What Is My Nocatee Home Worth?
Recent guide data puts Nocatee pricing at mid-to-high $600s median (early 2026), townhomes from the high $300s, estates past $2 million. But neighborhood-level numbers only get you so far. Your street, your lot, your floor plan, and your timing decide the real figure. We prepare every valuation by hand, using closed sales we know firsthand, and we will tell you honestly if waiting is the smarter move.
What actually drives Nocatee home values
Nocatee pricing from our guide research: mid-to-high $600s median (early 2026), townhomes from the high $300s, estates past $2 million. Where your home lands in that range depends on the factors below.
HOA dues plus a Tolomato CDD assessment on every home, adding roughly $2,000 or more per year
Top-ranked St. Johns County district with three in-community K-8 academies and a fourth opening for 2026-2027
the priciest entry among area master plans, plus a Tolomato CDD assessment on top of HOA dues, and a huge community still building toward roughly 13,000 homes.
The same floor plan can close tens of thousands apart based on condition, light, and how it is presented. This is where an agent-prepared valuation beats any algorithm.
Get your real number.
An agent who closes in Nocatee prepares your valuation by hand, usually within one business day. No automated teaser number, no obligation.
While you wait
Seller questions we hear in Nocatee
How accurate are online estimates for Nocatee homes?
Automated estimates struggle with community-specific factors like fee structures, lot premiums, and street-by-street differences. They are a starting point, not a number to act on. An agent valuation uses closed sales and current competition.
What does the valuation cost?
Nothing. It is prepared by a local Momentum agent, usually within one business day, with no obligation to list.
Is now a good time to sell in Nocatee?
It depends on your equity, your next move, and current inventory in your price band. We will give you a straight answer either way, including when the answer is to wait.
