Community Details at a Glance
The Homes
Product
Established resale single-family homes from roughly 892 to about 2,452 sq ft, generally three to four bedrooms, one- and two-story, built roughly 1989 to 1996; confirm exact size and bedroom count against the specific listing
Character
An older, established Lake Asbury pocket of about 160 homes, cozy and reasonably priced by area standards; not new construction, so condition and updates vary home to home
Scale
A small, non-gated resale neighborhood in the Lake Asbury area of Green Cove Springs with a pond at the front entry; inventory is thin and homes reportedly sell fast when they list
Distinct from
Not the same as the newer Russell Retreat, Preserve at Russell Crossing, or other Russell-named communities nearby; several share the Russell name, so confirm which one a listing means
Costs & Fees
HOA
No HOA is reported for Russell Oaks, so there are no mandatory association dues; confirm there is no active or dormant association and read any recorded deed restrictions for the specific parcel before you offer
CDD
No CDD is reported for this community, unlike many newer Green Cove Springs master plans; verify on the Clay County tax roll for the specific homesite before you write, since a CDD assessment would change the monthly carry
Reality
This is a rare no-HOA, no-CDD resale niche in a corridor full of fee-carrying new builds; the money is in the home itself and the freedom from monthly fees, not amenities, so budget for self-managed upkeep
Amenities
Front-entry pond
A pond greets you at the entrance to the neighborhood, a pleasant visual feature rather than a recreational amenity; confirm maintenance responsibility since there is no HOA
No HOA freedom
With no association, there are fewer rules on parking, boats, RVs, fences, and exterior choices, though any recorded deed restrictions still bind; verify what is and is not restricted for your parcel
Ronnie Van Zant Park
The Lake Asbury area's Ronnie Van Zant Park is close by, with ballfields, tennis and basketball courts, a playground, pavilions and grills, and a fishing pond; confirm current hours and facilities with Clay County
Everyday convenience
Close to the Lake Asbury schools and the park, with the Green Cove Springs and Fleming Island retail, dining, and services a short drive away and the wider Jacksonville job market to the north
Location
Setting
The Lake Asbury area of Green Cove Springs, Clay County, ZIP 32043, an established 1989 to 1996 neighborhood near Sandridge Road, Henley Road, and Ronnie Van Zant Park; coordinates are an approximate best estimate for the neighborhood, so confirm the exact parcel with the survey and plat
Highways
Reached via the Henley Road and CR 218 corridors, with Blanding Boulevard and the First Coast Expressway (SR 23) improving the drive north toward Orange Park and Jacksonville; confirm current commute times for your route
Errands
The Lake Asbury schools and Ronnie Van Zant Park are minutes away, with Fleming Island and Green Cove Springs retail close for groceries, dining, and services
The Homes & Style
Russell Oaks is a small, established, non-gated neighborhood of roughly 160 single-family homes in the Lake Asbury area of Green Cove Springs. Because it built out in the 1990s, this is an established resale market, not a new-construction sales floor.
The neighborhood started in the late 1980s and finished in the mid 1990s: reporting puts the first home at 1989 and the last of about 160 homes at 1996. That means every home here is a resale with its own history of updates, systems, and condition.
Product runs cozy and reasonably priced by area standards: sizes reportedly range from about 892 to roughly 2,452 square feet, generally three to four bedrooms, one- and two-story. Confirm the exact square footage and bedroom count against the specific listing, since aggregator sites round and mislabel older homes.
Because these are 1990s homes, the buy turns on condition: roof age, HVAC, plumbing, windows, and any updates or deferred maintenance. Two homes of the same floor plan can trade very differently depending on how they have been kept.
This is a first-time-buyer, downsizer, and investor pocket rather than a move-up luxury enclave. The appeal is an established, walkable-scale neighborhood at an accessible price, with a pond at the front entrance and a county park across the way.
Inventory is thin. Reporting on the neighborhood notes that when homes list here, they tend to sell fast, so a prepared buyer with financing lined up and an agent watching the market has the advantage.
As always with an older resale, order the inspection, confirm the true tax bill and any homestead status, and price to condition rather than to the newest sale, since a renovated home and a dated one are not the same product.
Living Here
Russell Oaks is an established, quiet, non-gated neighborhood built around everyday livability rather than resort amenities. There is no clubhouse, no pool, and no gate; the amenities are the setting, the price point, and the nearby county park.
The front-entry pond is the neighborhood's signature visual: you see it as you pull in. Treat it as a pleasant feature, not a recreational amenity, and confirm who is responsible for maintaining it given there is no HOA.
The real recreation is across the way at Ronnie Van Zant Park in the Lake Asbury area, which reporting describes as offering ballfields, tennis and basketball courts, a playground, pavilions and grills, and a pond for fishing. Confirm current hours and facilities directly with Clay County.
Everyday errands lean on the Fleming Island and Green Cove Springs retail corridors, both a short drive away for groceries, dining, and services, with the Lake Asbury schools close by.
The commute runs north via the Henley Road and CR 218 corridors toward Blanding Boulevard, Orange Park, and Jacksonville, with the First Coast Expressway continuing to improve access; confirm current drive times for your specific route.
For the right buyer, the trade is clear: an established, no-fee, accessibly priced neighborhood with a park nearby, versus the newer, amenitized, fee-carrying master plans that dominate the rest of the corridor.
Before You Offer
Confirm there is truly no HOA and no mandatory dues, and pull the recorded deed restrictions or covenants for the specific parcel. No HOA does not automatically mean no rules; older neighborhoods can still carry recorded restrictions, and Clay County zoning and code enforcement still apply. Read them before you assume you can add a fence, park a boat, or place an RV.
Verify the CDD status and the true tax bill on the Clay County tax roll for the specific homesite. No CDD is reported for Russell Oaks, but confirm there is no CDD line item and check the actual taxes, homestead status, and any assessments before you budget.
Order a thorough inspection and treat condition as the main variable. These are 1990s homes, so roof age, HVAC, plumbing, electrical, and windows drive both price and your carrying costs; a renovated home and a dated one are very different buys at similar square footage.
Confirm you have the right community. Several nearby neighborhoods share the Russell name, including the newer Russell Retreat and Preserve at Russell Crossing, so make sure any comp, listing, or document actually refers to Russell Oaks, the established 1990s no-HOA neighborhood, before you act on it.
Comparisons
Russell Oaks competes for the buyer who wants an accessibly priced, established home in the Lake Asbury area without buying into a fee-carrying new-construction master plan. Against the newer Russell-named communities such as Russell Retreat and Preserve at Russell Crossing, Russell Oaks gives up new construction and warranty coverage but wins on price point and, crucially, on the no-HOA, no-CDD structure, since those newer communities typically carry association dues, a CDD assessment, or both. Against the larger amenitized Green Cove Springs master plans such as Hyland Trail and Granary Park, Russell Oaks trades clubhouses, pools, and amenity campuses for a quiet, established, no-fee neighborhood at a lower entry price. Against Magnolia Point, the established guard-gated golf community nearby, Russell Oaks gives up the gate, the golf, and the amenities but avoids the HOA fee entirely and sits at a very different price point. The honest summary: Russell Oaks wins on the rare no-HOA, no-CDD freedom, the accessible price, and the established Lake Asbury location, and gives ground on new construction, warranties, amenities, and shared upkeep.
Who It Fits
Russell Oaks fits the first-time buyer who wants an accessibly priced entry into the Lake Asbury area, the downsizer who wants an established single-story-friendly neighborhood without monthly dues, and the investor who wants a no-HOA property with fewer rental and use restrictions, subject to any recorded deed restrictions. It does not fit the buyer who wants new construction, a clubhouse, a pool, or a gate, the buyer who wants an HOA to enforce standards and maintain common areas, or the buyer who needs a deep, always-available inventory, since this is a small neighborhood where homes reportedly sell fast. Anyone considering Russell Oaks should confirm there is no HOA and read any recorded deed restrictions, verify the CDD status and true tax bill on the Clay County roll, order a full inspection given the 1990s vintage, and make sure they are not confusing it with the newer Russell Retreat or Preserve at Russell Crossing nearby.













