★ Bronson · The County Seat’s Tidy Eleven
11 lots · paved cul-de-sac · City water, no HOA, no flood zone · ZIP 32621

Deer Trail. Know what matters before you buy.

Eleven lots at the end of a paved cul-de-sac in the county seat: half-acre homesites with city water, no HOA, and no flood zone — nearly built out, with the last parcel recently on the market and Bronson’s ~$264K new-construction median framing the build math.

11Lots in the entire community
PavedStreets & cul-de-sac setting
City waterRare at this rural tier
No flood zonePer recent listing — verify per lot
~0.5 acTypical lot size
$0HOA / CDD
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Tell us whether you want a Deer Trail resale, the remaining land, or a comparable Bronson street — we will watch this eleven-lot market with the homework done.

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The Homes

Product

Site-built and quality manufactured homes on half-acre lots, with recent new construction — an eleven-lot community nearly built out

The setting

A paved cul-de-sac tucked off Bronson’s grid — privacy with a neighborhood feel

Utilities

City water available — a genuine rarity at this price tier in rural Levy; septic standard

Identity

The county seat’s tidy small subdivision — order without an association

Costs & Governance

HOA / CDD

None — the paved streets and city water do the work an HOA would charge for

Insurance

Inland, no-flood-zone positioning (per listing — verify per lot) keeps quotes among the county’s gentlest; roof age still rules

Utilities

City water plus septic — confirm the exact service setup per lot

Amenities & Lifestyle

In the community

The infrastructure is the amenity: pavement, city water, and a cul-de-sac’s zero through-traffic

The town

Bronson’s courthouse, county offices, schools, and basics minutes away

Position

Gainesville ~30–35 minutes — a real commute at county-seat prices

Nature radius

Goethe, the springs, and Cedar Key all in day-trip range

Location & Nearby

Setting

Bronson — the Levy County seat on Alt-27/SR-24, the county’s government and school town

Anchors

County offices ~5 min; Williston ~12 min; Gainesville ~30–35 min; Chiefland ~25 min

Trade-off

Bronson is a working county seat, not a destination town — the value is the point

Public schools & ratings

Deer Trail is zoned to Levy County School District — the Bronson schools are minutes away in the same town. Verify current assignments before you offer.

SchoolGreatSchoolsLinks
Bronson Elementary School–/10GreatSchools
Bronson Middle High School–/10GreatSchools

Composites unverified at publication — check the links and visit; walk-to-school proximity is part of this address’s family case.

Deer Trail is the county seat’s quietly correct answer: eleven half-acre lots on a paved cul-de-sac with city water, no HOA, and no flood zone — nearly built out, with the last parcel recently marketed. In a town whose new construction medians ~$264K, this is Bronson’s tidy street.

The short version

The sixty-second version: an eleven-lot paved cul-de-sac community in Bronson — half-acre lots, city water, no HOA, no flood zone per listings, friendly-neighbor scale, and near-complete build-out with the last parcel recently on the market.

  • Eleven lots, ever — a community small enough that every neighbor is known and every sale is an event
  • Paved streets and city water: infrastructure that most of rural Levy’s plats cannot offer at any price
  • No HOA and no flood zone per recent listings — verify the zone per lot as standard practice
  • Half-acre homesites: yard, garden, and boat room without acreage upkeep
  • Nearly built out — the last remaining parcel (a half-acre lot) was recently marketed
  • Bronson’s new-construction median (~$264K) frames the build and resale math
  • The county seat’s quiet advantage: courthouse-town services, schools in walking range, Gainesville ~35 minutes
Quick verdict: is Deer Trail right for you?

Great if you want

  • City water + pavement + no flood zone — the trifecta at this tier
  • Cul-de-sac quiet with zero through-traffic
  • No HOA — order by neighborliness, not enforcement
  • County-seat services and schools minutes away
  • Gainesville commute (~35 min) at Bronson prices

Look elsewhere if you want

  • Eleven lots = trades are rare events
  • Near build-out: selection is whatever lists
  • Bronson is a working town, not a charm destination
  • Thin comps demand careful pricing
  • Septic still standard despite city water — verify per lot
The remaining land
Confirm live status

The last parcel — a half-acre lot with city water available, no HOA, and no flood zone per the listing — recently marketed. The final build ticket into the community.

~0.5 ac · last parcel
Established resales
Confirm live comps

Site-built and quality manufactured homes on the circle — when one lists, it prices against Bronson’s town market plus the street’s infrastructure premium. We pull actuals per event.

mixed · rare events
New construction context
~$264K median (Bronson)

Bronson’s recent new-construction median frames what a build on the last lot — or a newer resale on the circle — should pencil against.

town frame · 3-bed class

Bronson’s ~$264K new-construction median from recent portal data as cited; eleven-lot communities price by event — we comp per sale.

Recently sold in Deer Trail

List prices tell you what sellers want. Closed sales tell you what buyers actually paid. We pull the verified recent solds for the exact homes and views you are weighing.

Community size
Paved cul-de-sac
Sold price 11 lots
🔒 Unlock the real number
Last parcel
City water · no flood zone
Sold price ~0.5 ac (recently listed)
🔒 Unlock the real number
Bronson new-construction median
Town context
Sold price ~$264,000
🔒 Unlock the real number
Want the verified closed prices for the exact homes you care about in Deer Trail?
See What Buyers Actually Paid →
DestinationApprox. distanceApprox. drive
Bronson schools & county offices~1–2 mi~5 min
Williston (US-27 retail)~9 mi~12 min
Chiefland (US-19 retail)~17 mi~25 min
Gainesville (UF / Shands)~25 mi~30–35 min
Devil’s Den / Williston attractions~12 mi~15 min
Cedar Key (the Gulf)~33 mi~40 min
Ocala~32 mi~40 min

Alt-27 and SR-24 make Bronson the county’s best-connected small town — the Gainesville run is genuinely workable.

County-seat rhythm: court days and school events set the town’s calendar; the cul-de-sac stays quiet through all of it.

11
Lots in the entire community
~0.5 ac
Typical lot size
~$264K
Bronson new-construction median (context)
$0
HOA / CDD
● city water + pavement + no flood zone = the premium
Price tiers
Bronson town stock (context)
town market
Deer Trail resales
infrastructure premium
New build on the last lot
~$264K+ all-in
Relative positioning. The street’s premium over town stock is its infrastructure and order — modest in dollars, durable in resale.

Sources: Smith & Associates, BuyOwner, Homes.com listings and Bronson market context as cited. Event-market caveat throughout.

Want the real Deer Trail comps and a full carrying-cost read, not a Zestimate?
Get Real Comparable Sales →

The 60-Second Overview

Deer Trail is Bronson’s tidy answer to a question rural Levy County rarely answers well: where is the small, orderly street with real infrastructure? The community is eleven lots at the end of a paved cul-de-sac — half-acre homesites with city water available, no HOA, and no flood zone per recent listings — tucked off the county seat’s grid with friendly-neighbor scale and zero through-traffic.

It is nearly built out: the last remaining parcel, a half-acre lot, was recently on the market — the final build ticket into a community this size. For the build math, Bronson’s recent new-construction median around $264K frames what the lot-plus-build path penciled against, and what newer resales on the circle reasonably command.

City water, pavement, and no flood zone on a quiet cul-de-sac — in rural Levy County, that trifecta is the whole premium, and it is earned.

The honest frame: this is an event market. Eleven lots produce a listing every year or two, not a browsing inventory, and pricing each event correctly — the street’s infrastructure premium over Bronson’s town stock, without overreaching it — is the entire game for buyers and sellers alike.

The Fee Stack: $0 — the Infrastructure Already Won

There is no HOA and no CDD, and unusually for a no-fee community, you give up little for it: the streets are paved and maintained, city water reaches the lots (a genuine rarity at this tier — most of rural Levy runs wells), and the cul-de-sac geometry enforces the quiet that associations elsewhere bill for. Septic remains standard — confirm the exact service setup per lot — and the no-flood-zone status cited in listings should be verified per parcel as a matter of course, because it is one of this address’s quiet financial advantages: insurance quotes here run among the county’s gentlest, with roof age doing most of the pricing.

The honest comparison point: against Williston Highlands’ no-HOA freedom or Oak Ridge Estates’ four-figure lots, Deer Trail trades scale and price for finish: a small, completed street where the infrastructure questions that dominate rural Levy diligence — road, water, flood — are already answered. You pay the modest premium once and skip the homework forever.
Want the utility setup and flood verification for a specific Deer Trail lot?
Get the Lot Homework →

Bronson: The County Seat Advantage

Bronson is Levy County’s working center: the courthouse, county offices, school campuses, and the government payroll that comes with them, on the Alt-27/SR-24 crossroads that makes it the county’s best-connected small town. It is not a destination — no springs crowd, no festival economy — and that is precisely the value case: county-seat services at the county’s honest price floor, with Gainesville a genuine 30–35-minute commute.

For Deer Trail specifically, the town’s geography is the daily convenience: schools and offices five minutes away, Williston’s retail at twelve, Chiefland’s at twenty-five, and the county’s entire nature radius — Goethe, the springs, Cedar Key — in easy day-trip range.

The Homes & the Last Lot

The circle carries site-built and quality manufactured homes on half-acre lots, with recent new construction among them — a mix that reflects Bronson’s honest market. When resales list, they price against the town’s stock plus the street’s infrastructure premium; product type and condition set position, and the usual era homework (roof, systems) applies per house.

The last parcel — the half-acre lot recently marketed — is the community’s final build opportunity: city water at the street removes the well from the ledger, the no-flood-zone status eases both construction and insurance, and Bronson’s ~$264K new-construction median frames the all-in target. Small-community courtesy applies: whatever gets built on the eleventh lot becomes one-eleventh of the street’s identity, and the neighbors know it.

Interested in the last lot or the next resale? We will run the build and event math before it matters.
Run the Numbers →

Schools

Deer Trail zones to Levy County School District — the Bronson campuses, minutes away in the same town, which is part of this address’s family case. We could not verify current GreatSchools composites for the Bronson schools at publication; treat ratings as homework, visit, and confirm assignments for the exact lot with the district.

More on Living at Deer Trail

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

Location and commute
County offices and schools at five minutes, Williston at twelve, Gainesville at 30–35 on good roads — the county seat’s crossroads position makes this the most commute-practical small town in Levy. Cedar Key’s Gulf is the 40-minute weekend run.
The cul-de-sac life
Zero through-traffic, eleven households, and the kind of street where packages sit safely and kids bike the loop. No association enforces it — the geometry and the neighbors do. It is the rural county’s closest thing to a suburban street, priced accordingly modestly.
Utilities and insurance
City water at the street with septic per lot — confirm each home’s exact setup. Inland, no-flood-zone positioning keeps insurance gentle; roof age rules the quote, as everywhere. The infrastructure trifecta is this address’s quiet financial story.
What Bronson is actually like
A working county seat: courthouse mornings, school afternoons, Friday lights in season, and a government-anchored steadiness that resists boom-bust. Buyers wanting charm tourism should look at the springs towns — buyers wanting value with services should look here.

5 Mistakes Buyers Make at Deer Trail

Tiny-community buying has its own failure modes. These five cost the most here.

1

Waiting for inventory that is not coming

Eleven lots produce a listing every year or two. Buyers who want this street get on a watch list and move when the event happens — browsing does not work in event markets.

2

Pricing off Bronson’s town average

The street’s infrastructure premium — pavement, city water, no flood zone — is real and modest. Comp the street’s own events plus the premium, not the town’s mixed stock.

3

Assuming the utilities without verifying

City water at the street and septic per lot — confirm the exact setup and the flood-zone status for the specific parcel. Five-minute calls, permanent answers.

4

Calling the listing agent

The agent on the sign works for the seller — and in an event market, scarcity does the selling. Bring representation that prices the event against the street’s actual history.

5

Overbuilding the last lot

The eleventh build prices against the street’s ceiling, not Gainesville’s. Bronson’s ~$264K new-construction frame is the discipline — build to the street you are joining.

Want the street’s event history and the premium math before the next listing?
See What Buyers Actually Paid →

Which Positions Hold Value Best

On an eleven-lot circle, condition and product type are the resale insurance

Kept site-built homes hold the street’s ceiling; quality manufactured homes with documentation hold the middle honestly. The cul-de-sac’s deepest positions carry the quiet premium.

The mistake is assuming uniformity because the street is tidy — product type still defines each home’s comp set.

Kept site-built, deep cul-de-sac
Newer construction on the circle
Documented manufactured, kept
Dated stock needing systems

Relative resale strength, illustrative of how small mixed streets trade. The street’s infrastructure premium lifts every tier modestly and durably.

Want first word when anything on the circle lists?
Get on the Watch List →

What to Check Before You Offer

Before you write on any Deer Trail property, run this list.

  • Exact utility setup: city water connection status and septic condition
  • Flood-zone verification for the specific parcel — confirm the listing claim
  • Product type and its comp set: site-built vs manufactured paperwork
  • Roof, HVAC, and systems ages with documentation
  • The street’s event history — the last few sales, however far back
  • Any recorded restrictions — verify the no-rules assumption per lot
  • Insurance quote during inspection — gentle here, but quote it
  • School assignments confirmed with the district
Jon Brooks · Co-Founder, Momentum Realty

Deer Trail is the kind of street every rural county has exactly one or two of: small enough to know, finished enough to skip the homework that dominates everything else we cover in Levy, and priced in a town the market consistently underrates because it is a courthouse town instead of a springs town. The discipline here is patience and event-readiness — eleven lots produce a listing when life produces one, and the prepared buyer who priced the infrastructure premium correctly wins it in days. The trap is overthinking: this street’s value case is boring, durable, and entirely real.

Cross-shop it against Oak Ridge Estates if budget land matters more than finish, and Buck Bay if you want the same tidy-street thesis at Chiefland scale. For the county seat’s quietest finished street — this is it, all eleven lots of it.

Deer Trail vs. Comparable Options

The honest comparison set for a small-town Levy buyer.

CommunityHow it compares to Deer Trail
Oak Ridge EstatesThe budget plat ten minutes away: verified $7,200 lots with the readiness ledger unfinished. Deer Trail is the completed version — pay the modest premium, skip the homework.
Buck BayChiefland’s deed-restricted benchmark on acre lots — the same tidy-street thesis at larger scale with a $75–$100/yr association doing what Deer Trail’s geometry does free.
Williston HighlandsThe county’s big no-HOA plat: golf, scale, and street-by-street variance. Deer Trail trades all that range for eleven lots of certainty.
Spanish TraceThe countryside plat with a pond commons at $55/yr — seclusion and water versus Deer Trail’s town-adjacent finish.

Deer Trail’s case: the county’s most finished small street — infrastructure answered, quiet guaranteed by geometry, county-seat services attached. The case against: eleven lots of supply, a working-town setting, and an event market that demands patience.

Cross-shopping Levy’s small-town streets? We will compare them on finish, fees, and the commute for your situation.
Compare the Streets →

The Honest Trade-offs

Pros

  • City water, pavement, and no flood zone — the trifecta.
  • Cul-de-sac quiet with zero through-traffic.
  • No HOA — the geometry does the enforcing.
  • County-seat services and schools minutes away.
  • Workable Gainesville commute at Bronson prices.
  • Eleven known neighbors — small-street accountability.

Cons

  • Event-market supply: a listing every year or two.
  • Near build-out — selection is whatever lists.
  • Mixed product types define separate comp sets.
  • Bronson is a working town, not a charm destination.
  • Septic per lot despite city water.
  • Thin history makes each event’s pricing delicate.

The Deer Trail Playbook

How prepared buyers win here, in order:

  • Watch list first — event markets reward the pre-positioned
  • Price the infrastructure premium honestly over Bronson’s town stock
  • Verify utilities and the flood claim per parcel — quick, permanent answers
  • Comp within product type on a mixed street
  • Move inside the first week when the event happens — cleanly

Questions We Ask Before You Offer

When Momentum represents you here, these go out before the offer is drafted:

  • To the city/county: water connection status and septic records for the lot
  • To FEMA maps: the flood-zone verification the listing claims
  • To the title agent: any recorded restrictions on the plat
  • To the seller: roof, HVAC, and systems ages with receipts
  • To the street’s history: the last events, however sparse, adjusted honestly
  • To the district: confirmed school assignments

Is Deer Trail For You?

The honest fit check.

Consider elsewhere if you want

  • Acreage scale and animal freedom
  • Browsable inventory on your timeline
  • A charm-town setting with dining and festivals
  • New-construction selection
  • Enforced uniformity via association rules
  • Investment-grade land plays

Deer Trail fits if you want

  • The county’s most finished quiet street
  • City water and pavement without an HOA bill
  • A cul-de-sac for kids, dogs, and porch evenings
  • County-seat services five minutes away
  • A workable Gainesville commute at honest prices
  • Eleven neighbors you will actually know

Get the inside read on Deer Trail

Eleven lots list by life event, and the prepared buyer wins the week it happens. Tell us what you are after — the next resale or the last lot — and we will watch the circle with the homework already done. We represent you, not the seller.

We respond personally, usually the same day. Your information is never sold.

You are all set.

A Momentum Realty Deer Trail specialist will reach out personally, usually the same day.

Momentum listings (YTD)
97.98%
Sold-to-list ratio across our markets 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 metro average, year to date. Your home's result depends on pricing, condition, lot, view, and preparation.

Scarcity is your tailwind — not your strategy

Event-market listings that price right sell in days to the watch list; the ones that price on scarcity alone sit and stale visibly on an eleven-lot street. We pull the street’s history and the town frame so your event lands clean.

What is your Deer Trail home worth?

Get a no-obligation home value based on real comparable sales in Deer Trail 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. Prepared personally, never sold.

Thank you.

We will prepare your Deer Trail home value from real comparable sales and reach out personally.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where is Deer Trail?
A quiet eleven-lot cul-de-sac community in Bronson, FL 32621 — the Levy County seat — minutes from the courthouse, county offices, and schools.
How many homes are there?
Eleven lots total, nearly built out — with the last remaining parcel (a half-acre lot) recently on the market.
Is there an HOA?
No — no HOA and no CDD. The paved streets, city water, and cul-de-sac geometry deliver what associations elsewhere charge for.
Is there city water?
Yes — city water is available, a genuine rarity at this tier in rural Levy County. Septic remains standard per lot; confirm each home’s exact setup.
Is it in a flood zone?
Recent listings state no flood zone — we verify the FEMA designation per parcel as standard practice, since it is one of this address’s quiet financial advantages.
What do homes cost?
An eleven-lot market trades by event — resales price against Bronson’s town stock plus the street’s infrastructure premium, with the town’s ~$264K new-construction median as the frame. We pull actuals per event.
What is the last lot worth?
The final half-acre parcel prices as the community’s last build ticket: city water at the street, no flood zone, and Bronson’s build math as the ceiling discipline. Confirm live status — we track it.
What kind of homes are on the street?
A mix of site-built and quality manufactured homes, including recent new construction — each product type carries its own comp set, as on every mixed street.
What schools serve Deer Trail?
Levy County School District — the Bronson campuses, minutes away in the same town. Composites were unverified at publication; visit and confirm assignments.
How is the Gainesville commute?
About 30–35 minutes on good roads — the county seat’s crossroads position makes it the most commute-practical town in Levy.
What is Bronson like?
A working county seat: courthouse, county offices, schools, and a government-anchored steadiness — value and services rather than charm tourism.
How often do homes list here?
Every year or two, by life event — this is the definition of a watch-list market. Browsing does not work; positioning does.
Why no HOA if the street is so tidy?
Geometry and neighbors: a cul-de-sac with eleven known households enforces itself. It is the rural county’s closest thing to a suburban street, without the bill.
Is insurance really cheaper here?
Generally yes — inland, no-flood-zone positioning keeps quotes among the county’s gentlest, with roof age doing most of the pricing. Quote during inspection regardless.
Can I park a boat or RV?
With no HOA, county rules govern — verify any recorded plat restrictions for the specific lot before planning around it. Half-acre lots give most setups room.
What should I verify before offering?
Utility setup, the flood-zone claim, product-type comps, systems ages, any recorded restrictions, and the street’s sparse event history — the full checklist is on this page.

Deer Trail is the finished-street entry in our Levy small-town coverage — these guides cover the budget, benchmark, and countryside alternatives.

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