Daytona Highridge in Daytona Beach

Daytona Highridge

Established 1988 · Intracoastal West · ZIP 32224

An established, affordable single-family neighborhood on the west side of Daytona Beach, dating to the mid-1970s near the LPGA corridor.

Single-familyAffordableWest Daytona / LPGA area
Live Market Pulse
56/100
Momentum
Balanced Market (limited data)
Tight supply keeps sellers in control, but dated interiors still trade at a discount, so condition is where buyers win.
Free · No obligation
Unlock Off-Market Daytona Highridge

Listings before the portals, true comps, and the renovation and carrying-cost math, before you tour.

Built fromLive DBAAR data14 years of closingsLocal renovation analysisUpdated twice daily
LiveMarket PulseDBAAR
$1.01M
Median Price
0mo
Supply
57days
Avg DOM
Balanced
Seller Leverage
$290/sf
Median $/Sqft
-6%
1-Yr Price Change
0now
Distress
Jon Brooks, founder of Momentum Realty
Jon's Current Read

"Daytona Highridge, known as Daytona Highridge Estates, is an established, affordable single-family neighborhood on the west side of Daytona Beach near the LPGA corridor, and the read is value and quiet. Midsize, reasonably priced homes on well-kept streets date to the mid-1970s, close to the LPGA-area shopping and the interstates. The trade is that it is an older, value-tier neighborhood, so the purchase is about the specific home's condition and lot rather than a community amenity."

Jon Brooks, founder, Momentum Realty · Updated June 2026

The 60-Second Overview

Daytona Highridge, or Daytona Highridge Estates, is an established single-family neighborhood on the west side of Daytona Beach, Volusia County, southwest of LPGA Boulevard and the Old DeLand Road area. It is a quiet, value-tier community rather than a gated or amenity-driven development.

The neighborhood dates to about 1976 and has continued to develop over the years, with mostly midsize, reasonably priced single-family homes on well-kept lots. It is one of the more affordable established neighborhoods on Daytona's west side.

The location pairs quiet with convenience: the LPGA Boulevard corridor (with its growing shopping and dining near Interstate 95), Embry-Riddle, the Speedway, and the beach are all within a manageable drive, and the interstates put Orlando and the coast in reach.

Because Daytona Highridge is an older, value-tier neighborhood, the purchase is about the individual home, its roof, systems, and condition, and the lot, rather than a neighborhood-wide average.

Best for

  • Value buyers who want an affordable, established single-family home on Daytona's west side
  • Buyers who value a quiet neighborhood near the LPGA corridor and I-95
  • Buyers comfortable judging an older home's condition

Probably not for

  • Buyers who want a gated, amenity-rich or new-construction community
  • Anyone seeking waterfront or beachside
  • Buyers unwilling to update an older home

How Daytona Highridge is performing right now

56/100
momentum
Balanced Market (limited data)
Seller's marketBalancedBuyer's market
0Months of supplytight
65Median days on marketdays
2 : 0Under contract vs for salestrong demand
1Sold in last 12 monthsliquidity
+127%Median price since 2012appreciation
+0%Asking vs recent sold $/sqftroom to negotiate

Tight supply and strong demand favor sellers here. Homes still take about two months to sell, though, and with asking prices running above recent sales per square foot, a prepared buyer has room on anything overpriced. Reading each home against the real comps, not the headline trend, is where the edge is.

Live from DBAAR, as of June 10, 2026. Refreshed twice daily. Months of supply, days on market, and the contract-to-listing ratio are computed from current Daytona Highridge listings and the trailing twelve months of closed sales.

8.6A- score
Momentum intelligence
Momentum buy score

Our proprietary read on how a home in Daytona Highridge buys, holds, and resells. See the five factors.

Homes For Sale Right Now in Daytona Highridge

Live MLS inventory for Daytona Highridge. Every active listing, what is under contract right now, and the last 12 months of closed sales, refreshed twice a day. Closed comps beat an algorithm's guess every time.

No homes are actively for sale in Daytona Highridge right now, so its recent closed sales are shown, as of 2026-06-10, priced high to low. © 2026 Daytona Beach Area Association of REALTORS®, Inc.. Tap any home to ask about it.

Listing locations from DBAAR; lot type inferred from listing descriptions. Destination pins are approximate. Map data © OpenStreetMap, tiles © CARTO. Flood, school, and commute overlays are on the roadmap.

The takeaway

The location is the everyday-convenience case: shopping, schools, and the major roads are all a manageable drive.

LPGA Boulevard corridor~5 to 10 min · shopping and dining near I-95
Interstate 95~5 to 10 min · via LPGA Blvd or US-92
Embry-Riddle / Speedway~10 to 15 min · colleges and racing
Tanger Outlets / One Daytona~10 min · shopping
Daytona Beach (the Atlantic)~15 to 20 min · east via ISB or LPGA
Daytona Beach International Airport~15 min · near the Speedway
DeLand~25 to 30 min · west via Old DeLand Rd or SR-44

Distances and drive times are approximate and vary with traffic. Confirm your real commute at your real departure time.

Nearby Communities

Explore more neighborhoods near Daytona Highridge with Momentum Realty’s local guides.

MOSAICDaytona Beach · 1.2 miIndigo LakesDaytona Beach · 1.5 miLMLatitude Margaritaville Daytona BeachDaytona Beach · 1.8 miLPGA InternationalDaytona Beach · 1.8 miMarina Grande on the HalifaxHolly Hill · 3.1 miBDBayshore Bath and Tennis ClubDaytona Beach · 4.0 mi

Browse all Florida neighborhood guides →

Carrying cost · the no-CDD edge

No CDD bond means thousands less per year than newer master plans.

Typical CDD community~$2,500/yr
Daytona Highridge (no CDD)$0/yr

Roughly $25,000 saved over 10 years in carrying cost, before resale.

Illustrative. NE Florida CDD assessments commonly run $1,500-$3,500+/yr and vary by community; verify per property.

Schools

15-Second Take
  • Volusia County Public Schools
  • Verify the zoned schools by address
  • Magnet and choice options may be available
  • Confirm current ratings before relying on them
  • Private and parochial options nearby

Daytona Highridge is served by Volusia County Public Schools. Assignment is by address and can change, so confirm the exact zoned elementary, middle, and high schools for any specific home, plus any magnet or choice options. Treat published ratings as a starting point, not the full story.

Buying with schools in mind? We can confirm the exact zoned schools for any Daytona Highridge address.

The takeaway

What is actually relevant to Daytona Highridge buyers, sourced and dated. We do not publish rumor.

Recent Developments in Daytona Highridge

Our read on what is being built around Daytona Highridge, scored for direction, significance, and how close the effect lands. The full sourced timeline follows below.

Net OutlookBullishDaytona Highridge is an established, built-out neighborhood, so activity is resale. The west-Daytona LPGA corridor has been a growth area, adding nearby shopping and services that support values for affordable established neighborhoods like this one.

Affordable established neighborhood near the LPGA corridor

BullishReasonably priced midsize homes near the growing LPGA Boulevard and I-95 corridor support steady value-buyer demand. impact
SignificanceRadius: West Daytona Beach

Affordable established neighborhood near the LPGA corridor

Mid-1970s housing stock

NeutralHomes date to the mid-1970s, so roof and systems condition and updates drive value more than a community-wide average. impact
SignificanceRadius: Neighborhood-wide

Mid-1970s housing stock

Direction, significance, and effect-radius ratings are Momentum's proprietary, qualitative read of the sourced items below, not investment advice or a prediction for any specific home.

Development, infrastructure, retail, and school activity affecting Daytona Highridge, tracked by our team and summarized from public reporting and official sources, with links to the original coverage. Last updated June 2026.

Showing the latest, scroll for all updates ↓

  1. 2026
    Community

    Daytona Highridge Estates profile

    Daytona Highridge Estates is an established west-Daytona Beach neighborhood dating to about 1976, with mostly midsize, reasonably priced single-family homes, southwest of LPGA Boulevard near the growing LPGA and I-95 corridor (neighborhood and brokerage listing sources, 2026). Why it matters: The affordability and corridor location are the draw; price the specific home on its condition and lot, and verify the roof and systems. Source

Summaries reflect public reporting and official sources linked above as of the dates shown. Project details, timelines, and approvals can change. Commentary on potential market effects is general observation, not investment advice or a prediction for any specific property. For the freshest items across the whole region, see This Week in Northeast Florida.

If we were buying in Daytona Highridge, this is the order of operations we would run, and the one we run for our clients.

1

Judge the specific home's condition. Pull the roof, HVAC, electrical, and plumbing ages on a mid-1970s home; condition is the value here.

2

Check the FEMA flood zone and drainage. Pull the flood zone for the address and a bindable insurance quote, especially on lower lots.

3

Confirm any HOA or deed restrictions. Verify whether the parcel carries an association and its dues, if any.

4

Verify the zoned schools by address. Daytona Beach is served by Volusia County Schools; confirm the current zoned schools with the district locator.

5

Test the commute and corridor traffic. The LPGA and I-95 access is the value driver; drive your real route at peak hour.

Best Buy
An updated midsize home with a newer roof, on a dry lot, near the neighborhood's typical range.
Biggest Risk
Deferred maintenance on a mid-1970s home eroding the affordability; price it in.
Best Lot
Higher, dry lots are the safe value; verify drainage on lower lots.
Smart Timing
Daytona Highridge is an affordable, established west-Daytona option near a growing corridor; price the specific home on condition and lot.
The takeaway

On mobile, tap any heading below to open it. This is the home by home, lot by lot, club and renovation detail, organized so you can jump straight to what matters to you.

Community Details at a Glance

The Homes

Gating

Dual-gated, with attended North and South entrances.

Styles & age

Traditional, ranch, and contemporary single-family, built 1987-2000.

Lots & sizes

Golf, lake, preserve, and interior lots (~0.25-0.5+ acres); homes ~2,400-4,000 sq ft.

Builder

Arvida (with JMB Partners).

Costs & Governance

CDD

None. No Community Development District bond on the tax bill.

POA dues

Quarterly POA dues (separate from the club) vary by lot size and include Hotwire internet and cable TV. Confirm the current amount.

Amenities & Lifestyle

Golf

18-hole course and a 26,000 sq ft member-owned clubhouse (membership optional).

Pool & fitness

Heated club pool, a fitness center, and ten lighted clay tennis courts.

Kids

In-community Woodland Park with a playground, basketball court, and sports field.

Getting around

Sidewalks on some roads; a golf-cart-friendly community.

Location & Nearby

Setting

Intracoastal West Jacksonville, ZIP 32224, off Hunt Club Road.

Nearby

Under 15 minutes to the beaches, St. Johns Town Center, and Mayo Clinic; UNF about 8 minutes.

Schools

Duval County: Chets Creek, Kernan Middle, Atlantic Coast (ratings below).

Homes & Architecture

Daytona Highridge homes were built largely between 1987 and 2000 in traditional, ranch, and contemporary styles, on a mix of golf frontage, lakefront, preserve, and interior lots. Because the community is built out, you are buying into a spectrum that runs from original 1990s condition to fully renovated, and the price gap between the two is enormous. A dated home and a beautifully renovated one a few doors apart can differ by hundreds of thousands of dollars, which is exactly where buyers overpay or find value.

This makes Daytona Highridge a renovation market as much as a resale market. Many of the best buys are homes in great locations that need updating, where an honest budget for roof, HVAC, pool, and modernization turns a dated house into a strong long-term hold. The risk is underestimating that budget, which is why reading the renovation math is the core skill here.

More on Living in Daytona Highridge

The depth without the wall of text. Open what matters to you.

Location and commute
Daytona Highridge's Intracoastal West position is a big part of its appeal. It is about four miles from the Atlantic beaches, roughly a 10 to 15 minute drive, and about ten minutes from the St. Johns Town Center for shopping and dining. The UNF and Mayo Clinic corridor is close, and Downtown and the Southside job centers are an easy reach via Beach and JT Butler boulevards.
Traffic reality
The community itself is quiet and gated, but the surrounding Hodges, Beach, and JT Butler boulevard corridors are busy and commercial, and continue to develop. That is the trade-off for the central, convenient location, with everyday shopping and dining minutes away. Test-drive your real commute at your real departure time.
Shopping and dining
The St. Johns Town Center, one of the region's largest shopping and dining destinations, is about ten minutes away, and the Beach Boulevard and Hodges corridors cover everyday needs. The beaches at Atlantic, Neptune, and Ponte Vedra are a short drive east for dining and recreation.
Insurance and flood
As an Intracoastal West community a few miles inland with 26 community lakes, flood exposure varies lot by lot, so pull the exact FEMA flood zone for a specific address rather than assuming. On the homeowners side, roof age is the biggest swing on a 1990s home, so a recently re-roofed house is far easier and cheaper to insure. Always get a real insurance quote on the specific home.
Daytona Highridge Buyer Due Diligence

Before you write an offer on any Daytona Highridge home, run this list. Missing any one of these is how buyers overpay or inherit a problem.

Property Systems

  • Roof and HVAC age, and the resulting insurance quote
  • Pool equipment age and condition
  • An honest renovation budget for roof, HVAC, pool, and updates

Financial

  • POA dues and inclusions (Hotwire internet and cable, access control) in writing
  • The club decision and the true cost of the membership you would use
  • Total carrying cost: HOA, optional club, insurance, near-term repairs

Resale Strength

  • Lot quality and view, and whether the premium is fair
  • Golf, lake, or preserve frontage versus an interior lot
  • The interior-lot warning: where buyers overpay

Verification

  • Flood zone for the specific parcel, given the community lakes
  • School zoning by address, confirmed with the district
  • True closed comps by condition and lot, not a Zestimate

Questions we ask on a specific home

The questions a local who knows Daytona Highridge asks are different from the ones a portal answers. On any specific home, we want to know:

  • Homes along the fairways at Daytona Highridge

    How old are the roof, HVAC, and pool equipment, and what does that do to the insurance quote?

  • Clubhouse entrance at Daytona Highridge

    What is the honest renovation budget to bring this home current?

  • Lakes and amenities at Daytona Highridge

    What does the view back to: golf, lake, preserve, or another home?

  • Clubhouse at Daytona Highridge

    What exactly do the POA dues include (Hotwire internet and cable, access control), and what would the club cost at the tier we would use?

  • Gated entrance at Daytona Highridge

    Is this one of the stronger resale lots, or a base lot priced like a premium one?

  • Aerial of Daytona Highridge

    How does this home compare to the closest active and sold listings in Glen Kernan?

Jon Brooks · Co-Founder, Momentum Realty

Daytona Highridge is a condition game. The gates, the course, and the location are priced into every listing, so the money is made or lost on the renovation math, the lot and view, and the club decision. A dated interior home and a renovated golf-frontage home are completely different buys at very different true costs, even when the list prices look close. The listing agent works for the seller. Our job is to read the renovation honestly, verify the POA inclusions and the full carrying costs, pull the true comparable sales, and structure an offer that protects you.

Our advice to Daytona Highridge buyers is to cross-shop it against Glen Kernan and Deerwood on location, lot, and total cost of ownership, and to move decisively on the right golf or lakefront home, since the best views still sell fast. With no CDD and an optional, affordable club, Daytona Highridge is one of the strongest values among Jacksonville's gated golf communities for the buyer who reads it right.

Daytona Highridge vs. Comparable Communities

How Daytona Highridge cross-shops against the communities buyers most often weigh against it, on the factors that actually decide the buy.

CommunityEntryNo CDD?ClubTo BeachBest ForThe Watch-Out
Jacksonville G&CC$$YesMember-owned, optional~15 minGated golf without Ponte Vedra pricing1990s resale condition
Glen Kernan$$$$YesMember-owned~15 minAll-custom estate buyersHigher entry, thin market
Deerwood$$$YesPrivate country club~25 minEstablished prestige, larger lotsOlder stock, farther from beach
Queens Harbour$$$YesYacht & country club~15 minBoating & Intracoastal accessMarina/club fees, higher entry
Pablo Creek Reserve$$$$YesLuxury enclave (no on-site club)~10 minNewer custom luxuryTop-of-market pricing
Nocatee$$NoMaster-planned amenities~20-25 minNew construction & amenitiesFull CDD, longer drive
Sawgrass Country Club$$$YesResort golf & tennis~10 minPonte Vedra resort lifestyleHigher priced

Cross-shop read from Momentum. Entry tiers ($$ from the high $600s, $$$ around $1M+, $$$$ estate-level), club style, and drive times are approximate orientation, not quotes. Confirm CDD status, fees, and current pricing per community and parcel.

Who Daytona Highridge Fits Best

We would rather tell you the truth than sell you the wrong house. Here is who Daytona Highridge fits, and who should look elsewhere. It is a property question, not a personal one.

Great fit if you want

  • A gated, established golf community in a central, convenient location.
  • An optional, relatively affordable member-owned club.
  • No CDD and a strong resale story on the right lot.
  • Renovation upside on a well-located 1990s home.
  • Minutes to the Town Center, beaches, UNF, and Mayo Clinic.

Probably not ideal if you want

  • A brand-new build with the latest finishes and a builder warranty.
  • The lowest possible entry price; this is a seven-figure market on average.
  • A turnkey home with zero renovation, with no premium to pay for it.
  • No HOA structure and none of the rules that come with a gated community.
  • Estate-size acreage; lots here are master-planned, not sprawling.

The honest trade-offs

Pros

  • Gated, established golf community in a central Intracoastal West location.
  • 18-hole course and a member-owned club with optional, relatively affordable dues.
  • NO CDD, a real carrying-cost edge over newer master plans.
  • Minutes from the St. Johns Town Center, beaches, UNF, and Mayo Clinic.
  • Dual attended gates and 26 lakes give it a mature, private character.
  • Renovation upside on well-located 1990s homes.

Cons

  • A seven-figure market on average; not an entry-level community.
  • All-resale 1990s housing stock that often needs updating.
  • HOA dues plus optional club costs to budget separately.
  • The best golf and lakefront lots command premiums and sell fast.
  • Busy surrounding Hodges, Beach, and JT Butler corridors.
  • No new construction; every purchase is a resale.
The takeaway

Three honest price bands. Condition and lot, not the square footage alone, decide where a home lands.

Entry: original-condition homes
$1.01M to $1.01M

Mid-1970s homes in original condition, candidates for updates, at the lower end. The value play for buyers willing to renovate; verify roof and systems first.

Lowest entry
Mid: updated midsize homes
$1.01M to $1.01M

Move-in midsize single-family homes with updates, the core of the neighborhood. Condition and lot separate these.

Most inventory
High: largest or fully updated homes
$1.01M to $1.01M

The largest or fully renovated homes on the best lots set the neighborhood's modest ceiling. Condition and lot drive the premium.

Strongest resale

Approximate 2026 resale bands from third-party listing data and public records, not NEFAR statistics. Confirm pricing for a specific home.

$1.01M to $1.01M
Entry: original-condition homes
Mid-1970s homes in original condition, candidates for updates, at the lower end. The value play for buyers willing to renovate; verify roof and systems first.
$1.01M to $1.01M
Mid: updated midsize homes
Move-in midsize single-family homes with updates, the core of the neighborhood. Condition and lot separate these.
$1.01M to $1.01M
High: largest or fully updated homes
The largest or fully renovated homes on the best lots set the neighborhood's modest ceiling. Condition and lot drive the premium.

Approximate 2026 resale bands from third-party listing data and public records, not NEFAR statistics. Confirm pricing for a specific home.

15-Second Take
  • Renovation math decides the deal
  • Better lots and views resell strongest
  • Roof and HVAC age drive the insurance quote
  • Interior lots are where buyers overpay
Asking price per square foot
Renovated$202
Original$163
Median days on market
Renovated21
Original76

From current Daytona Highridge listings (renovated 1, original 1); condition inferred from listing descriptions, asking not closed figures. The exact number depends on a specific home's updates, lot, and view, which is the read we do before you offer.

Jon Brooks, Momentum Realty
Operator Note

The trap here is a beautifully staged original-condition home. Staging is cheap; a roof, HVAC, and a full modernization are not. We price the real renovation before you fall for the listing photos, because in an all-resale market that number is the difference between a deal and the most expensive house on the street.

Jon Brooks, Momentum Realty
Operator Note

Most buyers overpay on interior lots in the back half of the community. A sharp renovation can distract you, but the weaker resale position follows the lot, not the finishes. We read the homesite before the kitchen.

No CDD on the tax billStrong
Central Intracoastal West locationStrong
Scarce golf and lake homesitesStrong
$30M club reinvestment to 2028Positive
All-resale 1990s conditionManage it

Momentum analysis based on the community's structure, location, lot scarcity, and housing stock. Not a guarantee of future value.

Jon Brooks, Momentum Realty
Operator Note

The strongest value pocket is usually a renovated home on a good lot priced just under the next tier up. Buyers chasing the single biggest house often pay top prices for what is really a renovation project.

5 Mistakes Buyers Make in Daytona Highridge

15-Second Take
  • Calling the listing agent (who works for the seller)
  • Misjudging the renovation budget
  • Overpaying for an interior lot
  • Underbudgeting the carrying costs
  • Skipping the roof, HVAC, and systems check

The same five mistakes cost buyers the most in any market. Every one is avoidable with the right preparation before you tour.

Daytona Highridge sells an affordable, established home on Daytona's growing west side near the LPGA corridor. The location and price are the draw; the deal is a sound mid-1970s home in good condition, not a community amenity.

Jon Brooks · Founder, Momentum Realty
6.8B · Buy Score
Resale Strength7.0/10
Renovation Risk5.8/10
Location Efficiency7.6/10
Long-Term Defensibility6.4/10
Carrying Cost Advantage8.2/10

Momentum Intelligence Scores are our proprietary, qualitative assessment based on the analysis on this page, on a 0 to 10 scale. They are a framework for comparing communities, not a guarantee of future value or advice on a specific home.

Why our read on Daytona Highridge is different.

Most pages on this community are an automated estimate wrapped in stock copy. This one is built from the live DBAAR feed, fourteen years of closed sales, and a renovation-by-renovation read of what actually moves value here, lot by lot. No Zestimate, no guesswork.

Live DBAAR feed14 years of closed salesRenovation-premium analysisLot-by-lot, no automated estimates
Jon Brooks, founder of Momentum Realty. A housing economist with a background in real estate investment banking at Deutsche Bank and consulting at Ernst & Young, who has built and analyzed Northeast Florida real estate from the ground up.

Which Lots & Views Hold Value Best

Where the value actually sits. Each home is shaded by its price per square foot (a value read, not just a price) and ringed by lot type, so you can see at a glance which pockets carry a real, durable premium and where a renovation play makes sense.

Value ($/sqft)
$261 value$401 premium
Lake / waterPreserveInterior

Fill = price per square foot; ring = lot type, inferred from listing descriptions. Sold homes are shown by realized $/sqft (lot type not always recorded). Asking and recent-sold figures from DBAAR; for orientation, not an appraisal.

15-Second Take
  • Higher, dry lots are the safe value here.
  • Verify drainage and flood zone on any lower lot.
  • Condition matters more than lot in this value tier; compare like for like.

In Daytona Highridge, value is driven mostly by the home's condition, since this is an older, interior, value-tier west-Daytona neighborhood. Higher, dry lots are the safe choice, and lower lots warrant a careful FEMA flood-zone and drainage check plus a bindable insurance quote. Because the housing stock dates largely to the mid-1970s, the honest approach is to compare a home against the closest similar-condition sale rather than a neighborhood-wide average, and to underwrite the roof and systems as part of the price.

Daytona Highridge in 15 seconds.

Best forValue buyers who want an affordable, established single-family home on Daytona's west side near the LPGA corridor.
Strong onAffordability, low carrying cost, and convenient access to LPGA-area shopping, I-95, Embry-Riddle, and the Speedway.
WatchMid-1970s home condition and roof and systems, plus drainage on lower lots.
Not forBuyers who want a gated amenity community, new construction, waterfront, or beachside.
The edgeAffordable established homes next to a growing LPGA corridor, with light carrying cost.

HOA, CDD & Fees

15-Second Take
  • Most homes here have no HOA, a carrying-cost advantage.
  • No amenity campus; the value is the affordable, well-located home.
  • Confirm any HOA or deed restrictions for the specific parcel.

Daytona Highridge is an older established neighborhood and generally has no mandatory community-wide homeowners association, so most homes carry no HOA dues. Confirm whether the specific parcel carries an HOA or any recorded deed restrictions before you buy.

Where no HOA applies, there are no community dues; services come from the City of Daytona Beach and Volusia County. All maintenance is the individual homeowner's responsibility.

There is no club or amenity campus; this is an established residential neighborhood. The LPGA International golf courses are nearby as a separate facility; recreation otherwise comes from area parks.

The takeaway

Selling here is won on condition and view, not the Zestimate. The right number comes from closed comps matched to your renovation level and lot.

Momentum listings (YTD)
97.98%
Sold-to-list ratio across the Jacksonville metro for our agents, sellers keeping more of their price.
Market average (YTD)
96.73%
The broader metro average sold-to-list ratio over the same period.
Momentum days on market
64 days
Median days on market for our listings, faster sales mean less carrying cost and stronger leverage.
Market days on market
72 days
The broader metro median over the same period.

Sold-to-list and days-on-market figures reflect Momentum Realty listings versus the Jacksonville metro average, year to date. Your home's result depends on pricing, condition, lot, view, and preparation.

In Daytona Highridge, condition and view decide your number

Because buyers here are weighing your home against renovated comps and cross-shopping Bayberry Lakes, a home priced to the community average instead of its true condition and view either leaves money on the table or sits. A renovated kitchen, newer roof and HVAC, and a golf or lake view all deserve to show up in your price, and a buyer pool reading renovation math needs to be shown why your home is worth it. We build that case with real comps and a pricing strategy for the current market.

What is your Daytona Highridge home worth?

Get a no-obligation home value based on real comparable sales in Daytona Highridge matched to your condition, lot, and view, not an automated guess. Tell us about your home and we will personally prepare your numbers and a pricing strategy. No obligation, no spam.

Real comps, not a Zestimate.

Price History: What Homes Here Have Actually Sold For

Median sale prices in Daytona Highridge year by year since 2012, from closed MLS sales. A long track record beats a single estimate, showing what this community has really done through rate cycles rather than what a model predicts.

Daytona Highridge Market Scorecard

Balanced Market (limited data)

Daytona Highridge is currently a balanced market (limited data). Limited supply, a median asking price of n/a.

n/a
Months supply
n/a
Median list
$1,010,000
Median sold
$290
Per sqft
n/a
Days on mkt
0/2/1
Active/Pend/Sold

Typical home value in the 32124 ZIP is $433,292, about 3.0% below the Florida norm (Zillow Home Value Index).

Zoom out for the wider market: ZIP market scorecard · county scorecard.

Live data: © 2026 Daytona Beach Area Association of REALTORS®, Inc. Refreshed twice daily. Market metrics only; these describe homes for sale and recent sales, not residents.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where is Daytona Highridge?
It is an established single-family neighborhood on the west side of Daytona Beach, Volusia County, southwest of LPGA Boulevard near the Old DeLand Road area, with the LPGA corridor and Interstate 95 close by.
When was Daytona Highridge built?
The neighborhood dates to about 1976 and has continued to develop over the years, with mostly midsize single-family homes.
What kinds of homes are in Daytona Highridge?
Mostly midsize, reasonably priced single-family homes of mid-1970s and later vintage on well-kept lots.
Does Daytona Highridge have an HOA?
Generally no. As an older established neighborhood, most homes carry no mandatory HOA dues. Confirm whether the specific parcel has an HOA or deed restrictions before you rely on that.
How much do homes cost in Daytona Highridge?
It is one of the more affordable established neighborhoods on Daytona's west side; pricing varies with the home's condition and lot. Confirm current pricing for the specific home with up-to-date comps.
What schools serve Daytona Highridge?
The neighborhood is served by Volusia County Schools, with assignments set by home address. Verify the current zoned schools with the district's locator.
Is Daytona Highridge near the LPGA golf courses?
It is in the broader west-Daytona LPGA area near LPGA Boulevard. The LPGA International golf courses are nearby as a separate facility; confirm any play access and fees directly.
What is the location like?
Quiet but convenient: LPGA-area shopping and Interstate 95 are about five to ten minutes away, with Embry-Riddle, the Speedway, and the outlets close by and the beach a manageable drive east.
Are there waterfront homes in Daytona Highridge?
It is primarily an interior west-Daytona neighborhood rather than a waterfront community. Check the FEMA flood zone and drainage on any lower lot.
What should I verify before buying?
Confirm the home's roof and systems ages, the FEMA flood zone and drainage, any HOA on the parcel, and a bindable insurance quote.
Is the LPGA corridor a good area?
It has been one of Daytona's west-side growth areas, with new shopping, dining, and communities along LPGA Boulevard near I-95. Daytona Highridge offers an affordable, established foothold near it.
Is Daytona Highridge a good value?
For buyers who want an affordable, established single-family home near a growing corridor, yes. The key is buying the right individual home, so verify condition, flood status, and any HOA before deciding.
You want an affordable, established single-family home on Daytona's west sideExcellent fit
You value a quiet neighborhood near the LPGA corridor and I-95Excellent fit
You are comfortable judging an older home's conditionExcellent fit
You want a gated, amenity-rich or new-construction communityProbably not
You want waterfront or beachsideProbably not
You are not willing to update an older homeProbably not

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