The 60-Second Overview
Grand Landings is a 774-acre gated community at the south end of Seminole Woods Boulevard, approved as a planned unit development by Flagler County back in 2005 and built in waves ever since: KB Home first, Seagate patio homes after, then D.R. Horton and Dream Finders Homes carrying the recent phases. That history matters, because it makes Grand Landings something rare in Palm Coast: a gated community with both mature resale streets and active new construction behind the same gate.
The headline is the fee math. The HOA runs $300 a quarter, about $100 a month, and there is no CDD reported community-wide. For that you get a gated entry, a zero-entry pool, a clubhouse with a fitness center, a basketball court, a playground, a dog park, and walking trails through acreage that includes wetlands and preserves. We track fees across every gated community in the county, and nothing matches that amenity list at that monthly number.
Roughly $100 a month, no CDD, full amenity campus. The honest counterweights are parked next door and on the city's books: a flight-training airport and an approved expansion to 890 homes.
Those counterweights deserve plain language. Flagler Executive Airport sits immediately north, and its touch-and-go training traffic is an active county controversy, residents in nearby Seminole Woods and Quail Hollow have demanded restrictions, and the county has said FAA rules prevent most of what they want. City officials note the main runway runs east-west and that planes do not really fly over Grand Landings itself, and many residents barely notice; but pattern noise varies street by street and day by day, so we tell every buyer the same thing: visit during weekday training hours before you write an offer. Meanwhile, the Palm Coast City Council approved growing the community from 749 to 890 homes, with an option to develop the front commercial parcel as multi-family. More homes, more construction, and possibly apartments near the entrance, the HOA itself opposed that last part publicly. Buy with all of it in view.
The Fee Math: ~$100 a Month, No CDD
Here is what makes Grand Landings the fee benchmark in gated Palm Coast. The HOA is $300 per quarter per recent listings, roughly $1,200 a year, and listings consistently report no CDD. Compare that to what gated, amenitized communities typically cost: neighboring corridors fund similar amenity packages through CDD assessments that can run $1,500–$3,000 a year on top of an HOA, and guard-gated communities like Grand Haven layer HOA plus CDD plus club options into several multiples of this number.
Run it over a decade: the gap between Grand Landings' fee stack and a comparable HOA-plus-CDD community is commonly $15,000–$25,000, money that never builds equity in either case. That is the quiet argument for this community, and it is a durable one, because a CDD cannot be retrofitted onto homes that closed without one. Two verifications anyway, because that is the job: confirm the current HOA amount and inclusions in the estoppel during your contract period, and pull the parcel's actual tax bill to confirm the non-ad-valorem lines, no CDD in a listing remark is marketing until the TRIM notice agrees.
Want the verified fee picture on a specific address? Estoppel, tax bill, budget, reserves, one honest monthly number.
Get the numbers →The Airport Next Door: What the Noise Is Really Like
Flagler Executive Airport is Grand Landings' northern neighbor, and we are not going to soft-pedal it, because the internet will not either. The airport hosts active flight training, and its touch-and-go operations, repeated landing-and-takeoff circuits, have generated organized resident opposition from nearby Seminole Woods and Quail Hollow, including demands to ban the practice and a threatened lawsuit. The county's answer has been consistent: FAA regulations and federal grant obligations bar the airport from prohibiting training operations, so the noise is a condition of the area, not a temporary one.
Now the other half of the truth. The main runway runs east-west, and the development sits south of the field; when the Grand Landings expansion was reviewed, city officials stated that planes do not really fly over this development coming and going. Plenty of residents report the airport as background hum at most. But traffic patterns shift with wind and runway use, training tempo varies by season and school enrollment, and a street that is quiet on Sunday afternoon can sound different on a Tuesday morning. So our standing rule for this community: tour your specific street during weekday training hours, roughly mid-morning, before you commit, and ask the sellers' disclosure pointed questions about aircraft noise. We keep notes on which sections clients have flagged and which they have not, and we share them.
Sensitive to noise? We will schedule your showing for peak training hours on purpose, and bring our street-by-street notes.
Plan the right tour →The Approved Growth to 890 Homes
The Palm Coast City Council approved an amendment taking Grand Landings from 749 approved homes to 890, an increase of 141, and gave the developer the option to build part or all of the front commercial parcel as multi-family or apartments instead. Existing residents pushed back during the hearings, on reduced lot sizes and on rentals near the entrance; the HOA president opposed the apartment option on the record. The approval stands, so a buyer today should assume more construction phases are coming and that the entrance-area parcel's future is genuinely undecided.
How to think about it: growth cuts both ways. New phases mean construction traffic on Grand Landings Parkway and builder competition that caps resale pricing while it lasts, that is the cost. The benefit is that build-out finishes the community, spreads the HOA budget across more doors, and historically marks the point where amenity communities stop competing with their own builder and start appreciating as resale neighborhoods. If you are buying a resale here, the smartest question is not whether growth happens, it will, but where your street sits relative to the remaining phases and the commercial parcel. We pull the current plat and development order on every deal here so you know exactly what is approved around you.
Amenities & the Multi-Era Housing Stock
The amenity campus is the full modern checklist: zero-entry pool, clubhouse, fitness center, basketball court, playground, dog park, and walking trails, threaded through 774 acres that include wetlands and preserve. It is right-sized rather than resort-scale, which is precisely how it stays funded at ~$100 a month. The gate is an access gate, not a staffed gatehouse; price it as traffic filtering and privacy, not as security service.
The housing stock spans eras, and that is the diligence story. KB Home built the first phase starting around 2008, Seagate added patio homes, and D.R. Horton and Dream Finders have carried recent years, with plans commonly running about 1,622–3,213 square feet across 3–5 bedrooms. A 2010 resale and a 2024 build behind the same gate are different products: different roof ages, different code generations, different warranty positions, and, candidly, different build philosophies. Comp within the era, inspect to the era, and if you are weighing new versus resale here, remember the resale comes with blinds, fans, gutters, landscaping, and an established yard the builder's sticker does not include.
Schools
Grand Landings feeds the south Palm Coast school lineup. We are deliberately not printing specific assignments here, because the Seminole Woods corridor is among the fastest-growing in Flagler County and the district adjusts zones as it plans capacity; verify the current elementary, middle, and high assignment for your exact address with Flagler Schools before you rely on it. The honest framing: Flagler schools rate mid-pack statewide, below the St. Johns districts to the north, and families weighing schools against budget should see what the same payment buys in both counties before deciding.
Schools versus budget? We will run the same monthly payment in Flagler and St. Johns, honestly, both directions.
See the comparison →More on Living in Grand Landings
What buyers actually ask us about life behind this gate:
How bad is the airport noise, really?
It varies by street and by day. The main runway runs east-west and the community sits south of the field, so many residents report little more than background hum, while training-pattern days are louder on some streets. The county controversy is real and FAA rules mean training will continue. Tour during weekday training hours and judge your specific street yourself.
Is the gate staffed?
No, it is an access gate. It filters pass-through traffic and adds privacy, but it is not a guarded entrance like Grand Haven's. Price the difference accordingly.
What happens with the 890-home expansion?
The city approval stands, so expect more construction phases and an undecided front commercial parcel that could become multi-family. Where your street sits relative to remaining phases matters more than the headline number; we pull the current plat on every deal.
Are short-term rentals allowed?
Community covenants and Palm Coast city rules both apply, and gated communities typically restrict STRs. If rental flexibility matters, have the current covenants verified in writing, and confirm in the estoppel, before you offer.
5 Mistakes Buyers Make in Grand Landings
The avoidable ones we see most:
Touring only on a quiet weekend
Flight training runs on weekday schedules. See your street at mid-morning on a Tuesday before you decide the airport is a non-issue, or a dealbreaker.
Treating every house behind the gate as the same product
KB-era, Seagate patio, Horton, and Dream Finders homes differ in age, systems, and build approach. Comp within the era and inspect to the era.
Taking no CDD and $300/quarter on faith
Confirm the HOA amount, inclusions, budget, and reserves in the estoppel, and confirm the tax bill's non-ad-valorem lines on your parcel. Cheap fees with thin reserves are not cheap.
Ignoring the development map
141 more homes are approved and the front parcel could go multi-family. Know what is platted near your lot before you fall for the preserve view.
Paying list in a 116-day market
Early-2026 sales averaged about $18K under ask with nearly four months on market. That is buyer leverage; use it, with comps, not bravado.
Buying here? We negotiate this community regularly and know where the give is, on resales and builder inventory alike.
Talk to us first →Which Lots & Views Hold Value Best
Want the development map with our annotations? Remaining phases, the commercial parcel, and our noise notes, on one map.
Get the map →What to Check Before You Offer
- Visit during weekday flight-training hours. Judge the airport from your specific street, not from a Sunday showing.
- Order the estoppel early. Confirm the $300/quarter amount, inclusions, budget, reserves, and any assessment history in writing.
- Pull the parcel's tax bill. Confirm no CDD on the non-ad-valorem lines, not in the listing remarks.
- Check the development order and plat. Know where the remaining ~141 homes and the front commercial parcel sit relative to your lot.
- Identify the builder era. KB, Seagate, Horton, or Dream Finders, then inspect to that era: roof age, HVAC, water heater, code generation.
- Walk the lot after rain. A community with wetlands and preserves tells the truth about drainage within a day of a storm.
- Comp within the era and negotiate the gap. ~$18K average list-to-sale spread and ~116 days on market is leverage.
- Verify school assignment. Corridor growth makes rezoning a live possibility; confirm with Flagler Schools.
Grand Landings is the best fee math in gated Palm Coast, about $100 a month and no CDD for an amenity campus that communities charging triple cannot beat. The buyers who win here do two unglamorous things: they tour during flight-training hours, and they read the estoppel and the plat before they fall in love.
The airport and the 890-home approval are not reasons to skip this community. They are reasons to buy the right street in it, at the right number, with eyes open.
Grand Landings vs. Comparable Communities
The cross-shops we run most with clients:
| Community | Gate | Fee model | Product | Typical buy-in |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grand Landings | Gated (unmanned) | ~$100/mo HOA; no CDD reported | Multi-era SF, resale + new | Mid $300s–$700s |
| Seminole Trace | Gated (unmanned) | ~$33/mo HOA; no CDD indicated | Villas + 50'/60' SF, one builder | $227K–$637K |
| Seminole Palms | Not gated | HOA + CDD | SF, multiple national builders | ~$320K–$450K |
| Grand Reserve | Not gated (55+ pocket is) | Tiny HOA + Deer Run CDD | SF + public golf | $270K–$356K+ |
| Grand Haven | Staffed gate | HOA + CDD + club options | SF + Intracoastal golf club life | $400s–$1M+ |
The verdict: for amenities-per-fee-dollar behind a gate, Grand Landings wins its bracket outright. Seminole Trace answers with a lower entry price and an even smaller HOA but a younger, thinner community; Seminole Palms answers with builder choice and no gate; Grand Reserve answers with golf; Grand Haven answers with the staffed gate and the Intracoastal lifestyle at several times the carrying cost. Grand Landings' unique card is maturity plus fees: an established gated community that still costs ~$100 a month to run.
Cross-shopping the corridor? One afternoon, all five communities, current pricing and fee stacks in hand.
Plan the tour →The Honest Trade-offs
Why people love it
- ~$100/mo HOA, no CDD, full amenity campus
- 774 gated acres with wetlands, preserves, and trails
- Mature streets and new construction in one community
- Mid $300s entry into a gated amenity community
- Real resale liquidity, ~19 sales in early 2026
- Quick SR-100 run to Flagler Beach
Why people pass
- Flight-training airport next door; noise varies by street
- Approved growth to 890 homes means more construction
- Front parcel could become multi-family or apartments
- Unmanned gate, not a guarded entrance
- ~116-day market; selling takes patience
- One corridor in and out via Seminole Woods Blvd
The Grand Landings Playbook
How we run a purchase here:
- Day one: tax-bill pull to verify no CDD; estoppel ordered for the HOA amount, budget, and reserves; development order and plat reviewed against the target lot.
- Noise diligence: showing scheduled during weekday training hours; our street-by-street notes shared; seller disclosure questioned specifically on aircraft noise.
- Era fit: KB/Seagate value resale vs Horton/Dream Finders near-new decided on systems age and warranty position, not staging.
- Offer: comped within the era, priced against the ~$18K average list-to-sale gap and 116-day market; inspection rights protected.
- Closing: estoppel reconciled against the closing disclosure; every fee and inclusion documented before funding.
Questions We'd Ask Before Buying Here Ourselves
Six questions that surface the truth fast:
- What does this street sound like at 10 a.m. on a Tuesday? The only honest answer to the airport question is heard, not read.
- What does the estoppel show? Current HOA amount, inclusions, reserve health, and any special-assessment history.
- What do the tax bill's non-ad-valorem lines say? Verify the no-CDD claim in black and white.
- Where do the remaining ~141 homes and the front commercial parcel sit relative to this lot? The plat and development order know.
- Which builder era is this house, and what do its systems look like at this age? Inspect to the era.
- What did comparable homes actually close at versus list? A ~$18K average gap is negotiating room; bring it.
Grand Landings May Not Be Right For You If
The honest fit test:
Consider elsewhere if you want
- Zero aircraft noise, ever (shop north Palm Coast)
- A staffed guard gate (see Grand Haven)
- A finished community with no construction ahead
- Golf out the front door (see Grand Reserve)
- The lowest possible entry price (see Seminole Trace villas)
- Certainty about what builds on the front parcel
Grand Landings fits if you want
- The best fee-to-amenity ratio in gated Palm Coast
- ~$100/month with no CDD, confirmed in the estoppel
- 774 gated acres with preserves and trails
- Choice between mature resales and new construction
- Buyer leverage in a ~116-day market
- A community whose growth finishes, then matures
