The 60-Second Overview
Cannons Point is one of Oakleaf Plantation's fourteen named villages - 2000s-era streets in the plan's interior, organized under a structure worth stating precisely: one plan-wide POA, not per-village sub-HOAs. The villages here are named sections of a single association - simpler governance than Eagle Harbor's layered model, with one rulebook and one dues line beside the Oakleaf CDD that funds the campus.
What the stack buys is the corridor's deepest amenity program: pools and water features, athletic centers, parks and trails - plus school campuses inside the plan and the Town Center at its edge.
Oakleaf is one association wearing fourteen names - and the names still matter, because the villages price on their own curves even under a single POA.
The market discipline: village-level comps (the names organize the tiers), the current POA+CDD numbers, the 2000s capex questions - and the corridor's standing comparison against Forest Hammock's no-CDD math, which shadows every Oakleaf resale whether the listing mentions it or not.
The Stack
1) The POA. One plan-wide association - confirm the current dues. The single-structure simplicity is real: one rulebook, one board, one schedule.
2) The CDD. The Oakleaf district on the tax bill - the campus's funding engine. Ask the bond-versus-O&M split and the retirement schedule; the answer shapes the long hold.
3) The era capex. 2000s systems at the decision ages - the corridor constant.
The Village: Named and Tiered
2000s-era single-family across the family range, tiered the corridor's standard way: original-era value homes, renovated cores, and the larger plans on backing lots. The village name carries the comp set - Cannons Point's era and streetscape price together, and the plan's averages blur what the village curve shows.
The era's questions - roof, HVAC, water heater, kitchen - assign each home its tier, and the school-season calendar moves the renovated tier fastest.
Schools
Cannons Point sits in the Oakleaf feeder - Oakleaf Village Elementary 7/10, Oakleaf Junior High 6/10, Oakleaf High 6/10 - with campuses inside the plan, minutes from the village. The feeder is the plan's demand engine; confirm zoning per address as the corridor grows.
More on Living at Cannons Point
The depth without the wall of text. Open what matters to you.
The campus life
One-rulebook simplicity
The plan's rhythm
The no-CDD shadow
5 Mistakes Buyers Make at Cannons Point
Named-village purchases inside one-POA plans produce specific mistakes. These are the five.
Comping plan-wide
Fourteen villages, fourteen curves - the averages blur what Cannons Point's own closings show.
Skipping the bond question
The CDD's bond-versus-O&M split and retirement schedule shape the long hold - ask the district.
Ignoring the no-CDD shadow
Forest Hammock's math is in every buyer's spreadsheet - run it yourself before the negotiation runs it for you.
Skipping the era list
2000s roofs and systems price every offer - the corridor constant.
Assuming sub-HOA structure
One POA, named sections - importing Eagle Harbor's model misreads the governance and the documents.
Which Homes Hold Value Best
In a named village, updated cores on backing lots lead
Renovated family homes on preserve or pond backings crown the village - the school-season prize inside the plan. The original-era tier is the arbitrage; the village's name guarantees the renovation's comp set.
Campus walkability carries a quiet premium - positions nearest the pools and paths trade above their tier.
What to Check Before You Offer
Before you write on any Cannons Point home, run this list.
- Current POA dues and the CDD assessment - both lines, current
- The CDD's bond-versus-O&M split and retirement schedule
- Village-level comps by condition tier
- The era's four questions - roof, HVAC, water heater, kitchen
- Insurance quote inside the inspection period
- The POA's single rulebook read for your plans
- School zoning per address
- The Forest Hammock comparison run on decade math
Cannons Point teaches the Oakleaf lesson in miniature: the plan is one association wearing fourteen names, and the names still run the market. Village-level comps beat the averages, the POA+CDD stack prices the campus, and the no-CDD shadow from Forest Hammock keeps every negotiation honest. Buy the village by its name, price it by its tier, and the corridor's biggest plan trades as rationally as its smallest pocket.
Our advice: run the corridor's defining spreadsheet - this village's stack-inclusive decade cost against Forest Hammock's - and let your household's actual pool-and-court usage decide it. The campus is worth its funding to the families who live there; the math tells everyone else.
Cannons Point vs. Comparable Options
The honest way to place Cannons Point is across the corridor's structures.
| Community | How it compares to Cannons Point |
|---|---|
| Highland Mill | The sibling village - same structure, its own curve. Inventory timing decides between them. |
| Forest Hammock | The no-CDD counterargument - ~$500/yr against the stack, amenities-lite against the campus. The corridor's defining comparison. |
| Eagle Landing | The golf-and-resort tier - bigger amenities, bigger carrying costs, the plan's premium side. |
| Waterford Ranch | The no-CDD newer single-family nearby - 2022+ systems against the village's campus access. |
| Oakleaf Plantation (the plan) | The full fourteen-village map - the master guide for shopping the names side by side. |
Cannons Point's case: an established named village inside the corridor's amenity anchor, with the schools inside the plan. The case against: the corridor's heaviest fee profile, 2000s capex, and rivals selling lighter structures minutes away.
The Honest Trade-offs
Pros
- The corridor's deepest amenity campus included.
- One-association simplicity - a single rulebook.
- Oakleaf feeder schools inside the plan.
- Named-village identity sharpens the comps.
- Established streets in the plan's core.
- School-season liquidity in the renovated tier.
Cons
- The POA+CDD stack - the corridor's heaviest.
- 2000s capex at decision age.
- No village-level governance or amenities.
- Plan-scale school-hour traffic.
- The no-CDD shadow disciplines every resale.
- Fourteen-village comps demand precision.
The Cannons Point Playbook
If we were buying here, this is the order of operations - and the one we run for clients.
- Pull the stack first. POA dues plus the CDD - and the bond schedule behind it.
- Comp the village by name. Cannons Point's curve, not Oakleaf's average.
- Run the Forest Hammock spreadsheet. The corridor's defining comparison, answered in advance.
- Ask the era's questions. The 2000s constants price every offer.
- Time the calendar. The plan moves in school season.
Questions We Ask Before You Buy
These are the questions we put to the POA, the district and the seller on every Cannons Point purchase.
- What are the current POA dues and CDD assessment?
- Where does the CDD's bond schedule stand - what retires, when?
- What have Cannons Point homes closed at, by tier?
- What year is the roof, and what does a quote say?
- What does the POA rulebook say about your plans?
- What schools is this address zoned for, per the district today?
Is Cannons Point For You?
No village fits everyone. The honest sort:
Consider elsewhere if you want
- No CDD on principle - Forest Hammock's lane.
- Golf and resort scale - Eagle Landing's side.
- New construction - The District and Waterford Ranch.
- Village-level governance - Eagle Harbor's model.
- Quiet outside the plan's rhythm.
- The lightest possible fees.
Cannons Point fits if you want
- The campus life the stack actually funds.
- Schools inside the plan, minutes from the village.
- One-rulebook simplicity at master-plan scale.
- A named village bought on its own curve.
- Established Oakleaf at the plan's core.
- The corridor's anchor - priced with its shadow answered.
