Bahia Del Mar II market snapshot (as of June 25, 2026): the median sale price is about $332K ($368 per sq ft), with homes averaging 32 days on market and 4.0 months of supply, a buyer-leaning market (limited data). Based on 6 recent closings in live Stellar MLS data.
Bahia Del Mar II is a residential condominium association on Isla del Sol, a private island connected to St. Petersburg and St. Pete Beach by the Pinellas Bayway. Per the association website, the community comprises Tower L at 6357, Tower M at 6295, the surrounding villas, and the lakeside villas at 6273, 6277, 6281, and 6285 Bahia Del Mar Circle, set on landscaped grounds with lakes, fountains, and waterfront views on Boca Ciega Bay (Bahia del Mar II Condominium Association, 2025).
The buildings were developed in the early 1980s, with public unit records generally citing construction between 1981 and 1983 and floor plans running from compact one bedrooms to two bedrooms in the roughly 740 to 1,240 square foot range (Bahia Del Mar building and listing guides, 2025). Confirm the exact size, bedroom count, building, and floor for any specific unit, since the association spans several distinct structures.
The complex enforces a minimum rental term of 30 days, cited across Bahia Del Mar listing and brokerage guidance. That policy distinguishes Bahia Del Mar II from the nightly and weekly vacation-rental buildings found elsewhere on Isla del Sol and keeps the community oriented toward owners, seasonal residents, and longer-term tenants. Confirm the current rental rules in the declaration of condominium during diligence, as association policies can be amended.
Under Florida law (SB 4-D, as amended by HB 913 in 2025), older condo associations must complete a milestone structural inspection and a Structural Integrity Reserve Study. Confirm the milestone and SIRS status for the specific Bahia Del Mar II building you are buying in, since the association spans towers and villas of different ages and the reports are completed at the building or association level. The carrying cost picture includes monthly HOA dues that historically cover water, sewer, trash, cable, internet, security, and exterior and grounds maintenance, with the master policy typically covering the building structure and common elements; the unit interior, personal property, and loss-of-use exposure fall on each owner's individual HO-6 policy. Flood zone and insurance exposure vary by building and FEMA mapping, so run the FEMA lookup and get an insurance quote for the specific unit before you close.