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Portmiami Finance

Published: February 24, 2026
Last updated February 23, 2026. Prepared by DWU AI; human review in progress.

PortMiami — Financial Profile

Miami-Dade County Seaport Department

Cruise Capital of the World® — Revenue Bond Credit Analysis

Prepared by DWU AI

An AI Product of DWU Consulting LLC

February 2026

DWU Consulting LLC provides specialized municipal finance consulting for transportation agencies, airports, ports, toll roads, and water utilities. Our infrastructure finance expertise spans revenue forecasting, bond structuring, rate analysis, and capital program advisory. Please visit https://dwuconsulting.com

Important Disclaimer: This article is generated by artificial intelligence and provided for informational purposes only. It should not be construed as legal advice, investment advice, or financial guidance. Port authorities, investors, and policymakers should consult qualified legal, financial, and technical advisors before making decisions based on this content. DWU Consulting does not provide personalized investment, legal, or tax advice through this article.

Sources & QC
Entity financial data: Sourced from the port authority's published ACFR, official statements, and EMMA continuing disclosures. Figures reflect reported data as of the fiscal years cited; current figures may differ.
Credit ratings: Referenced from published rating agency reports. Ratings are point-in-time; verify current ratings before reliance.
Operational statistics: Based on port-published cargo volumes, vessel calls, and operational reports. Cargo data is subject to revision.
Governance and organizational information: Based on publicly available port authority enabling legislation, board records, and organizational documents.
Analysis and commentary: DWU Consulting analysis. Port finance is an expanding area of DWU's practice; independent verification of specific figures against primary source documents is recommended.

Changelog

2026-02-23 — Initial publication. Covers PortMiami cruise dominance (8.5M+ passengers), dual cruise/cargo revenue model, $2.3B debt profile, world's largest shore-power system, COVID recovery analysis, and 2021 Bond Buyer Deal of the Year.

PortMiami Update (February 2026): PortMiami set a new all-time passenger record in FY2025 with 8,564,225 cruise passengers — surpassing the previous FY2024 record of 8,233,056 and marking the world's busiest cruise homeport for the third consecutive year. The Port is targeting 9.4 million passengers by FY2028. Container volume continues to grow: 1,115,058 TEUs in FY2025 (+2.35%), maintaining PortMiami as Florida's #1 international cargo port. The world's largest combined shore-power system (5 berths, $125 million) was completed in 2024, reducing vessel emissions by up to 98% when ships plug in. Total outstanding debt stands at approximately $2.3 billion (senior + subordinate), with ratings of Fitch A and Moody's A3 (both Stable). The Port's $2.2 billion CIP through FY2033 includes major cruise terminal expansions, Royal Caribbean headquarters campus, and sustainability initiatives. PortMiami is a county department of Miami-Dade County — one of the largest and most economically diverse counties in the U.S. — providing an institutional backstop not present at independent port authorities.

Introduction

PortMiami is the "Cruise Capital of the World®" — a registered trademark that reflects a verifiable and sustained market position. No port in the world processes more cruise passengers or homeports more major cruise vessels than PortMiami, which in FY2025 welcomed 8.564 million passengers across hundreds of embarkation calls. This cruise dominance shapes every dimension of PortMiami's financial profile: revenue composition, capital program, environmental strategy, and credit risk.

PortMiami is structured as an enterprise fund department of Miami-Dade County — a governance model that differentiates it from independent port authorities. As a county department, PortMiami operates under county budget oversight and its bonds are subject to county financial management policies. This structure provides access to Miami-Dade County's institutional resources and reputation (Miami-Dade is the most populous county in Florida, with a $400+ billion economy) while also creating some interdependencies with county finances not present at independent authorities.

The Port's financial recovery from COVID-19 — which suspended cruise operations for approximately 16 months and caused coverage to collapse to 0.71x in FY2020 — is now complete. Record passenger volumes, strong container growth, and new terminal infrastructure have restored financial metrics to pre-pandemic levels. The Port's demonstrated resilience through an unprecedented disruption strengthens the credit case for investors who weathered the 2020-2021 period.

Entity Overview

Field Value
Full Legal Name PortMiami (Miami-Dade County Seaport Department)
Market Position "Cruise Capital of the World®" — world's busiest cruise homeport; Florida's #1 international cargo port
Governance Miami-Dade County Board of County Commissioners (enterprise fund department)
Foreign Trade Zone FTZ No. 281
Annual Economic Impact $61.4 billion; supports 340,078 jobs

Revenue Model

PortMiami's revenue is divided into three primary streams that reflect its dual role as world cruise headquarters and Florida's leading cargo gateway:

Revenue Stream % of Revenue Key Components
Cruise Operations ~53% Per-passenger fees, terminal leases with cruise lines, dockage charges
Cargo Operations ~19% Container wharfage/dockage; Latin America/Caribbean trade focus; ~1.1M TEUs/yr
Parking & Other ~28% Cruise terminal parking (high-yield, captive demand), ground transportation, FTZ fees, warehousing

Cruise Line Partnerships: PortMiami has long-term terminal agreements with all five major cruise line groups:

Cruise Line Terminal Notes
Royal Caribbean International Terminal A Major HQ facility; $455M PortMiami bond financing for RCI campus
Carnival Cruise Line Terminal F Long-term agreement; Carnival Corp world's largest cruise operator
Norwegian Cruise Line Terminal B Dedicated terminal; NCL Holdings Miami base
MSC Cruises Dedicated access Fastest-growing major cruise line; private Swiss/Italian ownership
Virgin Voyages Terminal V Newest major entrant; premium adult-only segment

Cruise Operations — Passenger Record

Metric FY 2025 FY 2024 FY 2020 (COVID)
Cruise Passengers 8,564,225 8,233,056 ~1.5M (partial)
Year-over-Year Change +4.0% +13%
World Rank #1 #1 (or #2 vs Canaveral)
FY 2028 Target 9.4 million

Bond Structure and Debt Profile

Feature Detail
Pledge Type Senior Lien Net Revenue — first-lien pledge of seaport net revenues
Subordinate Lien Separate subordinate lien bonds also outstanding ($442.5M Series 2021B)
Senior DSCR Target 2.0x senior lien management target; 1.0x minimum all obligations
Liquidity 300+ days cash on hand target
Total Outstanding Debt ~$2.3 billion (senior + subordinate)
Senior Lien Bonds ~$1.8 billion
Subordinate Lien $442.5 million (Series 2021B)
Bond Ratings Fitch: A (Stable); Moody's: A3 (Stable) — upgraded from negative watch (Moody's, Aug 2021)

2021 Bond Buyer Deal of the Year: PortMiami's $1.24 billion issuance in 2021 — executed at the height of post-COVID recovery uncertainty, with cruise operations partially suspended — won the Bond Buyer's Deal of the Year award for its structural innovation and market execution at 5.00%–5.25% coupons (true interest cost 4.57%). The transaction demonstrated PortMiami's sustained capital market access even during periods of revenue stress.

Capital Program — Shore Power and Terminal Expansion

Project Amount Status
World's Largest Shore Power System $125M 5 berths completed 2024; up to 98% emission reduction per call; 21 cruise ships outfitted
Royal Caribbean HQ Campus ~$455M Bond-funded; major anchor tenant locked in for decades
Cruise Terminal Expansions (AA, AAA, F, G) Multiple Active; accommodating next-generation mega-ships
Channel Deepening (Deep Dredge) $1B+ "Big Ship Ready" to -50/-52 ft — completed
Total CIP through FY2033 $2.1–2.2 billion Active program; partly funded by planned $500M new bond issuance

Environmental Leadership: PortMiami's shore power program — the world's largest combined cruise shore power system — completed in 2024 across five berths represents a $125 million investment that demonstrates both environmental leadership and operational modernization. When cruise ships plug into shore power rather than running onboard diesel generators, emissions drop by up to 98%. This investment is increasingly important as cruise line ESG commitments and regulatory requirements for clean port operations intensify globally.

COVID-19 Impact and Recovery

PortMiami's COVID-19 experience represents the most severe revenue stress test in the Port's history — and its recovery provides important insights into credit resilience for cruise-dependent port investors.

The CDC No-Sail Order suspended cruise operations from March 2020 through approximately late 2021 — approximately 16 months. During this period, cruise revenue (which was approximately 55% of pre-COVID revenue) fell to near zero. DSCR collapsed to 0.71x (FY2020) on an all-in basis, triggering coverage covenant concerns. Federal relief ($66.9 million under the American Rescue Plan Act) and Miami-Dade County institutional support helped bridge the gap. By FY2024, PortMiami had not only recovered but set all-time passenger records — an outcome that exceeded the expectations of most credit analysts when the No-Sail Order was first imposed.

Credit Analysis

Strengths: (1) World's #1 cruise port — unmatched market position with structural barriers to entry (berth capacity, cruise line agreements, channel depth, geographic convenience for Florida homeporting). (2) Record and growing passenger volumes targeting 9.4M by FY2028. (3) Long-term cruise line partnerships across all major operators lock in volume and revenue floor. (4) Latin America/Caribbean cargo trade gateway — geographic competitive advantage. (5) Shore power environmental leadership positions Port favorably with ESG-conscious investors and regulatory bodies. (6) Miami-Dade County backing (4.3M population, $400B+ economy). (7) Demonstrated COVID recovery — 2020-2021 stress test passed; stronger post-COVID trajectory.

Risks: (1) Cruise concentration (~53%) — the single largest credit risk. Any pandemic, regulatory prohibition on cruising, or material disruption to cruise industry economics directly affects PortMiami credit quality in a way that cargo-only ports do not face. (2) Hurricane and climate risk — PortMiami is located at sea level in Miami, directly exposed to Atlantic hurricane season. Climate-change sea level rise projections represent a multi-decade risk for infrastructure at the water's edge. (3) Large debt burden — $2.3B outstanding with $500M+ additional planned issuance creates cumulative leverage that is higher than most comparable container ports. (4) Subordinate lien complexity — $442.5M subordinate bonds have lower recovery priority and higher yield, reflecting structural subordination risk. (5) Macro-economic sensitivity — cruise demand is highly consumer discretionary; economic recessions disproportionately affect leisure travel and cruise bookings.

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