Representation across Duval, St. Johns, Clay, and Nassau counties — from beaches and the Intracoastal to Nocatee and Mandarin to the World Golf Village corridor.
Greater Jacksonville is geographically the largest city in the contiguous United States, and the surrounding metro reflects that scale: distinct submarkets that operate almost independently. Coastal Jacksonville (Atlantic Beach, Neptune, Ponte Vedra) is a different market than urban Riverside / Avondale, which is different again from the St. Johns County growth corridor running south to St. Augustine.
The metro has been a quiet Florida success story — strong relocation in-migration, a solid employment base across logistics, healthcare, and finance, and a price point that still works for buyers priced out of South Florida and Tampa.
St. Johns County in particular — Nocatee, World Golf Village, Ponte Vedra — has been one of Florida's standout growth submarkets for over a decade running.
Stats are directional regional figures and vary widely by submarket, condition, and price tier.
Established luxury coastal community. Sawgrass, TPC Sawgrass, and oceanfront single-family. Premier relocation submarket.
Master-planned community in St. Johns County — one of the country's top-selling master plans. Strong family-market and relocation demand.
St. Johns County growth corridor. Historic St. Augustine, new-construction along SR-16 and CR-210, and the WGV golf community.
Historic urban Jacksonville. Walkable, eclectic single-family and townhome inventory. Strong demand from urban-oriented buyers.
Walkable beach communities with strong local demand and second-home appeal. Limited inventory, consistent appreciation.
Established suburban single-family south of the city. Strong family-market demand with good school zones.
A free consultation with a licensed Florida broker. Submarket-specific data, pricing context, and a clear next step.