The 60-Second Overview
Sawgrass Players Club is the gated Ponte Vedra Beach community west of A1A that holds TPC Sawgrass, the PGA Tour headquarters, and THE PLAYERS Championship: nearly 1,900 homes across 16 independent neighborhoods. Cypress Bridge is the water enclave of its north gate: 53 detached single-family homes per Frankel Realty Group, the first neighborhood on the left as you enter, reached over the community's own bridge across a small creek behind a landscaped entrance, per local community sources.
The product is specific and consistent: 3-to-5-bedroom homes of roughly 2,211 to 3,477 square feet per Frankel Realty Group, averaging around 3,000 square feet, built largely between 1987 and 1997 with buildout described from the mid-1980s to 2000 by local sources, on three quiet dead-end streets. Every home backs water per local community sources, and the majority carry lake views. There is no through traffic; the only cars on these streets belong to the neighbors.
Documented recent closings ran $1,000,000 to $1,400,000: 7013 Cypress Bridge Drive North closed at $1,000,000 in May 2025, while 7003 and 7027 Cypress Bridge Drive North closed at $1,300,000 and $1,400,000 in January 2026, per third-party records. A larger renovated home was asking $2,289,000 in mid-2026. The trades: 30-to-40-year-old construction with real renovation spread, a two-layer fee stack to verify, and a market of 53 homes where the right house may simply not be for sale this year.
A bridge, three dead-end streets, water behind every house, and the most famous gates in Florida golf around all of it. Cypress Bridge is what an enclave actually means.
Fees and the HOA Stack: Cypress Bridge Plus the Master, No CDD
The fee stack here has two layers and no CDD. Layer one is the Cypress Bridge sub-association: the neighborhood records its own covenants and restrictions, which are published through local community resources, and sets its own assessment; confirm the current amount and billing schedule directly with the association. Layer two is the Sawgrass Players Club master association assessment, billed semi-annually; the recent master budget listed $969 per residential unit each half-year. The master funds the staffed gates, common-area landscaping, lakes and waterways, recreational amenities, and reserves; the Cypress Bridge layer funds the enclave's own obligations, including its entrance and bridge-side landscaping. Both amounts change, so confirm the current figures in writing.
The structural point most buyers miss: Sawgrass Players Club runs as one master association over 16 independent neighborhood sub-associations, and each sub-association keeps its own board, its own budget, its own covenants, and its own rules. A healthy master file tells you nothing about Cypress Bridge's reserves or restrictions. When you buy here, your diligence reads two files: the master's and Cypress Bridge's.
What is not in the stack matters too. There is no CDD anywhere in this Arvida-era community, per Frankel Realty Group, and no mandatory club membership: golf and racquet amenities at TPC Sawgrass, The Yards, and Sawgrass Country Club are all separate, optional decisions. For a seven-figure water lot behind these gates, the required carry is modest, provided both HOA layers check out.
The Water and the Bridge: Why the Enclave Works
Cypress Bridge's defining feature is in the name. The neighborhood is entered over its own bridge across a small creek, and once inside, every home backs water per local community sources, with the majority carrying lake views per Frankel Realty Group. In a community where water exposure is usually a lot-by-lot premium, here it is the baseline: the question is not whether you get water, but which water and how much of it.
That distinction matters for pricing. A wide lake panorama and a narrow creek frontage are different assets that share one street, and with only a handful of sales a year, portals cannot price the difference for you. We comp water against water: orientation, width of the view, privacy across the water, and how the lot actually lives. The renovated January 2026 closings at $1,300,000 and $1,400,000 against the $1,000,000 May 2025 sale show how much condition and exposure move the number inside one small enclave.
The geometry does the rest. Three dead-end streets mean zero through traffic; the bridge makes the boundary physical, not just legal; and two of the streets carry sidewalks connecting toward the neighboring Salt Creek section per local community sources, so the enclave is sealed without being isolated. It is a rare layout, and it is most of what you are paying for.
The Homes: Late-1980s and 1990s Plans on the Water
The housing stock is more consistent than most Players Club neighborhoods: 3-to-5-bedroom homes of roughly 2,211 to 3,477 square feet per Frankel Realty Group, built largely between 1987 and 1997, with local sources describing buildout from the mid-1980s and the final home completed by 2000. The plans average around 3,000 square feet, which puts Cypress Bridge in the comfortable family-home band of the community: bigger than the Oakbridge cottages, below the estate sections.
The vintage is the homework. A 2026 buyer here is shopping renovation history as much as floor plan: roofs, windows, HVAC, plumbing, electrical, and any additions vary house to house, and the spread between an original 1990 interior and a current one is hundreds of thousands of dollars, as the documented closings show. Florida insurers underwrite roof age directly, so the roof conversation belongs in the offer, not the closing week. Ask for permit history; thirty-plus years of owners means thirty-plus years of projects, documented and otherwise.
One naming trap to retire immediately: Cypress Bridge is not Cypress Creek. They are two separate neighborhoods inside the same gates with confusingly similar names, listed separately by local brokerages including Frankel Realty Group. Confirm the legal subdivision on any listing before you comp it, because mixing the two corrupts the math in a market this thin.
Inside the Players Club: The Gates, the Golf, the Optional Memberships
Cypress Bridge inherits everything that makes Sawgrass Players Club singular. The community holds TPC Sawgrass with the Stadium Course and its island-green 17th, the Dye's Valley course, the PGA Tour headquarters, and THE PLAYERS Championship each spring, all behind staffed gates west of A1A. Residency buys the address, the access control, and the grounds; it does not buy golf.
The club menu is unusually deep for one address: TPC Sawgrass inside the same community, The Yards behind the same gates, and Sawgrass Country Club across A1A, each with its own membership categories, initiation, and dues that change; confirm current pricing directly with the club you actually want. The recreational layer is broader than golf: per Frankel Realty Group the gated community includes a community pool, ballfield, and playground, and the master association maintains the lakes, paths, and common grounds.
The north-gate position is Cypress Bridge's practical edge inside all of this. Per local community sources you are the first neighborhood inside the gate, which means gate to Solano Road and A1A in minutes, with grocery-anchored shopping outside either exit. Our complete Sawgrass Players Club guide maps all 16 neighborhoods if you want the full picture.
Schools: The Zone Behind the Price
Cypress Bridge is zoned to the Ponte Vedra feeder pattern of the St. Johns County district, one of the top-rated districts in Florida, per Frankel Realty Group: Ponte Vedra Palm Valley/Rawlings Elementary, currently rated 10/10 on GreatSchools, then Alice B. Landrum Middle and Ponte Vedra High. For a 3,000-square-foot family-home product on the water, the school zone is structural to the value, because it keeps families in the buyer pool alongside golfers and downsizers. Verify current assignments by address before relying on them.
What Living Here Is Actually Like
Quiet in a way that has to be engineered: a bridge, three dead-end streets, water behind the house, and a staffed gate between you and A1A, with the grocery run still measured in minutes.
The ownership profile
Cypress Bridge draws families chasing the school zone and the water, golfers who want the TPC address without estate money, and long-tenured owners who simply do not leave, which is why inventory stays thin. The covenants and the enclave geometry keep the character owner-occupied; read the rules before underwriting any rental plan.
Tournament week
THE PLAYERS arrives each spring with crowds and A1A traffic. The north-gate position makes daily logistics easier than deeper sections, but tournament week is still tournament week. Most residents call it a fair trade; know which camp you are in.
Maintenance and the water
Houses from the late 1980s and 1990s in coastal air need stewardship, and a water-backed lot adds its own list: drainage, seawall or bank condition where applicable, and irrigation. Budget real maintenance money, and put the lot itself on the inspection scope, not just the house.
The weekly rhythm
Out the north gate to Solano Road in two minutes, Publix and Sawgrass Village just beyond, the beach minutes across A1A, and Mayo Clinic in fifteen to twenty. It is the TPC life with the community's most convenient exit.
Five Costly Mistakes Cypress Bridge Buyers Make
A 53-home water enclave behind a famous gate concentrates very specific errors:
Comping Cypress Creek, the ZIP code, or the community average
Cypress Bridge and Cypress Creek are different neighborhoods, and a 32082 average describes no house here. With a handful of sales a year, only condition-adjusted Cypress Bridge and Players Club water comps mean anything. Verify the legal subdivision before you trust a single number.
Reading only the master file, not Cypress Bridge's
The Players Club runs 16 independent sub-associations, each with its own board, budget, covenants, and rules. In a 53-home association, the reserve math for the entrance and common areas falls on very few owners. Read both files.
Treating all water exposure as equal
Every home backs water, so the premium is not whether but which: lake width, orientation, privacy across the water, and how the lot lives. The spread between the $1.0M and $1.4M closings is condition and exposure, not square footage alone.
Underestimating the late-1980s-1990s inspection
Roof age drives insurance quotes, original plumbing and panels drive surprises, and undocumented renovations drive appraisal problems. Inspect like the vintage demands, and put the water-backed lot itself on the scope.
Assuming the address includes the golf
Living behind the TPC gates is not membership at TPC Sawgrass, The Yards, or Sawgrass Country Club. Each is separate, with its own initiation and dues. Settle which club, if any, fits your budget before you buy, not after.
Position, Water, and Value
The water, the renovation, and the wait are the premium here
In Cypress Bridge, three variables stack: the quality of the specific water exposure, renovation depth across thirty-plus years of ownership, and simple availability in a 53-home market. The value play, when it appears, is the structurally sound house with dated finishes on good water: the lot and the address at a discount, with the remodel on your terms.
With turnover this thin, the right answer is usually the best water and condition available in your window, not the theoretical favorite that may not list for years.
The Cypress Bridge Buyer Checklist
- Verify the legal subdivision: Cypress Bridge, not Cypress Creek; the names are close and the markets are not interchangeable.
- Pull both association files: the Players Club master and the Cypress Bridge sub-association budget, reserves, covenants, and minutes.
- Confirm both fee layers in writing: the Cypress Bridge assessment and the master assessment, with inclusions.
- Walk the water: exposure, orientation, privacy across the lake, and the condition of the bank behind the specific lot.
- Inspect like a late-1980s-1990s house: roof, windows, HVAC, plumbing, electrical panel, and additions, with permit history.
- Get a real insurance quote inside the window: roof age drives the premium, and pull the FEMA flood designation for the exact lot.
- Comp condition and exposure explicitly: the documented spread runs $1.0M to $1.4M-plus inside one small enclave.
- Settle the club question separately: TPC Sawgrass, The Yards, or Sawgrass Country Club, with current pricing confirmed.
Cypress Bridge is the neighborhood we point to when someone wants the TPC Sawgrass gates, real water behind the house, and an enclave that actually feels like one: a bridge, three dead-end streets, and 53 owners. The catch is the same thing that makes it work; almost nothing trades, so the buyers who win here are the ones already watching when a door opens.
Our job is simple: verify everything the listing does not say, price the water and the renovation honestly against a tiny comp set, and make sure the house you fall for is also the contract you should sign.
Cypress Bridge vs. the Players Club Set
The realistic cross-shop for a Cypress Bridge buyer:
| Community | Format | The honest one-liner |
|---|---|---|
| Oakbridge | 353 homes, 1976-1986, behind the same gates | The bigger, older, more attainable sibling; Cypress Bridge trades volume and entry price for newer plans and water behind every house. |
| Seven Mile Drive | Enclave inside the same gates | Another small Players Club section; different geometry, same two-layer fee logic and thin inventory. |
| Turtleback Crossing | Townhomes behind the same gates | The attached entry to the Players Club; a different product class from a detached water-lot house. |
| Sawgrass Players Club | The umbrella community | The full menu behind one gate, nearly 1,900 homes across 16 neighborhoods from condos to Stadium-Course estates. |
| TPC Sawgrass | The course and the homes around it | The headline address inside the same gates; the estate sections trade above Cypress Bridge's band. |
Cypress Bridge's lane: a true water enclave at the most convenient gate in the community, with family-scale 1990s homes, top schools, no CDD, and no mandatory club bill. If you need volume, new construction, or one simple fee, look elsewhere; if you want water behind the house and the TPC gates around it, this is one of the purest versions on the market.
The Honest Pros and Cons
Pros
- Every home backs water; majority with lake views
- Bridge entry, three dead-end streets, zero through traffic
- First neighborhood inside the north gate: fastest exit in the community
- No CDD; golf and club memberships optional
- Top-rated St. Johns schools, including a 10/10 elementary
- Family-scale plans around 3,000 square feet
Cons
- 53 homes: thin inventory and thin comps
- Late-1980s-1990s construction: real inspection and insurance diligence
- Two HOA layers to verify, Cypress Bridge plus the master
- Small association means concentrated reserve obligations
- Club amenities cost extra, on top of two fee layers
- Tournament-week crowds and A1A traffic each spring
Our Cypress Bridge Buyer Playbook
How we run a Cypress Bridge purchase, in order:
- Start the watch early: with 53 homes, the buyers who win are already in position when a listing or quiet opportunity appears.
- Decide the water priority first: exposure quality versus condition versus plan size, ranked before a listing forces the choice.
- Pull both association files on day one: master and Cypress Bridge budgets, reserves, covenants, and minutes.
- Underwrite insurance and the inspection before offering, with roof age, permit history, and the flood designation priced into the number.
- Negotiate on condition and exposure, precisely: the renovation delta and the water premium are the leverage in a thin market.
Questions We Ask Before You Sign
Six answers we get in writing on every Cypress Bridge contract:
- What are the current Cypress Bridge and master assessments, and exactly what does each cover?
- What do the sub-association financials and reserves show, and what shared projects, including the entrance and bridge areas, are next?
- What assessments are pending or discussed in the minutes?
- What is the roof age and the full permit history, and what does the insurance quote actually come back at?
- What do the covenants allow for the changes you plan, and what do they say about rentals?
- What did the last true comparables trade for, condition- and exposure-adjusted, inside Cypress Bridge specifically?
Is Cypress Bridge Not For You?
The honest cut, both directions:
Consider elsewhere if you want
- New construction or modern systems out of the box
- Inventory to choose from on your timeline
- One simple fee with everything bundled
- Estate-scale lots and square footage
- Club amenities included in the dues
- A deep comp set that prices itself
Cypress Bridge fits if you want
- Water behind the house, guaranteed by the neighborhood's own layout
- A true enclave: bridge entry, dead-end streets, 53 owners
- The fastest gate-to-A1A position behind the TPC gates
- Family-scale 1990s plans around 3,000 square feet
- Top St. Johns schools behind a staffed gate
- Patience rewarded in a market that rarely trades
