The 60-Second Overview
GreyHawk is GreenPointe's amenity community on the Middleburg corridor - the developer behind Hyland Trail, Amberly and Tributary, running its standard playbook: build the lifestyle campus first, then let the builder sell around it. Lennar carries the community now (Richmond American's section sold out) with four collections: 40s from $331,490, 50s from $353,490, 60s from $392,990 to $498,990, plus a 63-foot line - all Everything's Included.
The campus is the pitch: a lakeside clubhouse, lagoon-entry pool, fitness center, tennis, sports court, playground and guided trails - the deepest amenity package on a corridor whose other new communities mostly sell fee-minimalism instead.
An $8.33 monthly HOA next to a lagoon pool and lakeside clubhouse is not a miracle - it is an assessment structure. Find the real line before you sign.
Which is the diligence headline: the marketed $8.33/month HOA coexists with an approximate $198 special assessment line in listing data, and a campus of this scale is funded somewhere. The TRIM notice and association documents - not the brochure - tell you the cost of ownership here. One more disambiguation: this is not GreyHawk Landing near Bradenton; portals conflate them constantly.
The Fee Question: $8.33 and the Rest
1) The headline HOA: $8.33/month. A token association line. It does not fund a clubhouse campus, and reading it as the monthly cost is the community's classic misread.
2) The assessment line. Listing data shows an approximate $198 special assessment - the shape of a district or assessment structure that actually carries the amenities and infrastructure. Pull the TRIM notice for the exact lot and get the full schedule in writing: amount, what it funds, and whether any portion retires.
3) The incentive layer. Four collections repricing by release means the same week can carry different effective deals across the community - normalize everything to true monthly.
The Amenities
The campus is built and operating - a lakeside clubhouse with a fitness center, the lagoon-entry pool that anchors the marketing, tennis and sports courts, a playground and a guided trail network threading the community. On a corridor where the competing new communities offer trails-and-a-field at best, this is genuine differentiation - and the reason the assessment stack exists.
The honest utilization test applies: households who will live at the pool and courts convert the assessment into value weekly; households who will not are paying for their neighbors' weekends. Price your actual life, not the brochure's.
Schools
GreyHawk sits on the Middleburg corridor near the Oakleaf feeder boundary: nearby schools rate Tynes Elementary 7/10, Wilkinson Junior High 6/10 and Middleburg High 4/10 on GreatSchools, with the Oakleaf feeder's steadier scores minutes north. The boundary moves as the corridor grows - confirm the exact zoned schools for the specific address before you contract.
More on Living at GreyHawk
The depth without the wall of text. Open what matters to you.
The GreenPointe pattern
Four collections, one campus
Doctors Lake within reach
Construction years ahead
5 Mistakes Buyers Make at GreyHawk
Amenity communities with token HOAs produce predictable mistakes. These are the five.
Reading $8.33 as the monthly cost
The campus is funded through assessments. The TRIM notice tells the truth; the brochure's HOA line does not.
Skipping the Double Branch comparison
The corridor's defining matchup - amenities versus fee minimalism at similar stickers. Run both true monthlies or you chose blind.
Assuming the school feeder
The Oakleaf boundary runs near this corridor and the feeders rate differently. Verify the address with the district.
Confusing the GreyHawks
GreyHawk Landing is in Bradenton with its own CDD data. Portals conflate them - comps and fee figures imported across are garbage.
Buying the lot without the phasing map
Four collections build for years. Know what rises behind your fence before you pay a premium for the view of it.
Which Lots Hold Value Best
In an amenity community, walkability to the campus is the quiet premium
Lots within an easy walk of the clubhouse - without backing the parking - hold the lifestyle premium, alongside the usual preserve and water backings. The 60s/63s on premium positions are the community's blue-chip tier.
The trap is paying a position premium and an active-phase discount on the same lot - the phasing map separates them.
What to Check Before You Sign
Before you sign a Lennar contract at GreyHawk, run this list.
- The complete assessment picture - TRIM notice and association documents, not the $8.33 headline
- School zoning verified for the exact address with the district
- The Double Branch comparison run on assessment-inclusive monthly
- The phasing map against your lot - releases, timelines, collector roads
- Incentives in monthly dollars across the collections
- Pre-drywall and final inspections scheduled independently
- Leasing rules in the covenants if rental flexibility matters
- Comps from THIS GreyHawk - not the Bradenton one the portals conflate
GreyHawk is the corridor's amenity argument made physical: a lagoon pool and lakeside clubhouse on a road where every competitor sells fee minimalism instead. The argument is legitimate - GreenPointe builds real campuses and Lennar's collection range is the corridor's widest - but it is only priceable when the funding structure is on the table, and an $8.33 headline HOA guarantees that structure lives somewhere else. One TRIM notice settles what three model-home visits will not.
Our advice: this corridor now offers a genuine choice of philosophies - Double Branch's no-CDD simplicity, Murray Farms' Pulte middle path, and GreyHawk's full campus. Tour all three in one afternoon, normalize the monthlies, and buy the life you will actually live.
GreyHawk vs. Comparable Communities
The honest way to place GreyHawk is against the corridor's philosophies.
| Community | How it compares to GreyHawk |
|---|---|
| Double Branch | The defining matchup: Pulte's no-CDD, low-HOA, fiber-wired simplicity at similar stickers. Fee minimalism versus the amenity campus - run both true monthlies. |
| Murray Farms | Pulte's second corridor front from $316,990 - the middle path between GreyHawk's campus and the bare-bones rows. |
| Two Creeks | The established amenity community - pools and courts with resale stock and documented fees. The proven version of GreyHawk's thesis. |
| Amberly | GreenPointe's sister community on CR-218 - same developer playbook with Dream Finders building. The family comparison. |
| Jennings Farm | LGI's gated, no-CDD community with its own $3M amenity center - the corridor's other amenity claim, with a gate. |
GreyHawk's case: the corridor's deepest amenity campus with the widest plan range, from a proven developer. The case against: the assessment stack must be verified and priced, the school story needs address-level confirmation, and the buildout runs years.
The Honest Trade-offs
Pros
- The corridor's deepest amenity campus - built, not rendered.
- Four Lennar collections from $331,490 to $498,990.
- Everything's Included pricing transparency.
- GreenPointe's proven development track record.
- Entry and move-up buyers share one amenity base.
- Expressway and Oakleaf retail minutes away.
Cons
- The $8.33 HOA headline obscures the real assessment stack.
- Middleburg High's 4/10 pending zoning verification.
- Years of multi-collection construction ahead.
- Amenity funding must be priced against no-CDD rivals.
- Resale competes with Lennar until sellout.
- Portal confusion with Bradenton's GreyHawk Landing.
The GreyHawk Playbook
If we were buying here, this is the order of operations - and the one we run for clients.
- Pull the TRIM notice first. The real fee stack before any model tour.
- Run the corridor matchup. GreyHawk versus Double Branch versus Murray Farms, true monthly.
- Verify the schools. Address-level, with the district - the boundary is close.
- Pick position against the phasing map. Campus walkability without construction adjacency.
- Inspect like a resale. Pre-drywall and final, independent of the builder.
Questions We Ask Before You Sign
These are the questions we put to the Lennar sales office and the county on every GreyHawk purchase.
- What is the complete assessment schedule for this lot - every line beyond the $8.33?
- What does each assessment fund, and does any portion retire?
- What schools is this address zoned for, per the district today?
- What does the phasing map show around this homesite, on what timeline?
- What is this week's incentive worth in monthly dollars, by collection?
- What have comparable homes closed at in this GreyHawk - not Bradenton's?
Is GreyHawk For You?
No community fits everyone. The honest sort:
Consider elsewhere if you want
- Fee minimalism - Double Branch is the argument.
- A finished neighborhood today.
- Top-rated high school certainty.
- A gate - Jennings Farm holds that lane.
- To skip amenity funding you will not use.
- Resale without builder competition.
GreyHawk fits if you want
- The lagoon pool and clubhouse life, priced honestly.
- Plan range from entry to move-up in one community.
- A proven developer's amenity playbook.
- Everything's Included pricing clarity.
- The corridor's growth with a lifestyle return on it.
- Weekends you walk to instead of drive to.
