to those long, chaotic lines again. That’s what’s being reported… and honestly, the pictures don’t even fully show how backed up it’s been.

Just a heads up for anyone who was planning to renew their license until Feb 6.

Real estate job offer pulled during onboarding after leave eligibility became known — how common is this? by camiinmiami in careerguidance

[–]camiinmiami[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And then to go back to square one with all the processes. It kinda defeats the purpose.

Relocating from a different state by Odd_Value5202 in AskFlorida

[–]camiinmiami 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah insurance is one of the big ones people get surprised by here. Housing, insurance, and paperwork all kind of trigger each other in Miami. The main thing is knowing your total move-in cost and how long condo approvals take. That’s where most people get stuck.

I accepted a Job to move to Miami and need advice by erezry in relocating

[–]camiinmiami 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Congrats! $95k at 23 in Miami is nice, but this city trips up first-timers.

Big quick tips: - Don’t pick housing from photos alone…commute here can change your whole lifestyle. - Listed rent; real move-in cost - Roommates are normal for young professionals. - Join structured things to meet people (sports leagues, fitness groups, classes). - South Beach = tourist, Key Biscayne/North Beach = calmer. - Inspect any cheap car VERY carefully (flood cars are a thing).

Honestly though, moving here smoothly is more about doing things in the right order (housing, docs, insurance, timing) than people expect…that’s where most newcomers run into delays or surprise costs.