The 60-Second Overview
Clearview Estates is the village Citrus Hills built for buyers who measure in acres: estate homes on one-acre lots - four times the community's standard quarter acre - in the heart of the footprint, less than a mile from the Tiki at the club core. It is also, uniquely, the only Citrus Hills village with equestrian trails running through it, a holdover of the area's horse-country DNA that no other village kept.
The cost structure matches the land-first philosophy: the HOA runs about $281 a year per recent listing data, and club membership is typically optional on these original-village deeds. The recent market: two active listings averaging $479,500 in a $360K-$599K range, with homes from 2,732 to 4,432 total square feet (roughly 1,916-2,965 under air).
Clearview is the acre-and-a-horse-trail version of Citrus Hills - estate land, a token HOA, and the club's Tiki bar close enough to walk to when the mood strikes.
The trade-offs are honest ones: inventory is thin (two listings at a time is normal), the stock is established rather than new, and an acre is yours to maintain. For the right buyer - especially one with a horse, a workshop dream, or an allergy to monthly fees - no other village under the brand competes.
The Fees: ~$281 a Year, and the Club Is a Choice
Clearview's obligation structure is the lightest tier of the Citrus Hills spectrum. The village HOA - approximately $281 per year per recent listing data - covers village-level commons and deed-restriction administration. Confirm the current budget, but the order of magnitude is the story: this is a $23-a-month neighborhood inside a brand whose premium villages stack $450-$687 a month.
The club question: on original-village deeds like Clearview's, the Citrus Hills social membership is typically optional - roughly $189/month plus a one-time $2,000 deposit if you add it, unlocking BellaVita, the member restaurants, pools, courts and member-rate golf across 54 holes. With the Tiki under a mile away, plenty of Clearview owners do join; the point is that it is their choice, confirmed in writing per deed before any offer - the protocol we run on every Citrus Hills purchase.
Want the deed checked? We confirm the current HOA and the club obligation in writing before you tour.
Get the fee checkTrails & Land: The Equestrian Exception
The equestrian trails are Clearview's signature and its moat: no other Citrus Hills village has them. They thread through the village's acre parcels, connecting the estate lots to the riding culture that Citrus County is quietly famous for - the county seat is minutes from Pine Ridge Estates and its 27-mile trail network, and Clearview is the only way to touch that lifestyle while staying inside the club community's footprint.
Horse-keeping rules are covenant-level - what counts as permitted animals, stabling and fencing standards vary by section and era of deed, so we pull the actual covenants before any buyer with horses commits. For non-riders, the trails read as something simpler: built-in green corridors that keep the village's character open and unmanicured in the best sense.
The acre itself is the second amenity: room for pools, detached garages, workshops and serious gardens, per covenants. Pets are explicitly allowed under the HOA rules. This is the village where the brand's deed restrictions sit lightest on the land - verify the specifics, but that is the character.
The Homes: Estate Scale, Established Stock
The housing stock is established estate product: recent listings ran from 2,732 to 4,432 total square feet (1,916-2,965 under air), three and four bedrooms, with the larger plans putting real distance between the garage and the lanai. Eras vary across the village, so the standard diligence applies - roofs, HVAC, plumbing generation - and the insurance quote belongs early in the process, not late.
The market structure to understand: with typically two-ish active listings, Clearview is a patience market. Buyers who know they want an acre here should be on a watch list before the right house exists - the good trail-adjacent parcels in particular tend to trade before they get famous. Sellers, conversely, face thin comps; the last actual closes matter far more than any asking price in the village.
Want first call on Clearview inventory? We watch the village continuously - tell us your spec and we will flag matches the day they list.
Join the watch listSchools: The Honest Context
Clearview is all-ages, and acre lots plus optional club fees make it one of the family-practical corners of Citrus Hills. Zoning generally points to Hernando Elementary (5/10 on GreatSchools at last check), Inverness Middle and Citrus High - confirm with Citrus County School District, and we verify per address on every offer with children involved.
Buying with kids or horses (or both)? We verify zoning and the animal covenants before you commit.
Verify for meWhat Living Here Is Actually Like
Morning on the trail, afternoon in the workshop, sunset at the Tiki - Clearview compresses three Florida lifestyles into one village. What buyers ask us most:
Can I actually keep a horse here?
The equestrian trails are real and unique to this village, but keeping horses on your parcel is covenant-governed - rules on stabling, fencing and animal counts vary by deed era. We pull the actual covenants for any horse buyer before an offer; never rely on listing remarks for this.
Do I have to join the club?
Typically no - original-village deeds like Clearview's usually carry optional membership. We confirm in writing per deed. With the Tiki under a mile away, many owners join anyway; it is genuinely a choice here.
What does an acre cost to maintain?
Realistically a $200-$300/month lawn service if you outsource it all, less if you ride a mower yourself. The acre is the amenity - budget its upkeep honestly.
How is storm exposure?
Favorable - Citrus Hills elevation, far inland of surge. Mature trees on acre parcels add the usual wind-cleanup considerations; we pull the FEMA layer and insurance quotes per parcel.
Five Costly Mistakes Clearview Buyers Make
Acre villages inside club brands generate their own errors - these five recur.
Assuming the horse rules from the trail signs
Trails through the village do not equal stabling rights on your parcel. The covenants decide - read them before you bring the trailer.
Comping against quarter-acre villages
A Clearview estate and a Canterbury ranch are different products. Land-adjusted comps only - or you will misprice in either direction.
Negotiating from asking prices in a two-listing market
Thin inventory lets asks float. The last actual closes - even months old - anchor better than any current list price.
Skipping era diligence on estate stock
Bigger homes mean bigger roofs and bigger re-pipe bills. System ages belong in the offer math, with the insurance quote ordered early.
Paying a club premium on an optional-club deed
Some listings price as if the membership conveys as value. If it is optional, it is not a premium - it is your future choice. We price accordingly.
Want a second set of eyes? We represent you, not the seller - this checklist runs on every Clearview deal.
Talk to a buyer agentParcel Tiers: Where the Value Sits
Touring? We rank live inventory by parcel quality first, house second.
Rank the inventoryThe Clearview Due-Diligence Checklist
- Covenant read: animal/stabling rules, outbuilding rights, and fencing standards for THIS parcel.
- Fee confirmation: current HOA budget (~$281/yr recently) and written club-obligation status per deed.
- Era diligence: roof, HVAC, plumbing generation - documented, priced into the offer.
- Insurance early: estate-scale roofs and tree exposure shape the quote.
- Trail map: where the equestrian corridors actually run relative to your parcel.
- Land-adjusted comps: acre-village closes only - never quarter-acre comps.
- Survey: on acre parcels, boundary and easement clarity is worth the cost every time.
- Well/septic vs. utilities: confirm what serves this specific parcel.
Clearview is the village we show buyers who love the Citrus Hills idea but flinch at fee stacks: an acre, a horse trail, a $281-a-year HOA, and the Tiki close enough to hear the band. Nothing else under the brand trades land this generously.
Our discipline here is parcel-first: covenants, survey, trail map and land-adjusted comps before we talk about kitchens. The house is changeable; the acre is the asset.
Clearview vs. the Alternatives
Clearview shoppers weigh the brand's other value villages and the county's acreage plays:
| Community | Land | Carry | Signature | Edge |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clearview Estates | 1-acre estates | ~$281/yr, club optional | Equestrian trails | Most land in the brand |
| Canterbury Lake Estates | ~0.25 ac | ~$32/mo, club optional | 3 lakes + state trail | Lower entry, own pool |
| Belmont Hills | ~0.6-0.77 ac treed | Deed-dependent | Gated + buildable lots | Newer stock, gate |
| Villages of Citrus Hills (all) | Varies | $135/yr-$250/mo + club | 54 holes + BellaVita | Full menu |
| Terra Vista | 0.25 ac+ | ~$450-$650/mo stack | Manned gate + Skyview | Club immersion |
The verdict: for maximum land and minimum obligation inside the brand, Clearview is the answer - full stop. Buyers wanting gates go Belmont Hills; buyers wanting lakes and the lowest entry go Canterbury.
Cross-shopping? One conversation, the honest land-and-fee math on each.
Compare them for meThe Honest Pros & Cons
Why buyers choose Clearview
- A true acre - 4x the community standard
- The brand's only equestrian trails
- ~$281/year HOA, club optional
- Estate-scale homes at mid-$400s average
- The Tiki under a mile away
- Room for pools, workshops, gardens
Why some buyers pass
- An acre of upkeep, no bundling
- Two-listing inventory - patience required
- Established stock, era diligence needed
- No gate, no village pool of its own
- Horse rights are covenant-level, not automatic
- Thin comps complicate pricing both ways
Our Clearview Buyer Playbook
How we run a Clearview purchase:
- Parcel first. Trail map, covenants, survey and canopy walk before any house talk.
- Deed-level fees. HOA and club status confirmed in writing.
- Close-anchored pricing. Last actual sales beat asking prices in a two-listing market.
- Era diligence priced in. Systems and insurance quoted before the offer, not after.
- Watch-list discipline. The right acre rarely waits - we set the alert before you need it.
Questions We Ask Before You Offer
The six questions that protect Clearview buyers:
- What do the covenants permit on this parcel - animals, outbuildings, fencing?
- What is the current HOA budget, and is the club optional on this deed - in writing?
- Where do the trails run relative to this lot, and is adjacency priced correctly?
- What are the system ages, and what does insurance quote?
- What served this parcel - well/septic or utilities?
- What did the last acre-village closes actually run, land-adjusted?
Is Clearview Right for You?
The honest fit check:
Consider elsewhere if you want
- Maintenance-included living
- A gate and manned security
- Deep inventory to choose from
- New construction
- The club deeded and done
- A compact, social village green
Clearview fits if you want
- An acre under the Citrus Hills brand
- Horse trails out the back (covenants permitting)
- A $281-a-year obligation, not a stack
- Workshop, pool and garden room
- The Tiki within a stroll
- Land as the asset, house as the project
