The 60-Second Overview
Hampton Hills is the Citrus Hills village that never needed marketing: wooded, rolling estate lots built out quietly from 1984 through 2021, holding some of the most private parcels in the community's core. The stock runs 2,034 to 3,851 square feet in recent listings, the canopy is real, and the recorded HOA is so small that portals list it at roughly $6 a month - effectively a token deed-restriction association.
The current market needs honest interpretation. Two active listings average $917,450 - and that number describes those two houses, not the village. Four decades of stock means 1980s originals, 2000s estates and 2021-era builds all live here, and when inventory rotates, the village trades across a band from the mid $300s to a million-plus. Thin samples flatter sellers and mislead buyers; we comp by era and parcel, never by the day's average.
Hampton Hills is where Citrus Hills keeps its quietest streets - four decades of estates under the oaks, a token HOA, and a market so thin that homework is the entire edge.
Club membership is typically optional on these original-village deeds - the social tier (~$189/month plus the $2,000 deposit) is a genuine choice, confirmed in writing per deed as always. Average property tax recently ran about $4,092 a year, consistent with estate-scale product. For buyers who want woods, scale and minimal obligation inside the brand's core, this village and Clearview Estates are the two answers - and Hampton Hills is the more wooded of the pair.
The Fees: A Token HOA, and What That Means
The recorded figure - about $6 a month, call it $72 a year - tells you what kind of association this is: a deed-restriction steward, not an amenity operator. There is no village pool to fund, no gate staff, no paint crews. The association exists to keep the covenants meaningful, and the price reflects exactly that scope. Verify the current budget per deed (portal fee data is approximate by nature), but the order of magnitude is the village's character statement.
What a token HOA does NOT mean: no rules. Deed restrictions here still govern use, structures and standards - read them per parcel. And it does not mean no club: the full Citrus Hills portfolio (54 holes, BellaVita, member restaurants) is available via the optional social membership whenever you want it, at then-current rates.
Want the deed verified? We confirm the current association budget and the club status in writing before you tour.
Get the fee checkThe Homes: Four Decades Under the Canopy
The era spread is the widest in the community's core, and it creates three real markets behind one village name. The 1984-1990s originals: solid estate bones, era systems, and the honest entry point - roofs, HVAC, plumbing and panel generations belong in the offer math. The 2000s-2010s middle: larger plans, newer systems, the canopy fully matured - where most of the village's value trades when inventory exists. The 2021-era builds: current-code construction that, with the showpiece parcels, drives today's $917K listing average.
Across all three, the parcel does the heavy lifting: wooded depth, rolling elevation and rear-exposure privacy separate the village's best addresses from its merely good ones. Infill construction ended around 2021, so this is now a pure resale market - thin, sporadic, and rewarding to the prepared. We run a standing watch on the village because the right house here rarely waits for a second weekend.
Want first call? Tell us your spec - we flag Hampton Hills matches the day they list, sometimes before.
Join the watch listClub Access: Optional, and Eight Minutes Away
Hampton Hills residents reach the full Citrus Hills portfolio - the Oaks, Meadows and Skyview courses, the ~50,000 sqft BellaVita complex, The Grille, The Tiki and the Skyview restaurant - through the optional social membership (~$189/month plus the $2,000 deposit at last check). The club core sits roughly eight minutes away: close enough for a daily gym habit, far enough that the village keeps its woods-first character.
The optionality matters financially: a no-club Hampton Hills owner carries roughly $72 a year in structural obligation; a full-club owner adds about $2,270 a year plus the deposit. Both are rational - the point is the choice is yours, documented per deed before any offer. Beyond the club: the Withlacoochee State Trail and the Tsala Apopka lakes chain are both minutes east for the self-propelled.
Schools: The Honest Context
Hampton Hills is all-ages, and its estate scale draws a mix of retirees, professionals and families. Zoning generally points to Hernando Elementary (5/10 on GreatSchools at last check), Inverness Middle and Citrus High - confirm with Citrus County School District per address. As everywhere in this community: the schools are regional-average; the woods and the value are the reasons to be here.
Buying with kids? We verify zoning and bus routes per address before you commit.
Check my zoningWhat Living Here Is Actually Like
Deer in the yard at dawn, oaks over the drive, the club when you want it and silence when you do not. What buyers ask us most:
Is the $6/month HOA real?
It is what portals record - effectively a token deed-restriction association with no amenities to fund. We verify the actual current figure per deed, but expect tens of dollars a year, not hundreds a month.
Why is the listing average $917K if entry homes exist?
Because it averages exactly two listings, both at the village's top tier. Four decades of stock trade far wider when inventory rotates - we comp by era, never by the day's thin average.
Do I have to join the club?
Typically no - original-village deeds usually carry optional membership, confirmed in writing per deed. Add the social tier later anytime at then-current rates.
How is storm exposure?
Favorable - inland elevation far from surge. The canopy adds wind-cleanup and insurance considerations typical of wooded estates; we quote insurance per parcel early, with roof age front and center.
Five Costly Mistakes Hampton Hills Buyers Make
Thin estate markets concentrate errors - these five recur here.
Pricing the village off two listings
The $917K average is a sample of two. Era-matched closes - even months old - are the honest anchor in a four-decade village.
Skipping era diligence on 1980s-90s stock
Estate-scale roofs, original plumbing and aging panels are five-figure lines. System ages belong in the offer, with insurance quoted early.
Treating the canopy as free
The oaks are the amenity and the budget line: arborist work, roof debris and insurance questions. Price the woods both ways.
Paying a club premium on an optional deed
If membership is optional, it is not embedded value - it is your future choice. We strip it from the price discussion.
Waiting for deep inventory
It never comes - this village trades sporadically. The watch-list buyer beats the portal-refresh buyer every time here.
Want a second set of eyes? We represent you, not the seller - this checklist runs on every Hampton Hills deal.
Talk to a buyer agentParcel Tiers: Where the Value Sits
Touring? We rank whatever is live by parcel quality and era tier - and we tell you when waiting is the right call.
Rank the inventoryThe Hampton Hills Due-Diligence Checklist
- Deed-level fee verify: the actual current association figure and covenant set for THIS parcel.
- Club status: written confirmation of optional/attached membership per deed.
- Era diligence: roof, HVAC, plumbing and panel generations documented and priced.
- Insurance early: wooded estate quotes hinge on roof age - order before waiving anything.
- Canopy assessment: tree health near the structure; arborist history if available.
- Era-matched comps: the last actual closes in the right decade - never the 2-listing average.
- Survey: wooded parcels reward boundary and easement clarity.
- Well/septic vs. utilities: confirm what serves this specific parcel.
Hampton Hills is the village we walk buyers through last on the tour - because once they have seen the oaks and heard the quiet, the rest of the community gets re-ranked. A token HOA and an optional club on estate-scale woods is a structurally rare offer.
The catch is the market's thinness: two listings can be a $900K average one month and a $400s entry the next. Our era-matched comping and standing watch list exist for exactly this village.
Hampton Hills vs. the Alternatives
Hampton Hills shoppers weigh the brand's other minimal-obligation estate villages:
| Community | Land | Carry | Signature | Edge |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hampton Hills | Wooded rolling estates | ~$72/yr, club optional | Deepest canopy in the core | Privacy + era choice |
| Clearview Estates | 1-acre estates | ~$281/yr, club optional | Equestrian trails | Most land + horses |
| Belmont Hills | ~0.6-0.77 ac treed | Deed-dependent | Gate + buildable lots | Newer stock |
| Canterbury Lake Estates | ~0.25 ac | ~$32/mo, club optional | Lakes + state trail | Lowest entry, own pool |
| Villages of Citrus Hills (all) | Varies | $135/yr-$250/mo + club | 54 holes + BellaVita | Full menu |
The verdict: among the brand's free-range villages, Hampton Hills wins on woods and era choice, Clearview wins on acreage and horses, Belmont Hills wins on gates and new builds. All three reward the deed-level homework we run as standard.
Cross-shopping the estate villages? One tour, all three, honest math on each.
Book the estates tourThe Honest Pros & Cons
Why buyers choose Hampton Hills
- The deepest woods in the Citrus Hills core
- ~$72/year recorded obligation - near-zero
- Club strictly optional
- Four decades of stock = real price choice
- 2021-era builds exist for newer-home buyers
- Estate scale without estate-community fees
Why some buyers pass
- Thin, sporadic inventory - patience required
- Pricing clarity suffers from small samples
- The woods are yours to maintain and insure
- No gate, no village amenities of its own
- Era diligence is real work on older stock
- No new construction supply
Our Hampton Hills Buyer Playbook
How we run a Hampton Hills purchase:
- Watch list first. The right house here rarely waits - we set the alert before you need it.
- Era-matched comps. Four decades behind one name - we price inside the right decade.
- Parcel walk. Canopy depth and rear privacy are the value - see them on foot.
- Deed-level verify. Fee and club status in writing before any number is discussed.
- Insurance-led diligence. Roof age and tree exposure quoted before the offer, not after.
Questions We Ask Before You Offer
The six questions that protect Hampton Hills buyers:
- What is the actual current association figure and covenant set for this parcel?
- Is the club optional on this deed - in writing?
- What decade is this house, and what do era-matched closes say?
- What are the system ages, and what does insurance quote with this canopy?
- What served this parcel - well/septic or utilities?
- How long has this listing sat, and what does its price history reveal?
Is Hampton Hills Right for You?
The honest fit check:
Consider elsewhere if you want
- Deep inventory and fast decisions
- Maintenance-included living
- A gate or village amenities
- New construction
- The club at cart distance
- Clean, deep comps for easy pricing
Hampton Hills fits if you want
- Real woods inside the brand's core
- A near-zero structural obligation
- The club as a choice, eight minutes off
- Estate scale across four price decades
- Privacy depth that villas cannot offer
- A patient, prepared purchase that wins
