Established subdivision · Pinellas County · ZIP 33713 · St. Petersburg
An established Central Oak Park subdivision with bungalows and ranch homes, walkable to the SunRunner and minutes from downtown St. Pete.
Established 1920s to 2010s stockNo mandatory HOA in most of the areaSunRunner and Grand Central access
Live Market Pulse
50/100 Momentum
Buyer-Leaning Market (limited data)
Fairfield View sits inside the broader Central Oak Park corridor, so condition, lot, and proximity to the SunRunner stations and Grand Central District drive value more than a single neighborhood average.
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Listings before the portals, true comps, and the renovation and carrying-cost math, before you tour.
Built fromLive Stellar MLS data14 years of closingsLocal renovation analysisUpdated twice daily
LiveMarket PulseStellar MLS
n/a
Median Price
0mo
Supply
n/a
Avg DOM
Soft
Seller Leverage
n/a
Median $/Sqft
n/a
1-Yr Price Change
0now
Distress
Jon's Current Read
"Fairfield View is an established Pinellas County subdivision in the heart of St. Petersburg's Central Oak Park corridor, with homes dating from the 1920s through the 2010s on tree-lined streets near 17th Street North and Prescott Street. Most of the area carries no mandatory HOA, which keeps carrying costs lean but means buyer-beware diligence on condition, systems, and flood zone. The SunRunner BRT overlay approved in May 2026 adds walkable transit access and long-term density pressure along Central Avenue one block north, which can lift land values near the corridor while also creating redevelopment uncertainty for adjacent blocks. The read here is condition first: bungalow-era homes can carry roof, electrical, and plumbing exposure that erases the price advantage if not priced into the offer."
Jon Brooks, founder, Momentum Realty · Updated June 2026
The 60-Second Overview
Fairfield View is a single-family subdivision in the Central Oak Park area of St. Petersburg, with homes built from the 1920s through the 2010s on streets near 17th Street North and Prescott Street in the 33713 ZIP code (Homes by Marco, 2026). It sits inside one of St. Pete's largest established residential corridors, which crosses Central Avenue and runs from the downtown fringe westward toward the Gulf.
The housing stock reflects Central Oak Park's layered history: 1920s and 1930s bungalows on brick streets, 1950s ranch homes, and a handful of more recent infill builds. Most lots in the area carry no mandatory HOA, which keeps monthly carrying costs predictable but shifts the responsibility for condition diligence entirely to the buyer.
Location is the core pitch. The SunRunner BRT line runs along Central Avenue, and the City of St. Pete unanimously approved a major transit-oriented zoning overlay for that corridor in May 2026, eliminating parking minimums and raising density limits near stations (St. Pete Rising, May 2026). That adds walkable transit access and a long-term land-value tailwind, though buyers in adjacent residential blocks should monitor how redevelopment activity evolves over time.
The trade-off is familiar for established Pinellas stock: the price entry can be attractive relative to newer master plans, but the bungalow-era roofs, electrical systems, and plumbing require an honest read. Flood zone, insurance, and condition are parcel-specific and must be verified before any offer.
Quick Match
Who Fairfield View is best for.
Best for
Buyers who want an established St. Pete address with walkable SunRunner access
Buyers comfortable doing condition diligence on bungalow and ranch-era homes
Buyers who prefer no mandatory HOA and lower monthly carrying costs
Buyers who value proximity to the Grand Central District and downtown St. Pete
Probably not for
Buyers who want a master-planned community with a clubhouse and amenity package
Buyers unwilling to budget roof, electrical, and plumbing work on an older home
Buyers expecting uniform housing stock, age, and finishes across the area
Buyers who need the lowest possible insurance costs without a condition and flood check
Market Pulse
How Fairfield View is performing right now
50/100 momentum
Buyer-Leaning Market (limited data)
Seller's marketBalancedBuyer's market
0Months of supplytight
56Median days on marketdays
0 : 0Under contract vs for salestrong demand
0Sold 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 Stellar MLS, as of June 24, 2026. Refreshed twice daily. Months of supply, days on market, and the contract-to-listing ratio are computed from current Fairfield View 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 Fairfield View buys, holds, and resells. See the five factors.
Interactive Map
Fairfield View on the map.
Every active, pending, and recently sold home, plotted. Toggle the layers, color the dots by status or lot type, and tap a home for the details.
Fairfield View trades established-home condition risk for a walkable SunRunner address and fast access to downtown St. Pete, the Gulf beaches, and Tampa via I-275.
Drive and walk times from Fairfield View. They are approximate and vary with traffic, route, and your exact starting address.
Grand Central District (Central Ave)~5 min · walkable to SunRunner
Downtown St. Petersburg~10 to 15 min · via Central Ave or I-275
St. Pete Beach (Gulf)~25 to 35 min · via Central Ave west
Tampa International Airport~25 to 35 min · via I-275 north
Tropicana Field area~10 min · via Central Ave east
Pinellas Trail (33713 segment)~5 to 10 min · biking and walking trail
Johns Hopkins All Children's Hospital~10 to 15 min · via I-275 or surface streets
Distances and drive times are approximate and vary with traffic and your specific parcel. Confirm your real commute at your real departure time.
Nearby Communities
Explore more neighborhoods near Fairfield ViewSt with Momentum Realty’s local guides.
No CDD bond means thousands less per year than newer master plans.
Typical CDD community~$2,500/yr
Fairfield View (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
Pinellas 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
Fairfield View is served by Pinellas 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.
Public
Pinellas County Public Schools (verify by address)
What is shaping value in Fairfield View and the surrounding Central Oak Park corridor: the SunRunner transit-oriented zoning overhaul, the St. Pete market shift to buyer-friendly conditions, and the long-term Tropicana Field redevelopment catalyst for the broader city. Each item is sourced and linked.
Recent Developments in Fairfield View
Development Intelligence
Our read on what is being built around Fairfield View, scored for direction, significance, and how close the effect lands. The full sourced timeline follows below.
Net OutlookBullishThe SunRunner corridor zoning overlay and continued downtown investment point to steady demand in the 33713 corridor, with the condition gap between renovated and deferred-maintenance stock remaining the key variable for buyers in Fairfield View.
SunRunner BRT zoning overlay approved May 2026
2026
BullishMajor impact
SignificanceRadius: Corridor
St. Pete unanimously approved a transit-oriented overlay along Central Avenue, eliminating parking minimums and raising density limits near SunRunner stations, adding a long-term land-value tailwind to adjacent residential blocks.
St. Pete market shifts toward buyer-friendly conditions in 2026
2026
NeutralNotable impact
SignificanceRadius: City
Active inventory has risen and days on market have lengthened compared to 2025, giving buyers more negotiating room while keeping seller expectations in check for condition-impaired homes.
Tropicana Field site redevelopment proposals active
2025 to 2026
BullishNotable impact
SignificanceRadius: City
Multi-billion-dollar redevelopment proposals for the 86-acre Gas Plant District signal sustained long-term investment in St. Pete, supporting city-wide demand and the Sunshine City narrative.
Older bungalow stock carries condition and insurance risk
Ongoing
NeutralNotable impact
SignificanceRadius: Community
Much of Fairfield View is 1920s through 1960s housing; roof age, electrical systems, and wind-mitigation history drive insurance costs and buyer diligence on this 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 Fairfield View, 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 ↓
May 2026
Zoning
St. Pete approves SunRunner BRT zoning overlay for Central Avenue corridor
St. Petersburg City Council unanimously approved the SunRunner Bus Rapid Transit Overlay in May 2026, eliminating parking minimums and raising density limits along Central Avenue west of 19th Street and near SunRunner stations, affecting blocks adjacent to the Central Oak Park corridor. Why it matters: The overlay adds a transit-access and density catalyst to blocks near Central Avenue, which can lift land values near Fairfield View over time while also increasing redevelopment activity along the corridor. Source
March 2026
Market
St. Petersburg Q1 2026 market update shows buyer-friendly shift in 33713
A Q1 2026 market update for St. Petersburg noted rising active inventory and longer days on market compared to 2025, with ZIP codes including 33713 showing moderate price adjustments that create opportunity for condition-prepared buyers. Why it matters: A more buyer-friendly environment in 33713 means condition-updated homes in Fairfield View can stand out, while deferred-maintenance stock faces more pricing pressure. Source
October 2025
Development
Multi-billion-dollar redevelopment proposals submitted for Tropicana Field site
In October 2025, a 6.8 billion dollar unsolicited redevelopment proposal was submitted for the 86-acre Historic Gas Plant District in downtown St. Pete, followed by additional proposals in early 2026; the city is reviewing competing bids for the transformative mixed-use project. Why it matters: Large-scale downtown investment of this magnitude reinforces the long-term desirability of established St. Pete addresses like Fairfield View with walkable access to the urban core. 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.
The Strategy
The Fairfield View buying strategy.
If we were buying in Fairfield View, this is the order of operations we would run, and the one we run for our clients.
1
Check the parcel for flood zone and insurance quotes early. Pinellas County flood exposure varies by address, and the insurance cost on an older St. Pete home can move the monthly payment significantly.
2
Read the roof and systems honestly. Bungalow and ranch-era homes in this corridor can carry aging roofs, original electrical panels, and older plumbing; price these into the offer or the inspection contingency.
3
Verify HOA status for the exact address. Most of Fairfield View carries no mandatory HOA, but confirm per parcel before assuming zero fees.
4
Understand the SunRunner overlay impact. The May 2026 transit-oriented zoning overlay for Central Avenue can affect neighboring blocks over time; understand what is permitted near your specific address.
5
Cross-shop condition-updated options nearby, and compare against Uptown Kenwood if walkability and restored bungalow character are priorities.
The Quick Decision
Best Buy
A condition-updated bungalow or ranch home on a dry lot outside the flood zone
Biggest Risk
Underbudgeting roof, systems, and insurance on an older home
Best Lot
A higher, drier parcel with verified flood zone and a solid insurance quote
Smart Timing
Confirm condition, flood zone, and HOA status before you offer
Deep-Dive Intelligence
The full read, only if you want it.
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
Fairfield View is a residential subdivision within the Central Oak Park corridor of St. Petersburg, a primarily single-family area with no organized community amenity center. Residents have walkable access to the SunRunner BRT along Central Avenue, the Grand Central District shops and restaurants, city parks, and the broader St. Pete arts and dining scene. There are no community pools, golf courses, or clubhouses associated with Fairfield View itself; lifestyle amenities are urban and neighborhood-based rather than HOA-managed.
Fairfield View Homes For Sale
What your money buys in Fairfield View.
The takeaway
Three honest price bands. Condition and lot, not the square footage alone, decide where a home lands.
Here are the broad resale bands in Fairfield View today. The right home is the one matched to your budget and the renovation math, so seeing fitting listings early is the edge.
The Established Entry
Original bungalow and ranch-era homes, often with no HOA, where condition and roof age drive value. The accessible way into a walkable St. Pete address.
Lowest entry
The Updated Classic
Renovated mid-century homes with updated systems, fresh finishes, and strong SunRunner and downtown access. The sweet spot of the resale market here.
Most inventory
The Infill Build
Newer construction infill homes on established lots, offering modern systems and finishes in an established corridor location.
Strongest resale
Approximate 2026 resale bands from third-party listing data and public records, not NEFAR statistics. Confirm pricing for a specific home.
Three realistic price bands. Where a home lands comes down to condition and lot, not square footage alone.
The Established Entry
Original bungalow and ranch-era homes, often with no HOA, where condition and roof age drive value. The accessible way into a walkable St. Pete address.
The Updated Classic
Renovated mid-century homes with updated systems, fresh finishes, and strong SunRunner and downtown access. The sweet spot of the resale market here.
The Infill Build
Newer construction infill homes on established lots, offering modern systems and finishes in an established corridor location.
Approximate 2026 resale bands from third-party listing data and public records, not NEFAR statistics. Confirm pricing for a specific home.
Operator Intelligence
Renovation & Resale Intelligence
The factors that actually move value in Fairfield View, condition, lot, and the renovation math, read from current listings and recent sales.
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
Proprietary Data
The renovation premium.
Renovated-listing inventory in Fairfield View is too thin right now to compute a reliable renovation premium. We read condition home by home against real comps before you offer.
Lot Value
The lot premium.
On a preferred homesite (water, preserve, corner, or a larger lot), the homesite is the part of your money the market gives back at resale. The house can be renovated; the lot cannot, so premium lots hold their value better than interior ones. How much more they command varies by frontage, view, and condition, which is why we read it home by home against real comparable sales rather than a single headline figure.
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.
Resale Strength Scorecard
How well Fairfield View holds value.
Our read on the factors that protect resale here, and the one to manage.
Roof1920s-1960s stock carries age risk; inspect before offer
ElectricalOlder panels common; budget for update on pre-1970 homes
PlumbingCast iron and galvanized lines possible on older homes
Flood zoneParcel specific; verify FEMA zone and insurance quote
LocationSunRunner walkability and downtown access are a genuine plus
Momentum analysis based on the community's structure, location, lot scarcity, and housing stock. Not a guarantee of future value.
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 Fairfield View
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.
1
Calling the listing agent
The agent on the sign works for the seller. In a market where condition swings price by hundreds of thousands, negotiating against that agent with no one in your corner is the costliest move of all.
2
Misjudging the renovation math
A dated home looks like a deal until you price the roof, HVAC, pool, and full modernization honestly. Underbudget the reno and the bargain becomes the expensive house.
3
Overpaying for an interior lot
A premium homesite (water, preserve, or a preferred position) carries a real, durable premium. Pay a top price for an interior lot and you are buying the weakest version of the value.
4
Underbudgeting the carrying costs
Two similar homes can cost very differently to own once the HOA, any CDD, insurance, and upkeep are priced in. Buyers who do not run the full monthly carrying cost misread the real number.
5
Skipping the systems check
An older home means older systems unless updated. Roof age, HVAC age, pool equipment, and prior renovations drive both price and insurability, and a thorough inspection matters more here than in a new build.
“
Fairfield View trades the master-plan fee structure for established character and SunRunner walkability. The deal is won or lost on condition, flood zone, and an honest insurance quote for the specific address.
Jon Brooks · Founder, Momentum Realty
Momentum Intelligence
Momentum Buy Score.
Our proprietary 0 to 10 read across the five factors that decide how a home here buys, holds, and resells.
7.4B · Buy Score
Resale Strength7.3/10
Renovation Risk5.0/10
Location Efficiency8.2/10
Long-Term Defensibility7.2/10
Carrying Cost Advantage8.5/10
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.
Momentum Housing Intelligence
Why our read on Fairfield View is different.
Most pages on this community are an automated estimate wrapped in stock copy. This one is built from the live Stellar MLS 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 Stellar MLS 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.
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 Stellar MLS; for orientation, not an appraisal.
15-Second Take
Higher, drier lots outside the FEMA flood zone hold value best
Verify the flood zone for the specific parcel before you offer
No mandatory HOA on most lots keeps carrying cost lean
SunRunner corridor proximity adds a long-term land value tailwind
Infill lots with newer construction command a condition premium
In an established market like Fairfield View, the lot is the part of your money the market protects over time. A higher, drier parcel outside the flood zone, close to the SunRunner corridor and the Grand Central District, holds value better than a low-lying lot with flood exposure. The home's condition can be improved; the flood zone, the location, and the transit access cannot. Read the parcel and the FEMA map first, then price the home's condition against what you find.
The 15-Second Verdict
Fairfield View in 15 seconds.
Best forBuyers who want an established St. Pete address with SunRunner walkability and no mandatory HOA.
Biggest advantageWalkable SunRunner and Grand Central access, established character, and no mandatory HOA carrying cost.
Biggest riskRoof, systems, and insurance on bungalow and ranch-era homes, and parcel-level flood exposure.
Sweet spotA condition-updated bungalow or ranch home on a dry lot, priced to real comps in the subdivision.
Avoid ifYou want a master-planned community with amenities or are unwilling to budget for older-home condition work.
HOA, CDD & Fees
15-Second Take
Most of the area has no mandatory HOA, verify per parcel
No CDD noted, confirm on the tax bill for any specific address
Flood zone is parcel specific, check FEMA and quote insurance early
Budget a roof and systems reserve on bungalow and ranch-era homes
SunRunner zoning overlay may affect redevelopment near Central Avenue
Most lots in Fairfield View carry no mandatory HOA, but confirm per parcel before assuming zero fees. Some individual streets or infill sections may have community agreements; verify the exact address.
Where no HOA exists, common-area maintenance and services fall to the city and county. Buyers should budget for individual home maintenance reserves rather than relying on a shared fee structure.
Run Your Numbers
Tools for a Fairfield View buy.
Free calculators to pressure-test the real cost before you tour.
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.
Selling in Fairfield View
Price to condition, lot, and the SunRunner corridor context, not a ZIP-code average.
Selling in Fairfield View means pricing to the specific home's condition, lot quality, and proximity to the SunRunner and Grand Central District, not to a broad Central Oak Park average that mixes renovated bungalows against deferred-maintenance originals. The roof, the systems, and the flood zone set your number.
Momentum listings (YTD)
97.98%
Sold-to-list ratio across our market 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 our market average, year to date. Your home's result depends on pricing, condition, lot, view, and preparation.
In Fairfield View, condition and view decide your number
Because buyers here are weighing your home against renovated comps and cross-shopping Uptown Kenwood, 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 Fairfield View home worth?
Get a no-obligation home value based on real comparable sales in Fairfield View 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.
Price History: What Homes Here Have Actually Sold For
Median sale prices in Fairfield View 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.
Fairfield View Market Scorecard
Thin data
Fairfield View is currently a thin data. Limited supply, a median asking price of n/a.
Live data: Stellar MLS, distributed by MLS GRID, refreshed twice daily. Typical value: Zillow Research. Market metrics only; these describe homes for sale and recent sales, not residents.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where is Fairfield View in St. Petersburg?
Fairfield View is an established single-family subdivision in the Central Oak Park area of St. Petersburg, Pinellas County, with streets near 17th Street North and Prescott Street in ZIP code 33713 (Homes by Marco, 2026).
What types of homes are in Fairfield View?
The subdivision includes single-family homes built from the 1920s through the 2010s, a mix of 1920s and 1930s bungalows, 1950s ranch homes, and more recent infill construction, ranging from approximately 534 to 2,308 square feet (Homes by Marco, 2026).
Does Fairfield View have an HOA?
Most of the area carries no mandatory HOA, but confirm per parcel before assuming zero fees. Always verify the exact address during diligence.
What schools serve Fairfield View?
The subdivision is in the Pinellas County School District. Zoned schools listed for this area include John M. Sexton Elementary, Meadowlawn Middle School, and St. Petersburg High School, but school assignment is by address and can change, so confirm the zoned schools for any specific home (Homes by Marco, 2026).
Is Fairfield View walkable to the SunRunner?
Yes. The SunRunner BRT connects downtown St. Pete to the Gulf beaches along Central Avenue, which runs through the Central Oak Park corridor adjacent to this subdivision. Walk times to stations vary by your specific address.
What is the SunRunner zoning overlay and how does it affect Fairfield View?
In May 2026, St. Petersburg unanimously approved a transit-oriented zoning overlay along the SunRunner corridor, eliminating parking minimums and raising density limits near Central Avenue stations (St. Pete Rising, May 2026). Buyers on blocks adjacent to Central Avenue should understand what this overlay permits near their specific address.
Is there a flood risk in Fairfield View?
Flood zone exposure is parcel specific across St. Petersburg. Always run the FEMA flood map and obtain an insurance quote for the specific address during diligence; do not rely on a neighborhood-level assumption.
How close is Fairfield View to downtown St. Petersburg?
Fairfield View is within a few miles of downtown St. Pete and the Grand Central District. Drive times are generally under 15 minutes depending on your exact starting point and traffic.
How far is Fairfield View from the Gulf beaches?
The St. Pete beaches on the Gulf are roughly 20 to 35 minutes west via Central Avenue or I-275 and Pinellas Bayway, depending on your destination and traffic. Confirm the route and timing from your specific address.
What should I know about buying an older home in Fairfield View?
Bungalow and ranch-era homes built from the 1920s through the 1960s can carry aging roofs, original electrical panels, and older plumbing. Budget a condition reserve and get the roof age, electrical system, and plumbing inspected early. Insurance costs on older homes should be quoted for the specific address.
How does Fairfield View compare to Uptown Kenwood?
Both are established St. Pete 33713 neighborhoods with bungalow and ranch stock. Uptown Kenwood sits in the Historic Kenwood district with a more defined arts-community identity. Fairfield View tends to offer a quieter residential character on the Central Oak Park side of the same corridor. Verify current inventory and condition in both before deciding.
Is Fairfield View a good investment?
Proximity to the SunRunner corridor, downtown St. Pete, and the Grand Central District supports demand, and the May 2026 transit overlay is a long-term land value tailwind. As with any established market, condition, flood zone, and insurance math drive the actual outcome; this is not a guarantee of future value.
Are there new builds in Fairfield View?
A small number of infill homes were built through the 2010s, but the area is mostly established housing stock from the mid-20th century and earlier. New construction here is the exception, not the rule.
What is the ZIP code for Fairfield View?
ZIP code 33713, in the Central Oak Park area of St. Petersburg, Pinellas County (Homes by Marco, 2026).
How do I verify flood zone and insurance for a Fairfield View home?
Use the FEMA Flood Map Service Center with the specific property address, then obtain insurance quotes for that address from at least two carriers. Do this before making an offer, as costs can vary significantly by parcel.
What is the Tropicana Field redevelopment and does it affect this area?
The city received multiple major redevelopment proposals for the 86-acre Historic Gas Plant District, with bids ranging from 6.8 to 8.1 billion dollars (St. Pete Rising, October 2025 and February 2026). The project is several miles from Fairfield View but represents a long-term investment signal for the broader St. Pete market.
Who is the best real estate agent for Fairfield View?
The best agent for Fairfield View is one who actively works St. Petersburg and knows the community's pricing, HOA and CDD details, and current inventory. Tell us what you're looking for in the form on this page and Momentum Realty will match you with a local specialist for Fairfield View.
How do I find a top St. Petersburg real estate agent who knows Fairfield View?
Share a few details in the form on this page. Momentum Realty has 280+ agents and more than $3.5B in closed sales, and we'll connect you with one who knows Fairfield View and the wider St. Petersburg area.
Can Momentum Realty connect me with an agent for Fairfield View?
Yes. Use the form on this page and we'll introduce you to a local specialist who can guide your Fairfield View purchase or sale - no call center and no pressure.
The Verdict
Should you buy in Fairfield View?
An honest fit check. We will tell you when it is not your community.
Buyers who want an established St. Pete address with SunRunner walkabilityExcellent fit
Buyers comfortable doing thorough condition diligence on bungalow and ranch-era homesExcellent fit
Buyers who prefer no mandatory HOA and a lean carrying cost structureExcellent fit
Buyers who value proximity to the Grand Central District, downtown, and the GulfExcellent fit
Buyers who will read flood zone, condition, and insurance before they offerExcellent fit
Buyers who want a master-planned community with a clubhouse and amenity packageProbably not
Buyers unwilling to budget roof, systems, and plumbing work on an older homeProbably not
Buyers expecting uniform housing stock, age, and finishes across the areaProbably not
Buyers who need the lowest possible insurance costs without a condition checkProbably not
Buyers who want a gated or deed-restricted community with enforced standardsProbably not
Get the inside read on Fairfield View
Whether you are buying a renovation project, comparing the lots and views, weighing the carrying costs, or selling your Fairfield View home, tell us what you need. Every inquiry comes straight to us. We represent you, not the seller, and what your agent is paid is negotiable and set in a written buyer agreement up front. No obligation, no spam, no high-pressure follow-up.
You are all set.
A Momentum Realty Fairfield View specialist will reach out personally, usually the same day.
Photography on this page is sourced from active and recently sold MLS listings in this community and remains the property of the listing brokerage and/or photographer. Listings courtesy of Stellar MLS as distributed by MLS GRID. IDX information is provided exclusively for consumers' personal, non-commercial use and may not be used for any purpose other than to identify prospective properties consumers may be interested in purchasing; deemed reliable but not guaranteed by MLS GRID.
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The numbers on this page move markets in the aggregate. The number that matters to you is what a buyer pays for your address. Momentum sells for 1.25% above the local market average and 8 days faster, and we’ll price yours against live your area comps.