The 60-Second Overview
Candler Hills is the fee-simple tier of On Top of the World, the 55+ mega-campus that Colen Built Development has grown in southwest Ocala since the family bought the Circle Square Ranch land in 1975. The distinction matters more here than in any other Marion County community: in OTOW's core sections you buy the home on leasehold terms, while in Candler Hills you hold title to the land under it. Lenders, appraisers and future buyers all treat those as different products, and the resale market prices them differently.
What you get for crossing that line is a neighborhood with its own 24-hour guarded gate, its own clubhouse and heated outdoor pool, and its own championship golf course - the Gordon Lewis-designed Candler Hills Golf Club, opened in 2005, par 72 and stretching to 7,233 yards across seven tee sets. And because you are still inside the OTOW campus, the ~$336 monthly HOA also buys access to the rest of the empire: the pools, fitness, entertainment and the club calendar that makes OTOW one of the most socially dense 55+ addresses in Florida.
Every listing here is priced on the golf and the campus. The money is made or lost on three quieter questions: leasehold versus fee simple, the bond on older sections, and which plan generation you are buying.
Pricing runs in two layers: earlier-section resales that have historically traded from the high $200s into the $400s, and the newer, larger product - current listings roughly $525K to $800K - where most of today's inventory sits. Colen Built is still building, so resales compete with new construction on the same streets, which caps appreciation on dated homes and rewards buyers who understand which sections carry the roughly $800-a-year bond assessment.
The Fee Stack: HOA, Bond, and the Leasehold Line
Candler Hills costs are simpler than a CDD community like Calesa or a club community like Golden Ocala, but there are still three things to verify before you sign anything:
1) The HOA: about $336.29 per month as of January 2025. It is a genuinely loaded number: the 24-hour guarded gate, common-area maintenance, curbside trash pickup, access to the full On Top of the World amenity campus, resident golf discounts, and the exclusive Candler Hills clubhouse and heated pool. Stack that against communities where the gate, the campus and the neighborhood pool are three separate bills and it reads fair - but confirm the current amount, because it adjusts.
2) The bond: roughly $800 per year, older sections only. The earlier Candler Hills (and Indigo East) sections carry a bond-style assessment that rides on the property-tax bill. Newer sections generally do not. Two otherwise identical listings can differ by $65+ a month because of it, and listing remarks rarely volunteer the number. We pull the parcel-level figure on every home we show.
3) The leasehold line. Candler Hills is fee simple - but it is surrounded by OTOW core sections that are not. Portal searches mix the two constantly, which is why an OTOW listing at a startlingly low price usually is not a Candler Hills comp at all. If land ownership is why you are here, make sure every comp and every listing you weigh sits on the right side of that line.
The Golf: A Real Championship Course Without the Equity Buy-In
Candler Hills Golf Club is the sleeper asset here. Gordon Lewis designed it, it opened in 2005, and from the back markers it plays 7,233 yards at par 72 - genuinely long by Ocala 55+ standards. Seven tee sets bring it back to 4,877 yards, which is the detail that matters for a community where ability ranges from club-championship players to nine-and-dine social golfers.
Just as important is what the club is not: there is no mandatory equity membership. Residents play on discounted rates through the HOA arrangement, pay-as-you-go. The course also came through a significant tee-to-green renovation recently, so conditions reflect new surfaces rather than 20-year-old wear - ask us for the current status and rates, since renovation schedules and pricing change.
The OTOW Campus: What the $336 Actually Buys
The reason buyers shortlist Candler Hills instead of a standalone gated neighborhood is the campus behind it. On Top of the World is one of Florida's largest 55+ communities, and Candler Hills owners hold full access: multiple pools and fitness facilities, hobby and club programming measured in the dozens upon dozens, entertainment venues and an event calendar that runs year-round. You also keep your own quieter clubhouse and heated pool inside the Candler Hills gate - the practical pattern we hear from owners is campus for the big stuff, neighborhood clubhouse for daily life.
The streets are golf-cart legal, and carts are the default second vehicle. You can run a cart to the campus amenities and out to the SR 200 corridor for groceries - a small thing on paper that reshapes daily life in practice.
The Homes: Colen Built, Two Generations of Product
Everything here is Colen Built Development, the family operation that has been building in Ocala since 1975 and building homes since 1947. That single-builder history cuts both ways: construction and HOA standards are consistent, but there is no builder competition inside the gate, and new phases set the price ceiling for resales.
Think of the inventory in two generations. The mid-2000s originals are smaller and date-stamped in their finishes - they are the affordable entry, and the most likely to carry the bond. The later product, including current plans like the Arlington, Wellington and Aberdeen, runs larger - the floor plans here are a deliberate step up in size from the OTOW core, which is a core part of the Candler Hills pitch. On premium golf and water lots with options, new builds push past $800K.
Schools: The 55+ Reality Check
Candler Hills is age-restricted, so zoned schools are rarely a buying criterion - but they still matter twice: visiting grandchildren, and the long-run resale story of southwest Ocala, where school capacity is part of the county's growth debate. The neighborhood sits in Marion County Public Schools territory generally served by the West Port High feeder pattern; verify current assignments with the district rather than trusting a portal, because southwest Ocala zoning has been a moving target as the corridor grows.
What Living Here Is Actually Like
The rhythm of Candler Hills is campus life with a private retreat. Owners describe mornings on the course or at the neighborhood pool, afternoons in OTOW clubs, and a cart-first lifestyle where the car can sit for days. Here are the questions buyers actually ask us, answered straight:
Is Candler Hills its own community or part of On Top of the World?
Both, and the distinction is contractual: it is a named neighborhood within the OTOW campus, with its own gate, clubhouse, pool and golf course - but unlike the OTOW core, you own your land fee simple. HOA money flows into both neighborhood and campus access.
Can I drive my golf cart outside the neighborhood?
Yes - cart-legal streets connect Candler Hills to the broader OTOW campus, and carts routinely make the run to shopping near the SR 200 corridor. Confirm current cart rules and routes with the association.
How social is it really?
OTOW's club ecosystem is the deepest in Marion County, and Candler Hills residents have full access plus their own clubhouse calendar. Introverts can opt out; the point is the option density.
What about hurricanes and insurance?
Inland Marion County is one of Florida's lower-premium regions, and newer concrete-block construction here quotes accordingly. Get an insurance quote during inspection - age of roof drives pricing on the earlier sections.
Five Costly Mistakes Candler Hills Buyers Make
We have watched each of these cost real buyers real money. None of them are exotic - they all come from trusting listing remarks instead of documents.
Comparing Candler Hills to leasehold OTOW comps
The core campus sections are leasehold; Candler Hills is fee simple. A core-section price is not a Candler Hills comp, and an appraiser will not treat it as one. Make sure every comp in your CMA sits on the right side of the line.
Missing the bond on older sections
Roughly $800 a year rides on the tax bill in the earlier sections. It does not appear in the HOA figure, and listing agents rarely volunteer it. Pull the parcel record before you price your offer.
Buying a dated original at a newer-plan price
Because Colen Built still sells new homes inside the gate, resale pricing has a hard ceiling. Paying $600K for a 2006 home that needs a roof and a kitchen, two streets from new construction, is how equity evaporates.
Ignoring the HOA inclusions when comparing communities
$336/month sounds high against a $100 HOA until you price the guard gate, campus access, trash and the private clubhouse separately. Compare totals, not labels - in both directions.
Skipping the golf math
No equity membership is a feature, but frequent players should still model annual rounds at resident rates against communities with bundled golf. For some golfers SummerGlen or Stone Creek math wins; for others Candler Hills does. Run it before you fall in love.
Lots & Sections: Where the Value Hides
The Pre-Offer Checklist
- Confirm fee-simple title. Verify the parcel is in Candler Hills proper, not an adjacent leasehold section.
- Pull the bond status. Get the exact annual assessment for that parcel, in writing.
- Verify the current HOA figure and inclusions. The ~$336.29 figure is a Jan 2025 number; confirm today's.
- Price new construction first. Get Colen Built's current base-plus-lot-plus-options number before valuing any resale.
- Roof and HVAC age on originals. Mid-2000s homes are in replacement season; budget accordingly.
- Golf reality check. Current resident rates, renovation status, and tee-time pressure in season.
- Insurance quote during inspection. Inland rates are favorable, but roof age drives the quote.
- Resale lens. Ask what percentage of recent sales were newer plans - it tells you what the market rewards.
Candler Hills is where we send buyers who love everything about On Top of the World except the leasehold. That one structural difference - owning your dirt - changes the lending, the appraisal and the exit, and it is worth the premium for most people who plan to stay seven-plus years.
The trap is paying newer-plan money for original-section product. The builder is still selling inside the gate, which means the market constantly re-prices what dated means. We keep buyers on the right side of that line.
Candler Hills vs. the Alternatives
Every Candler Hills buyer is also looking at three or four other Marion County 55+ addresses. Here is the honest grid:
| Community | Ownership | Golf | The honest trade |
|---|---|---|---|
| On Top of the World (core) | Leasehold | Campus courses | Cheaper entry, same campus - but you do not own the land |
| Del Webb Stone Creek | Fee simple | 18 holes | National-brand polish and resort core; less club-density than OTOW campus |
| SummerGlen | Fee simple | 18 holes | No-CDD value play with RV storage; smaller scale, fewer amenities |
| Ocala Preserve | Fee simple | Tom Lehman 24 holes | Resort-hospitality feel near WEC; mixed 55+/all-ages sections |
| Del Webb Spruce Creek G&CC | Fee simple | 36 holes | Most golf per dollar in the county; 15+ years older product, Summerfield location |
The verdict: choose Candler Hills when you want the deepest amenity campus in Marion County and insist on owning your land. Choose Stone Creek or Ocala Preserve for newer resort polish, SummerGlen for cost discipline, Spruce Creek for maximum golf.
The Unvarnished Pros & Cons
Pros
- Fee-simple ownership inside the OTOW campus - unique combination
- Loaded HOA: guard, trash, campus access, private clubhouse and pool
- Championship-length Gordon Lewis golf without equity membership
- Larger floor plans than OTOW core; builder still active
- Cart-legal access to campus and SR 200 shopping
- Inland location keeps insurance comparatively sane
Cons
- ~$336/month is real money if you will not use the campus
- Bond assessment on older sections is easy to miss
- Single-builder market caps resale leverage against new phases
- Age-restricted - excludes multigenerational plans
- SR 200 seasonal traffic is the daily-life tax
- Portal data chronically confuses leasehold OTOW with Candler Hills
The Momentum Buyer Playbook
How we run a Candler Hills purchase, in order:
- Define the generation first. Original-section value or newer-plan product - the budgets barely overlap.
- Price new construction as the benchmark. Every resale gets judged against Colen Built's current all-in number.
- Pull parcel records early. Bond status and title type before the second showing, not during contract.
- Negotiate on condition, not vibes. Roof, HVAC and kitchen vintage are the leverage on originals.
- Verify every fee in writing. HOA amount, inclusions, golf rates - dated documents, not listing remarks.
Questions We Ask Before You Offer
These are the calls we make on every Candler Hills contract - answers in writing, every time:
- What is the exact bond balance and annual assessment on this parcel?
- What is the current HOA fee and is an increase budgeted?
- Any pending special assessments at neighborhood or campus level?
- What are current resident golf rates and any planned course work?
- Roof, HVAC and water-heater ages with documentation?
- What did the last three closed sales of this plan actually sell for?
Is Candler Hills Not for You?
We would rather lose a sale than place you in the wrong community. The fit check, honestly:
Consider elsewhere if you want
- The cheapest 55+ entry - OTOW core or Oak Run undercut it
- No age restriction for a blended household
- Acreage, horses or privacy from neighbors
- A walkable town-center lifestyle
- Bundled unlimited golf in the HOA
- To avoid any bond/assessment lines entirely
Candler Hills fits if you want
- To own your land and still have the OTOW campus
- A private clubhouse layered on a mega-campus
- Championship golf, pay-as-you-play
- Newer, larger floor plans than the core sections
- A guarded gate and cart-first daily life
- Inland-Florida insurance math
