The mayor of Miami Beach is the nonpartisan chief executive of the municipal government of Miami Beach, Florida, and the presiding member of its seven-member City Commission. Modern-day mayors are elected to two-year terms and are term-limited to no more than 3 terms, which can be consecutive or non-consecutive. The mayor and other members of the City Commission appoint a city manager to administer the day-to-day affairs and operations of City Hall and its various departments. City Hall is located at 1700 Convention Center Drive; the mayor's office is located on the fourth floor.
Three father-son combinations have held the office: the John Lummuses (Jr. and Sr.), the Dermers (Jay and David), and the Gelbers (Seymour and Dan). One woman has served as mayor (Matti Bower). She is also, thus far, the only Hispanic to serve.
Six mayors (D. Lee Powell, Alex Daoud, Seymour Gelber, David Dermer, Matti Bower, and Dan Gelber) served 3 terms while Louis Snedigar is the only one elected to 4.
Snedigar was the longest-serving mayor, with a non-consecutive total of eight years and 8 months in office. Acting mayor Stanley Arkin was the briefest, filling in for three months in 1991 following Daoud's removal from office.
As of March 2025, there are six living former mayors: Norman Ciment, Neisen Kasdin, David Dermer, Matti Bower, Philip Levine, and Dan Gelber.
The current mayor is Steven Meiner, who was elected on November 21, 2023, and assumed office on November 28, 2023.[1]
length of service
1871–1961
–
October 28, 1918
7 months
1865–1941
October 25, 1920
October 23, 1922
1890–1951
December 21, 1926
2 months
1899–1983
December 18, 1928
December 16, 1930
1882–1966
December 20, 1932
1902-1960
December 18, 1934
1890-1951
June 1, 1937
6 1⁄2 months
1875?–1948
June 3, 1941
June 1, 1943
1900–1983
June 5, 1944
June 5, 1945
June 3, 1947
1896–1966
June 7, 1949
1915?–1988
June 5, 1951
1908–1983
June 2, 1953
1906?–1981
June 7, 1955
June 4, 1957
1916–1987
June 2, 1959
June 6, 1961
June 4, 1963
1911?–2001
June 1, 1965
1910–1990
June 6, 1967
1929–1984
November 2, 1971
5 months
1918?–1974
August 10, 1974
(died in office)
9 months
1925–2018
November 4, 1975
3 months
November 1, 1977
1933–2015
November 6, 1979
1931?–2017
November 3, 1981
1936–
November 1, 1983
1935–2016
November 5, 1985
1943–2025
October 31, 1991
(suspended from office)
1932–2015
November 20, 1991
1919–2019
November 4, 1997
[49][50][51]
1954–
November 13, 2001
1963–
November 21, 2007
1939–
November 25, 2013
1962–
November 13, 2017
1960–
November 28, 2023
1971–
Incumbent
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