What's in this guide
- Executive Summary
- Quick Facts
- Community Overview & History
- The Neighborhoods & Builders
- Real Estate Market
- Who Lives Here
- Schools
- Amenities & Lifestyle
- HOA & CDD Fees
- Commute Analysis
- Shopping & Dining
- Pros & Cons
- Neighborhood Comparisons
- Hidden Things to Know
- Momentum Expert Insight
- Frequently Asked Questions
Executive Summary
Argyle Forest, together with the adjacent Chimney Lakes, is one of the largest and most established value-priced submarkets on the Westside of Jacksonville, in Duval County's 32222 ZIP. It sits in southwest Jacksonville between I-295 and the First Coast Expressway (SR-23), a settled, family-and-retiree area of single-family homes and townhomes that has stayed popular because it delivers space and convenience at a reasonable price.
As of 2026, the area carries an average home price around $308,000, well below the St. Johns and Ponte Vedra communities, with a healthy resale market (a few hundred homes trade in a typical year) and a mix of older homes and newer construction. For first-time buyers, downsizers, and families priced out of St. Johns County, Argyle is one of the metro's most accessible entry points into homeownership.
The location is a core part of the appeal: quick access to I-295 and the First Coast Expressway, proximity to NAS Jacksonville and other Westside employers, and the Oakleaf Town Center's 70-plus stores including Publix, Aldi, and Target a short drive away. Many neighborhoods have their own amenities, with Chimney Lakes offering a pool, tennis, basketball, and sand volleyball, and Argyle Forest adding ball fields and pickleball.
The honest trade-offs are that this is Duval County, not St. Johns, so school zoning varies by neighborhood and matters, the housing stock ranges widely in age and condition, and it is a densely populated area where the specific pocket and street matter. The most valuable move you can make is to have your own agent who knows the individual neighborhoods, since condition and zoning vary block to block.
Quick Facts
| Category | Detail |
|---|---|
| Type | Established value-priced submarket (single-family + townhomes) |
| Includes | Argyle Forest and the adjacent Chimney Lakes |
| Setting | Southwest / Westside Jacksonville, between I-295 and First Coast Expressway |
| County | Duval County |
| ZIP code | 32222 (and parts of 32244) |
| Schools | Duval County; zoning varies by neighborhood (some Oakleaf-area schools) |
| Amenities | Neighborhood pools, tennis, ball fields, pickleball, parks, lakes |
| Shopping | Oakleaf Town Center (Publix, Aldi, Target, 70+ stores) nearby |
| Employment | Minutes to NAS Jacksonville and Westside employers |
| HOA / CDD | No CDD; modest neighborhood HOAs vary by subdivision |
| Price (2026) | Average around $308,000 |
| Home types | Older homes and newer construction; some townhomes, few condos |
Community Overview & History
Argyle, as locals call the broader area, grew up over the past few decades into one of the Westside's anchor residential districts, a patchwork of neighborhoods built around the Argyle Forest and Chimney Lakes names plus dozens of smaller subdivisions. The streets are quiet and largely free of cut-through traffic, lined with homes in Colonial, Craftsman, and Mediterranean styles, with small lakes and tree-lined drives throughout.
What has kept Argyle in demand is value and convenience. As St. Johns County prices climbed, southwest Jacksonville became the place where families and first-time buyers could still find a house with a yard at a workable price, close to jobs and the new retail that has grown up around the Oakleaf Town Center. The result is a settled, mixed community of families and retirees, with younger families often moving in as longtime owners move on.
The area is primarily single-family homes with some townhomes, and few condos or apartments inside the core neighborhoods, which gives it a stable, owner-occupied feel. Buyers choose Argyle for the price, the space, the commuter access, and the schools and shopping that have filled in around it, and the trade is an established housing stock that varies in age and a Duval County school picture that depends on the specific neighborhood.
Argyle Forest, Chimney Lakes & the Westside Value Case
Argyle Forest and Chimney Lakes
The two names anchor the submarket. Argyle Forest is the broader, older district, with ball fields, parks, and pickleball courts among its amenities. Chimney Lakes, just beside it, is a planned community known for its recreation, a community pool, tennis, basketball, and sand volleyball, along with the small lakes that give it its name. Within both are many smaller subdivisions, each with its own character, age, and sometimes its own HOA and amenities.
A value-priced housing mix
Homes here are predominantly single-family, with some townhomes and very few condos inside the core neighborhoods. The stock ranges from 1980s-and-1990s homes to newer construction, in Colonial, Craftsman, and Mediterranean styles, with an average price around $308,000 as of 2026. That breadth means a buyer can find an updated move-in-ready home or a dated one to improve, so condition is where the value is won or lost.
Why buyers choose Argyle
The case for Argyle is simple: more house for the money than St. Johns County, in a settled area with quick commuter access, neighborhood amenities, and the Oakleaf Town Center's retail close by. It draws first-time buyers, families, military households near NAS Jacksonville, and downsizers. The trade is Duval County schools that vary by neighborhood and an older, denser area where the specific street matters, which is exactly where local knowledge pays off.
The Market & Pricing
As of 2026, Argyle Forest and Chimney Lakes carry an average home price around $308,000, one of the more affordable established submarkets in the Jacksonville metro and well below the St. Johns and beaches markets. The area sees steady turnover, with a few hundred homes trading in a typical year, so a buyer has real choice across price points and home types.
Because the stock ranges widely in age and condition, the individual home drives value more than the address. An updated home with a newer roof and HVAC commands a premium over a dated one nearby, and renovated homes in the better-regarded subdivisions move quickly. The smart approach is to compare a turnkey home against one that needs work on a true all-in basis, including near-term repair costs, which is exactly where a buyer-side agent earns their keep.
On carrying cost, Argyle has a clear advantage: no CDD, and modest neighborhood HOAs that vary by subdivision, some with full amenities, some minimal. That keeps the monthly cost low relative to the newer CDD communities in St. Johns and Nassau, reinforcing the value case. Compare the all-in monthly number here against a newer community elsewhere and the gap, on a similar home, is often meaningful.
Who Lives Here
Argyle is a mixed, settled community of families and retirees, with a median household income around $80,000, reflecting its position as a solid middle-market area. Its affordability and proximity to NAS Jacksonville make it popular with military and first-responder households, and its schools and parks keep families moving in as longtime owners sell.
The feel is suburban and quiet, with neighborhood pools, ball fields, parks, and the small lakes that thread through the subdivisions, plus the Branan Field Wildlife and Environmental Area's trails nearby for the outdoors-minded. For buyers who want a stable, owner-occupied area at a workable price with everyday conveniences close, that is the draw; for those wanting St. Johns County schools or a brand-new master plan, the trade-offs point elsewhere.
Schools
Argyle Forest and Chimney Lakes are zoned to Duval County Public Schools, and this is the single most important thing to verify by neighborhood, because zoning varies across the area. Some neighborhoods feed well-regarded Oakleaf-area schools, including Oakleaf Village Elementary and the Oakleaf secondary schools, while others are zoned to Chimney Lakes Elementary, Argyle Elementary, Westside High, or Orange Park High, depending on the specific address and county lines.
Because Argyle straddles a popular, fast-grown part of the Westside, the school assigned to one subdivision can differ from the one next door, so a family should confirm the exact zoning for any specific home rather than assume an area-wide answer. Duval County also offers magnet and school-choice programs that can broaden options beyond the zoned school. For buyers without school-age children, the value case rests on price, location, and the home itself, which is the right lens there.
Amenities & Lifestyle
Amenities in Argyle are organized at the neighborhood level rather than as one master-plan package, which is typical for an established area. Chimney Lakes is the standout, with a community pool, tennis courts, basketball, and sand volleyball, while Argyle Forest adds ball fields and pickleball courts, and many smaller subdivisions have their own pools, playgrounds, or parks. The small lakes scattered through the neighborhoods add green space and walking routes.
Just beyond the neighborhoods, the Branan Field Wildlife and Environmental Area offers miles of trails for hiking and biking, and the wider Westside has parks and recreation. The amenity picture depends heavily on which subdivision you choose, since each has its own HOA and facilities, so confirming exactly what a specific neighborhood offers, and what its HOA covers, is part of the buying decision.
These neighborhood amenities are funded through modest subdivision HOAs that vary widely, covered next, with no CDD layered on top. The combination, real neighborhood amenities at a low carrying cost, is central to Argyle's value proposition.
HOA & CDD
Argyle's cost structure is one of its strongest selling points. The area has no CDD, since most of it was built before community development districts became standard, so buyers avoid the annual CDD assessment that newer St. Johns and Nassau communities carry. That alone keeps the long-term carrying cost lower than comparable newer homes elsewhere.
HOA dues vary by subdivision. Amenity-rich neighborhoods like Chimney Lakes carry modest dues that fund the pool and courts, while some smaller subdivisions have minimal HOAs or none at all. The right approach is to confirm the specific neighborhood's HOA, what it covers, and its financial health in writing for any home you consider, since the figure and the amenities behind it differ from one subdivision to the next. Even at the higher end, Argyle's all-in carrying cost is typically well below a CDD community, which is the heart of the value case.
Commute Analysis
Argyle's location is built for the commute, which is a big part of why it grew. The area sits between I-295 and the First Coast Expressway (SR-23), giving quick access across the Westside and to the rest of the metro. NAS Jacksonville and other Westside employers are minutes away, a major draw for military and defense-connected households, and downtown Jacksonville is a reasonable drive via I-295.
The First Coast Expressway has also opened up faster connections south toward Clay County and the growing southwest corridor. For most Westside and Southside job centers, Argyle's access is strong, and the trade versus a more central neighborhood is distance to the beaches and downtown in exchange for price and space. As always, drive your actual commute at rush hour before committing, since the Westside's main arteries can back up at peak times.
Shopping & Dining
Everyday shopping is a short drive at the Oakleaf Town Center, the area's retail anchor, with more than 70 businesses including Publix, Aldi, and Target, plus restaurants and services. The Argyle Village Shopping Center and the Orange Park Mall add more retail and dining nearby, so daily errands and weekly shopping are well covered without a long trip.
For more, the wider Orange Park area to the south and the Westside's commercial corridors offer additional options, and downtown Jacksonville and the St. Johns Town Center are a manageable drive for bigger outings. The pattern fits the value proposition: solid everyday retail and dining close to home, with the metro's larger destinations within reach when you want them.
Pros and Cons
Pros
- Value pricing (~$308K average), among the metro's more affordable established areas.
- No CDD, keeping the long-term carrying cost low.
- Strong commuter access via I-295 and the First Coast Expressway.
- Minutes to NAS Jacksonville and Westside employers.
- Neighborhood amenities (Chimney Lakes pool, tennis, courts; Argyle ball fields, pickleball).
- Oakleaf Town Center retail (Publix, Aldi, Target, 70+ stores) close by.
Cons
- Duval County schools, with zoning that varies by neighborhood (verify per home).
- Older, mixed housing stock; condition and updates vary widely.
- Densely populated area, so the specific pocket and street matter.
- Amenities are neighborhood-by-neighborhood, not one master-plan package.
- Farther from the beaches and downtown than central or eastside areas.
- Value market, so well-priced updated homes move fast and draw competition.
Argyle Forest vs. Comparable Communities
The honest way to place Argyle Forest is against the other value and family options a Westside or Clay buyer is realistically weighing. Each trades something different.
| Community | How it compares |
|---|---|
| Oakleaf Plantation | The large master-planned community just southwest in Clay; more amenities and newer homes, but a CDD and HOA structure Argyle does not carry. |
| Orange Park | The established Clay County town to the south; similar value and convenience, a different school district, and its own mix of older neighborhoods. |
| Mandarin | An established, leafy Southside area with a wide price range; generally pricier than Argyle, closer to the river and St. Johns County. |
| eTown | A newer Southside master plan with modern homes, amenities, and a CDD; much higher price and a different, planned feel. |
| Wells Creek | A newer Southside community with no CDD; newer homes at a higher price than Argyle, in a more eastern location. |
Argyle Forest's case against this field is straightforward value: more established home for the money, no CDD, neighborhood amenities, and strong commuter access on the Westside. The case against it is the Duval school picture that varies by neighborhood and the older, denser stock, where a buyer wanting newer construction and master-plan amenities would look at Oakleaf or eTown, and a buyer set on St. Johns County schools would pay more elsewhere.
Hidden Things Buyers Should Know
First, verify the exact school zoning for the specific home, not the area. Argyle straddles a popular part of the Westside where the assigned schools can change from one subdivision to the next, and Duval choice and magnet programs can broaden the options.
Second, the subdivision matters as much as the area. Each neighborhood has its own age, condition, HOA, and amenities, so two homes a mile apart can be very different buys. Local, neighborhood-level knowledge is the difference here.
Third, condition drives value in an older market. Roof age, HVAC age, and whether a home has been updated move both price and your near-term costs, so a thorough inspection and a true all-in comparison matter.
Fourth, confirm the HOA and what it covers. Amenity-rich neighborhoods like Chimney Lakes carry dues that fund real facilities; others are minimal. Know what you are paying for and the HOA's financial health.
Fifth, in a value market the well-priced, updated homes move fast. Be ready to act with financing in hand, and have an agent who can move quickly and read the comparable sales accurately so you neither overpay nor lose the right home.
Momentum Expert Insight
Argyle is the Westside's value engine, and it works for the right buyer: more established home for the money, no CDD, real neighborhood amenities, and a commute that makes sense for NAS Jacksonville and Westside jobs. The money is made or lost on two things, the specific neighborhood and the specific home's condition, because both vary widely across the area. Our job, at no cost to you as a buyer, is to know the individual subdivisions, verify the school zoning for the exact home, read condition honestly, and run the true all-in comparison against newer communities elsewhere.
Our advice is to decide your must-haves, school zone, amenities, and home condition, then let us point you to the right pockets of Argyle and Chimney Lakes rather than treating it as one undifferentiated area. Momentum Realty is Northeast Florida's number one independent brokerage, with 270-plus agents, 800-plus verified five-star reviews, and over $3.5 billion in closed sales, and we help value-focused buyers across the Westside and Clay every week.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Related Reading
If you are researching Argyle Forest, you are likely also weighing these other value and family options on the Westside and in Clay. We have written guides on each.
