Jupiter Farms market snapshot (as of June 13, 2026): the median sale price is about $812K ($422 per sq ft), with homes averaging 91 days on market and 3.2 months of supply, a balanced market. Based on 157 recent closings in live BeachesMLS data.
Jupiter Farms is an unincorporated, low-density community in northwest Palm Beach County, spread across roughly 15 square miles along the Indiantown Road corridor west of Florida's Turnpike. It was planned to protect a rural character of open lots, equestrian activity, and neighborhood parks rather than suburban subdivision density (Palm Beach County Jupiter Farms Neighborhood Plan).
Lots are large. The area's Future Land Use designation is Rural Residential 10 (RR-10), which requires newly created lots to be at least 10 acres; many existing parcels are smaller, commonly from about 1.25 to 10 acres, because they were platted before the current plan and are treated as legal nonconforming. New lot creation is effectively capped, so the supply of homesites is largely fixed.
There is no mandatory homeowners association. That is the central reason people buy here: animals, equipment, and outbuildings are governed by Palm Beach County agricultural-residential zoning rather than deed restrictions. The flip side is no HOA dues but also no HOA protections, and most homes run on a private well and an onsite septic system rather than city water and sewer.
Daily life centers on land and the outdoors. Jupiter Farms Park (about 51 acres) includes ball fields, a playground, and the Jupiter Farms Equestrian Center, with sand, grass, and warm-up arenas, and the adjacent Riverbend Park (roughly 1,000 acres) opens onto the Loxahatchee River for paddling and trails. Equestrian use, not amenity buildings, is the community's defining feature.