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Florida Building Code & the HVHZ Zone, Explained for Homeowners

If you are building in South Florida, you will hear the term HVHZ early and often. It stands for High-Velocity Hurricane Zone, and it is the reason Florida has some of the strictest building requirements in the United States. Here is what HVHZ means for your home, in plain English.

What is the HVHZ?

The High-Velocity Hurricane Zone covers Miami-Dade and Broward counties — the areas most exposed to powerful Atlantic hurricanes. Within the HVHZ, the Florida Building Code imposes the toughest wind-load, impact, and product-approval rules in the country. Other South Florida counties, including parts of Palm Beach, enforce high wind-load requirements as well.

What HVHZ actually requires

  • High design wind speeds: structures must be engineered for extreme sustained winds (commonly in the range of roughly 170–180 mph design speeds, depending on location and exposure).
  • Impact protection: windows, doors, and other openings must resist large- and small-missile impact — typically impact-rated glass or tested shutters.
  • Product approvals: many products must carry a Miami-Dade Notice of Acceptance (NOA) or Florida Product Approval, proving they passed required testing.
  • Roof & connection detailing: roofs and the connections tying the structure together get special scrutiny, because that is where storms do their worst.

Why HVHZ favors concrete construction

Because the code is so demanding, building systems that are inherently strong have an advantage. A SCIP concrete shell is well suited to HVHZ wind loads, and pairing it with NOA-approved impact windows and doors creates a fully sealed, engineered envelope. Concrete and panel systems also simplify meeting the roof and connection requirements that trip up weaker structures.

What this means for your build

HVHZ compliance is not optional, and it shapes everything from your window order to your engineering drawings. Working with a builder who knows the local permitting process — Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach all have their own offices and inspectors — saves time and headaches. See how we serve each county on our Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach pages.

What is the HVHZ in Florida?

HVHZ stands for High-Velocity Hurricane Zone — a designation covering Miami-Dade and Broward counties where the Florida Building Code applies the strictest wind-load, impact, and product-approval requirements in the U.S.

What is a Miami-Dade NOA?

A Notice of Acceptance (NOA) is Miami-Dade County’s product approval confirming that a building product passed the rigorous testing required for use in the High-Velocity Hurricane Zone. It is widely treated as a gold standard for hurricane-zone products.

Do I need impact windows in South Florida?

In the HVHZ, openings must resist missile impact — generally meaning impact-rated windows and doors or tested shutter systems. They are a core part of a code-compliant, storm-sealed home.

Building in the HVHZ? GreenFab knows South Florida code and permitting. Get a free feasibility review for your lot.

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