The 60-Second Overview
Calesa Township is the most deliberately family-built community in Marion County. Colen Built Development, the debt-free family company that has spent decades building Ocala's On Top of the World, flipped its own formula: instead of a 55+ community, it master-planned roughly 1,850 acres in southwest Ocala for close to 5,000 homes over about two decades, aimed squarely at households with kids. Construction began in 2021 off SW 80th Avenue, about 1.5 miles south of the SR-200 retail corridor, and the first neighborhood, Roan Hills, is essentially sold out, with Sorrel Glen and the new Townes townhomes selling now.
What makes it genuinely different is the infrastructure that came first. The Ina A. Colen Academy, a tuition-free K-8 public charter school funded by the Colen Family Charitable Trust, opened on-site in August 2022 and has earned an A grade from the state in consecutive years. Next door sits FAST, Florida Aquatics Swimming & Training, an 82,000-plus-square-foot aquatic center with a 10-lane indoor 50-meter Olympic pool and an 8-lane outdoor 50-meter pool, and resident memberships are bundled into an HOA advertised around $100 a month. A multi-surface trail system with pedestrian tunnels under the roads ties homes to the school, the pools, and Roan Hills Park, so kids can get to class or swim practice without crossing traffic.
Most Florida communities sell a clubhouse. Calesa sells an A-rated school, an Olympic pool, and a hundred-dollar HOA, and the fine print on all three is exactly what a buyer needs to read.
The honest counterweights: the charter school runs on a lottery, with Calesa residents holding priority for half the seats, priority, not a guarantee. The community is young, so you are buying years of construction traffic and evolving streetscapes. The spine road is public, so there is no guard gate at the entrance. And in a one-builder community, the thin resale market must price against Colen's current sheet and incentives. None of that breaks the case; all of it belongs in your math.
The Fee Stack: What ~$100 a Month Actually Buys
This is the centerpiece value story, and it is unusually clean for Florida. Calesa's fee structure has three honest facts most buyers never get spelled out:
1) The HOA has been advertised at roughly $100 per month, and it includes FAST. Per the developer's own disclosures (based on the 2025 budget year in Sorrel Glen), the monthly fee covers common-area and trail-system landscaping, common-area irrigation, electronic neighborhood entry gates, neighborhood amenities like Roan Hills Park, and FAST aquatic-center memberships for up to four household members. Stack that against what a family would pay separately for a gym-and-pool membership alone and the number explains itself. Two caveats we flag every time: third-party listing sites have shown figures closer to $130 per month, rates and inclusions vary by neighborhood, and the budget resets annually, so we confirm the current amount for the exact neighborhood in writing.
2) We have found no CDD. Colen Built is a debt-free developer that has historically self-funded its infrastructure rather than issuing community-development-district bonds, the same model as On Top of the World. That is a meaningful difference from many new SW Ocala competitors, where a CDD line of $1,000-$2,000+ a year can sit on the tax bill for decades. We still verify the non-ad-valorem lines on the specific parcel before you close, because the tax bill, not the brochure, is the document that counts.
3) There is no buy-in. No club equity, no initiation, no capital contribution to a country club, because there is no country club. The amenity model here is school, swim, trails, and parks, and it is funded through the HOA and the Colen family's own institutions. FAST programs beyond the bundled membership, swim lessons, the Falcons club team, Masters swimming, bill separately, and membership carries blackout dates around major meets.
Ina A. Colen Academy: The School That Anchors the Buy
Communities have been built around golf courses for fifty years; Calesa was built around a school. The Ina A. Colen Academy is a tuition-free K-8 public charter, established by the Colen Family Charitable Trust (named for the founder's mother, a teacher), authorized by the Marion County School Board, and run by an independent non-profit governing board. It opened in August 2022 with 215 students, has grown past 400, and is designed to add capacity toward roughly 1,450 students as the community builds out. The curriculum leans on project-based learning, social-emotional development, and physical health, with the trail network literally delivering kids to the door.
The early results are genuinely strong: the school has earned an A grade from the Florida DOE in consecutive years and a 7/10 on GreatSchools, with state-assessment proficiency well above district averages, placing it among the top-ranked elementary programs in Marion County. For a school that did not exist four years ago, that is an unusually fast track record, and it is the single biggest driver of demand for these homes.
Now the part the sales office will mention and a buyer must actually understand: admission is by lottery, and residency is a priority, not a guarantee. Under the school's enrollment policy, half of the seats are set aside with priority for Calesa Township residents; applications run through an annual Lotterease lottery (typically opening in late fall for the following school year), and when applications exceed seats for a grade, the lottery decides. In practice, resident priority in a still-small community has been a strong hand, but it is not a contractual right that conveys with the deed, sibling and staff preferences exist, the policy can change, and demand grows every year as both Calesa and the school's reputation grow. The honest read on any young school also applies: leadership, staffing, and grade-level depth are still maturing, middle-school grades are newer than the elementary core, and a buyer should tour the school and read the current enrollment policy, not a 2022 press release. And remember it ends at 8th grade: high school means zoned West Port High or Marion County's choice, magnet, and charter options.
FAST, Roan Hills Park, and the Trail Network
FAST, Florida Aquatics Swimming & Training, is not a community pool with a fancy name. It is an 82,000-plus-square-foot competition aquatic center adjacent to the community: a temperature-controlled 10-lane indoor 50-meter/25-yard Olympic pool, an 8-lane outdoor 50-meter/25-yard/25-meter pool, an outdoor splash pad, a dryland fitness center, and spectator seating for roughly 2,000, which is why it draws sanctioned meets and elite training. It is open to the public on daily rates and memberships, but Calesa residents get memberships bundled into the HOA, up to four per household, covering open swim, lap swim, FAST FIT, the spray ground, and locker rooms. The fine print: memberships are limited to household members, end if you move out, and carry blackout dates and adjusted hours around meets and events, the trade-off for living next to a facility good enough to host them. Lessons, the FAST Falcons club team, and Masters programs bill separately.
Inside the community proper, Roan Hills Park is the residents-only hub: a resort pool with a covered cabana building for parties, a spray pad, playground and tot lot, full-court basketball, a soccer area, and outdoor grills. An Adventure Park, neighborhood bark parks, yoga pavilions, and a roughly four-mile (and growing) multi-surface trail system thread it together, with pedestrian tunnels, including the Birds of Passage art tunnel, carrying the trails under the roads. The design intent is the rare one that survives contact with reality: a kid can bike from the driveway to school, swim practice, or the park without crossing a street. Additional neighborhood amenities and pools are planned as the master plan phases out; verify what exists today versus what is rendered, and who funds each.
Homes & Neighborhoods
Calesa is a one-builder community, every home is Colen Built, the same family operation behind On Top of the World, building in Florida since 1947 and, unusually for a developer, debt-free with no bankruptcy history. That means one design language, one warranty desk, and a price sheet the whole market keys off. The neighborhoods so far: Roan Hills (the 2021-era first neighborhood, essentially sold out and now the resale layer), Sorrel Glen (the second and current single-family neighborhood), and The Townes (the newest release, townhomes), with future neighborhoods, and eventually more multi-family product, still to come across the master plan.
The product lines, per the current published pricing (base prices; confirm current): The Townes, the Hartwood (1-story, 3 bed/2 bath, ~1,508 A/C sq ft) and Heritage (2-story, 3 bed/2.5 bath, ~1,551 A/C sq ft) townhomes with 2-car garages, published in the mid $260s to low $280s, the community's entry point. The Signature Collection singles (Amber, Currant, Garnet, Sapphire, Sable; ~1,600-2,420 A/C sq ft, 3-4 beds) have been published from the low $330s to the mid $370s. The Floral and Arbor Collections (Begonia, Gardenia, Larkspur, Marigold, Acacia, Hawthorn, Mulberry, and more; ~2,200-3,800 A/C sq ft, many with 3-car tandem or split garages) run from the high $390s to the low $520s, with HomeFlex multigenerational suite options on select plans, a real answer for households bringing a grandparent along. Lot premiums, elevations, and design-studio selections move the contract price meaningfully above base.
The new-build process here is the standard production-builder playbook with a Colen accent: choose plan and homesite, design-studio selections (or take an XPress/quick-delivery spec for speed), and builder financing incentives, rate buydowns through the preferred lender have been heavily advertised in 2025-26, always contingent on using that lender. Two things we do on every Calesa contract: price the incentive against an outside lender's real numbers (a below-market teaser rate can be worth less than a cleaner price), and bring an independent inspector at pre-drywall and final, builder reputation is good, but every production home deserves third-party eyes. For resales, the comp is the builder's current sheet plus incentives on the same plan, full stop.
Schools
Beyond the on-site Academy, every Calesa address also carries a Marion County Public Schools assignment, and it matters for three groups: families who do not win a lottery seat, families with high-schoolers (the Academy ends at 8th grade), and resale value. Commonly cited assignments for this part of SW Ocala are Saddlewood Elementary, Liberty Middle, and West Port High, mid-tier ratings overall, with West Port carrying respected magnet programs. Marion County rezones as this quadrant grows, so confirm the current assignment for the specific address with the district.
The honest framing: Calesa is the only community in Marion County where an A-rated charter sits inside the master plan, and that is a genuine edge, but a buyer's school plan needs all three layers, the lottery school, the zoned schools, and Florida's open-enrollment and choice options, mapped before the contract, not after the moving truck.
More on Living in Calesa Township
The depth without the wall of text. Open what matters to you.
Location, SR-200, and the commute
Is it gated? Safety and street design
Who lives here, and what is the vibe?
Construction, build-out, and what is still coming
5 Mistakes Buyers Make in Calesa Township
In a young, one-builder, school-anchored community, the same five mistakes cost buyers the most. Each is avoidable with the right read before you tour.
Treating the school as guaranteed
Resident priority covers half the seats and runs through a lottery. Families have bought assuming a seat for a specific child in a specific grade and met a waitlist instead. Map the lottery calendar, the grade-level demand, and the zoned fallback before you contract.
Quoting the $100 HOA without the fine print
The advertised figure is neighborhood-specific and budget-year-specific, third parties have cited ~$130/mo, and the FAST bundle caps at four household members with blackout dates. Get the current budget and inclusions for your exact neighborhood in writing.
Taking the builder incentive at face value
Rate buydowns through the preferred lender are real money, but they are priced into the deal and contingent on that lender. Run the math against an outside lender and a negotiated price; sometimes the headline rate is the worse deal.
Pricing a resale off Zillow instead of the builder's sheet
In a one-builder community, every resale competes with Colen's current base price plus incentives on the same or similar plan a street away. That number, not an algorithm, is the ceiling and the comp.
Walking into the sales office unrepresented
The friendly community specialist works for Colen Built, and they are good at their job. Your own agent costs you nothing extra, registers with you on day one, and works the lot premium, the options pricing, the incentive math, and the inspections for your side.
Which Lots & Views Hold Value Best
In a 20-year master plan, the lot is the only thing the builder cannot reproduce
Colen will build your floor plan again hundreds of times. What it cannot duplicate is the homesite: preserve and trail-backing lots, pond frontage, and park-adjacent positions carry the durable premiums here, while interior lots backing another home are the value play, and should be priced as one.
The Calesa-specific wrinkle: check what the master plan says is behind the lot, not what is behind it today. An open field can be a future phase, a school expansion, or permanent preserve, and only the plat and the master plan know which. We pull both before our buyers pay any lot premium.
What to Check Before You Offer
Before you sign a Calesa Township contract, new build or resale, run this list. Missing any one of them is how buyers overpay or inherit a surprise.
- The current HOA budget for the exact neighborhood: amount, inclusions, the FAST membership terms, and the annual-adjustment language
- The tax bill on the parcel: confirm there is no CDD or other non-ad-valorem assessment, in the records, not the brochure
- The school plan, all three layers: lottery calendar and current odds at the Academy, the zoned Marion schools, and choice options
- What the master plan puts behind your lot: future phases, road extensions, school expansion, or permanent preserve
- The incentive math: builder rate buydown vs an outside lender quote vs a negotiated price, run side by side
- True comps plan-to-plan: the builder's current sheet plus closed resales of the same plan, not a community average
- Independent inspections on new construction: pre-drywall and final, plus the warranty terms in writing
- Insurance and the practical stuff: a real quote, the gating status of the specific neighborhood, and golf-cart/trail rules if they matter to you
Calesa Township is the rare new community where the marketing pitch and the substance mostly match: the school is genuinely A-rated, the aquatic center is genuinely world-class, and the HOA is genuinely cheap for what it bundles. The money is made or lost in the gaps the brochure glides over, the lottery odds for your specific kid's grade, the neighborhood-by-neighborhood HOA differences, the lot premium against what the master plan builds behind it, and the real value of a builder rate buydown versus a sharper price. A buyer who walks into the sales office unrepresented hands all of that leverage to the seller's side, in a market where the builder is motivated.
Our advice to Calesa buyers is to cross-shop it honestly: against Marion Ranch next door if budget leads and the school is optional, against established Heath Brook and Fore Ranch if you want mature SR-200 convenience over a 20-year build-out, and, for the grandparents following the grandkids, against On Top of the World and Ocala Preserve fifteen minutes away. For a family that wants the school, the swim, and the trails as the actual organizing principle of the neighborhood, nothing else in Marion County is built like this, and the entry now starts in the $260s.
Calesa Township vs. Comparable Communities
The honest way to place Calesa is against the other Marion County communities a buyer is realistically weighing. Each trades something different.
| Community | How it compares to Calesa Township |
|---|---|
| Marion Ranch (Lennar & Pulte) | The direct neighbor on the SW 80th Street corridor: Lennar townhomes from the low $220s and Pulte singles from the low $310s, with resort-style pools and a lower base HOA (~$75/mo on the Pulte side). It wins on entry price and national-builder incentives; Calesa wins on the on-site school, FAST, the trail-and-tunnel design, and a single debt-free builder. Verify CDD status there parcel by parcel. |
| Heath Brook | The established SR-200 master plan: mature landscaping, larger resale homes roughly $320K-$550K across Heath Brook Hills, The Meadows, and The Preserve, and shopping at your doorstep. It trades Calesa's purpose-built school-and-swim infrastructure for maturity and location; HOA structures vary by subdivision. |
| Fore Ranch | SW Ocala's earlier family master plan off SR-200: resale-only pricing typically below Calesa's new builds, walkable retail, and a clubhouse-and-pool amenity set. The value alternative for families who want the corridor without a builder premium, without the charter school or the aquatics. |
| On Top of the World | The same Colen family, the opposite demographic: Ocala's 55+ giant with golf, clubs, and decades of build-out, about 15 minutes away. The natural landing spot for Calesa buyers' parents, same builder DNA, age-restricted ecosystem. |
| Ocala Preserve | The NW Ocala resort community with the Oak House club, flexible golf, and both 55+ and all-ages phases. Its all-ages sections compete with Calesa on lifestyle; Calesa wins decisively on schools-by-design, Ocala Preserve on resort dining, spa, and golf. |
| Golden Ocala G&EC | The luxury tier: gated golf-and-equestrian estate living beside the World Equestrian Center at a multiple of Calesa's price point, with club dues to match. A different budget conversation entirely; Calesa is the attainable family flagship. |
Calesa's case against this field is focus: it is the only Marion County community where an A-rated school, an Olympic aquatic center, and the street design were planned together for families, at a roughly $100 HOA and with no CDD found. The case against it is time and certainty, a 20-year build-out, a lottery school, no front gate, and a one-builder market that sets the resale ceiling.
The Honest Trade-offs
Pros
- An A-rated K-8 charter school inside the community, reachable by trail.
- FAST Olympic aquatics bundled into a roughly $100/month HOA (confirm by neighborhood).
- No CDD found, one debt-free builder, no club buy-in.
- Trail-and-tunnel design that actually separates kids from cars.
- Townhome entry from the $260s; HomeFlex multigenerational options.
- SR-200 retail and West Marion Hospital minutes away.
Cons
- School admission is a lottery; resident priority is half the seats, not all.
- Construction traffic and change for years across a ~20-year build-out.
- No guard gate at the main entrance; the spine road is public.
- One-builder market: thin resales priced against Colen's current sheet.
- K-8 only; high school means zoned West Port or choice options.
- SW Ocala growth means SR-200 corridor traffic keeps building.
The Calesa Township Playbook
If we were buying in Calesa Township, this is the order of operations we would run, and the one we run for our clients.
- Solve the school first. Lottery calendar, grade-level demand, and the zoned fallback, mapped before you fall for a floor plan.
- Pick the product tier. Townes carry, Signature space, or Floral/Arbor square footage and HomeFlex, then shop within it.
- Verify the fees for that neighborhood. Current HOA budget, FAST terms, and the tax bill's non-ad-valorem lines in writing.
- Hunt the lot against the master plan. Preserve and trail-backing first; never pay a premium without knowing what builds behind it.
- Work the money. Builder incentive vs outside lender vs negotiated price, with your own representation and independent inspections.
Questions We'd Ask Before Buying Here Ourselves
The questions a local who knows Calesa asks are different from the ones a portal answers. On any specific home, we want to know:
- What is the current-year HOA budget and FAST inclusion language for this exact neighborhood, and how has it trended?
- What are the realistic lottery odds at the Academy for my child's grade for the year we would enroll?
- What does the master plan put behind this lot, and when do the next phases break ground?
- Is the builder's rate incentive worth more than a price negotiation on this home, run both ways?
- What did the same plan close for, new and resale, in the last six months?
- What is the gating, parking, and rental policy for this neighborhood, and what changes at HOA turnover?
Calesa Township May Not Be Right For You If
We would rather tell you the truth than sell you the wrong community. Calesa may not be the right fit if any of these are deal-breakers, and that is a property question, not a personal one.
Consider elsewhere if you want
- A guard-gated entrance and a finished, settled community today.
- A guaranteed school seat that conveys with the deed, no lottery anywhere offers that, including here.
- Golf, a country club, or a 55+ social calendar as the core amenity.
- Acreage, horses, or no-HOA living, this is a planned community with rules.
- The absolute lowest entry price in SW Ocala; Marion Ranch townhomes start lower.
Calesa Township fits if you want
- A community organized around kids, school, and swim, by design, not marketing.
- An A-rated charter a bike ride away, with eyes open about the lottery.
- Olympic-facility aquatics in the HOA instead of a country-club bill.
- One accountable, debt-free builder and no CDD found on the tax bill.
- Room to grow, from a $260s townhome to a HomeFlex multigen home, inside one master plan.
