For overseas property owners

Your property is in Florida.
Your life is somewhere else.

Owning rental property in Florida from abroad is entirely manageable — with the right operational structure: local coordination, tenant communication, and regular reporting. Brighthold provides that structure, in English and Spanish, for owners based in Latin America, Spain, Europe, and beyond.

Tell us about your situation
Orlando · Central Florida English + Spanish LATAM · Spain · Europe 1–5 properties · Residential

Why distance changes everything

The operational problems of overseas ownership aren't random. They follow the same pattern.

Each of these happens to most overseas owners who manage informally. They're predictable — which means they're preventable.

The situation

A tenant messages about a maintenance issue at 3pm in Florida.

What distance does

That's 9pm in Madrid. 10pm in Bogotá. By the time you see it, it's too late to call anyone. The tenant waits. The issue sits. A week later it's still not resolved — and the tenant is forming a view of their landlord.

The situation

You arranged for a vendor to handle a repair. You haven't heard back.

What distance does

You can't drop by to check. You can't call the tenant without creating alarm. You send a follow-up message. Nobody responds. Three weeks later you find out the repair was "done" — but wasn't actually completed correctly.

The situation

Rent arrives every month on time. You assume things are running well.

What distance does

Rent payment and property health are two different things. An unresolved maintenance backlog, a deteriorating tenant relationship, an upcoming lease expiry nobody has addressed — none of these show up in a bank statement.

The situation

You manage your Florida property the way you'd manage one at home.

What distance does

Florida's rules on deposit handling, entry notice, and lease compliance differ from Spain, Colombia, Mexico, and most European markets. Assumptions that work at home create exposure in Florida — not from negligence, but from a difference nobody warned you about.

The situation

Your local contact is available and willing — but there's no defined process.

What distance does

Goodwill isn't a process. Without defined accountability for each step — request received, assessed, vendor assigned, completed, verified, reported — things fall through. Not from bad intent. From the absence of structure.

The situation

You only hear about problems when they've already become serious.

What distance does

Without proactive reporting, no news feels like good news. It often isn't. By the time a problem is visible to an overseas owner, it's typically been building for weeks or months. Proactive reporting — not reactive updates — is what creates real visibility.

The common thread

None of these produce an immediate crisis. They produce a slow, quiet drain — on the property, on tenant relationships, on your confidence in the investment. The solution isn't being closer geographically. It's having the right operational structure in place.

Who Brighthold works with

Overseas owners managing Florida property from a distance.

The situations vary, but the operational challenge is the same: owning real property in a market you can't physically reach when something needs attention.

International owners

You bought in Florida from abroad.

The property runs, but you're never quite sure what's actually happening on the ground. Maintenance requests come through informally. Reporting is sparse. You're managing from a 6+ hour time zone gap with no reliable local point of contact. Brighthold provides the operational structure that closes that gap — in English and Spanish.

First Florida property

You're preparing for your first tenant.

Florida's rental market has specific requirements — entry notice rules, deposit handling, lease compliance — that don't work the way they do in Spain, Latin America, or Europe. Getting the operational structure right before the first tenant avoids the problems that show up later. That conversation is one of the most useful ones to have early.

Something isn't working

The property is rented, but the setup has gaps.

Maintenance that stalls. Communication that lags. A local contact that no longer feels reliable. You know something needs to change but you're not sure what to replace it with. A second perspective on your current setup usually identifies the specific gaps quickly — and what it would take to fix them.

Considering buying

You want to understand the operational reality before committing.

What does managing from a distance actually require? What needs to be in place before the first tenant? What does Florida's legal framework look like for overseas owners? These are the right questions to have answered before the purchase, not after. Brighthold works with buyers who want an honest operational picture early.

What Brighthold coordinates

The operational layer between you and everything that needs to happen locally.

Not abstract service categories. Real coordination, with accountability at each step, so that an overseas owner knows what's happening with their property without having to manage every piece of it themselves.

THE BRIGHTHOLD APPROACH

The gaps that cost overseas owners money — a delayed repair, an unanswered tenant message, a vendor who didn't return — are predictable and preventable. Brighthold exists to close them before they become problems, not after.

Maintenance coordination

From the moment a request arrives to verified completion — assessed, assigned, scheduled with proper tenant notice, followed through, and reported to you. The full chain, not just the first step.

Tenant communication

Handled as the local point of contact — professionally, within appropriate timeframes, with documentation. Routine messages resolved without involving you. Decisions escalated with context already gathered.

Vendor management

Coordinating local providers with accountability for follow-through — not just access to a contact list, but ownership of the outcome. Verification before sign-off. Documentation of what was done and when.

Regular owner reporting

Structured reports on a set schedule — property status, completed maintenance, open items, tenant communications. They arrive without you having to ask. In English or Spanish, your choice.

Rental readiness support

For owners preparing to rent a Florida property for the first time — orientation on what needs to be in place before the first tenant, and review of your current setup against that standard.

What Brighthold does and doesn't provide

Clear scope. No confusion.

Overseas owners often come with questions that span operations, legal compliance, and tax — areas that require different professionals. Brighthold is explicit about where it operates and where it refers.

Brighthold provides
Property operations coordination
Maintenance coordination with verified follow-through
Tenant communication handling and documentation
Vendor management with accountability
Proactive owner reporting — English and Spanish
Rental readiness orientation for new owners
Second-perspective review of existing arrangements
Florida market operational context
Brighthold does not provide
Legal advice or lease drafting
Tax advice — ITIN, FIRPTA, income reporting
Licensed rent collection or financial management
Real estate brokerage or investment advice
Eviction management or legal representation
Insurance advisory
Immigration or visa guidance
Short-term / vacation rental operations
For legal questions about Florida landlord-tenant law, consult a qualified Florida real estate attorney. For non-resident tax obligations, consult a U.S. tax professional with experience in foreign national property ownership. Brighthold can help point you toward appropriate professionals for both.

English + Spanish support

Brighthold operates fully in English and Spanish.

"La distancia no tiene que ser un problema — pero sí requiere la estructura correcta."

All owner communications, reporting, and support are available in both languages. Write to us in whichever is easier. We'll respond in the same.

For owners from Spain, Latin America, or anywhere in the Spanish-speaking world: there's no need to navigate this in a second language.

Owner communications All reporting, updates, and correspondence in your preferred language — English or Spanish.
Bilingual reporting Property status, maintenance logs, and owner summaries — structured, clear, and in the language that works for you.
Cross-market context Brighthold operates across the Florida market and the Spanish and Latin American markets most of our owners come from.

Questions from international owners

The practical questions that come up most often from overseas owners and those considering buying in Florida.

Can I manage a Florida rental property from Spain — or from Latin America?

Yes. Overseas owners can manage Florida rental properties effectively from Spain, Colombia, Mexico, or anywhere else — with the right operational structure in place. The distance is manageable. What makes it difficult is an informal arrangement without defined processes, clear accountability, and proactive reporting. With those things in place, the day-to-day operation runs without requiring the owner to be physically present. This article covers what that structure actually looks like →

Does Brighthold work in Spanish?

Yes. Brighthold operates fully in English and Spanish. All owner communications, reporting, and support are available in both languages. Owners from Spain, Latin America, or anywhere in the Spanish-speaking world can communicate with Brighthold in Spanish from the first contact. Write to us in whichever language is easier and we'll respond in the same.

How is Florida's rental framework different from Spain or Latin America?

The differences that matter most are operational and legal: Florida requires security deposits to be held in a separate account and returned within specific statutory timelines — 15 days if no deductions, 30 days if deductions are claimed, with written notice. Landlords must give at least 12 hours advance notice before entering the property. The eviction process follows a statutory notice sequence that can't be skipped. These differ significantly from most European and Latin American rental frameworks. More on how Florida differs from home markets →

What do I need in place before renting my Florida property?

Before your first tenant: a written lease compliant with Florida law (reviewed by a Florida attorney, not a generic template); the security deposit handled correctly in a separate account; a structured local point of contact with defined accountability; a maintenance coordination process; a tenant communication channel someone actively manages; and your non-resident tax obligations addressed before you receive any rental income. Full checklist in Spanish → · Full guide in English →

I already have a property manager. Can Brighthold still help?

It depends on the arrangement. In some cases, Brighthold can provide the coordination and reporting layer that complements what a property manager provides — particularly if you want more frequent communication, bilingual reporting, or a more responsive local point of contact. In other cases, the roles overlap in ways that would create confusion. The best way to assess this is a short conversation about what you currently have and what's not working. We'll give you a direct answer.

Can I contact Brighthold before buying a property in Florida?

Yes — and it's often the most useful timing. Understanding the operational reality before a purchase means you can plan the management structure before the first tenant rather than after something goes wrong. We're happy to discuss what owning and managing in Central Florida actually involves, how it compares to your home market, and what you'd need in place. No commitment involved.

Tell us about your situation.

A short message about your property and where you're based is enough to start. In English or Spanish. Every inquiry is reviewed personally.

Or write directly: info@brightholdequity.com