Community Details at a Glance
The Homes
Product
New single-family from three builders, Meritage Homes, Lennar, and Breeze Homes, across 40, 50, and 80 foot homesites
Builder
Meritage, Lennar, and Breeze (Corner Lot's building arm), with Corner Lot and DLP Capital as master developers
Sizes
Roughly 1,484 to 2,750 square feet, 3 to 4 bedrooms across the builder lines
Scale
742 homesites planned in phases, with more than half the land marketed as conservation per kingspreserve.com
Costs & Fees
Pricing
Lennar from 249,995 to 353,985 dollars and Meritage from 292,990 dollars per 2026 builder and aggregator pricing; Breeze from the low 300s
HOA
Reported around 3 dollars per month on aggregators, nominal, but not the whole fee picture
Assessment
A separate annual special assessment near 1,595 dollars is reported on the Lennar section; confirm the district and full fee stack in writing
Amenities
Campus
Planned activities center with a resort pool, pavilions, playground, and dog park; confirm completion timing
Trails
Trails routed through the conservation land, the signature of the community
Conservation
More than 50 percent of the land marketed as preserved, which protects views and limits future density
Location
Setting
Northwest Jacksonville, off Plummer Road west of New Kings Road, just north of I-295, ZIP 32219
Access
About 5 minutes to I-295 at New Kings Road
Airport
Jacksonville International Airport about 18 minutes via I-295
Retail
River City Marketplace big-box, dining, and movies about 15 minutes away
The Homes & Style
Kings Preserve competes on attainability and scale: per builder and aggregator pricing referenced in 2026, the spread runs from 249,995 dollars at the Lennar entry to the mid 300s and up across Meritage and Breeze.
The buyer pool is first-time buyers, logistics and airport-corridor workers, and buyers trading commute time for square footage and conservation views.
With three builders delivering at once, resale will price against active builder inventory for years; negotiate accordingly.
Kings Preserve is a multi-builder community, so the first decision is which product line fits, then plan, lot, and phase.
Energy-efficiency-focused single-family plans from 292,990 dollars per meritagehomes.com in June 2026; the spray-foam and efficiency package is the differentiator.
Value-tier single-family from about 1,484 to 2,449 square feet, priced 249,995 to 353,985 dollars per NewHomeSource and Jome in 2026; the entry point of the community.
Regional builder plans from about 1,750 to 2,750 square feet, 3 to 4 bedrooms, from the low 300s per kingspreserve.com; lot widths run 40, 50, and 80 feet.
With 742 homesites planned, early phases set the comp base; conservation-backed lots carry premiums worth negotiating.
Living Here
The amenity plan is built around the land: more than half the community is marketed as conservation per kingspreserve.com.
The centerpiece of the amenity campus; confirm completion timing with the builders.
The family and pet anchors of the plan.
Trails routed through the conservation land are the signature of the community.
More than 50 percent of the land is marketed as preserved per kingspreserve.com, which protects views and limits future density.
Daily-needs retail sits along the New Kings Road and Dunn Avenue corridors, with River City Marketplace covering big-box, dining, and the movie theater about fifteen minutes away.
A 3-dollar HOA looks like a giveaway until you find the reported annual special assessment near 1,595 dollars on the Lennar section; that is roughly 133 dollars a month of payment math, so confirm the district before you fall in love with the sticker price.
Three builders on the same streets means you can play incentives against each other; few buyers actually do it.
Lots backing to preserve will out-appreciate interior lots at resale; the premium today is usually cheaper than the spread later.
Before You Offer
Jacksonville sees coastal, river, and creek flooding, and pockets near the St. Johns River tributaries can sit in higher-risk zones. Jacksonville participates in the FEMA Community Rating System at a class 6, which earns flood-insurance discounts of about 10 percent for homes outside a special flood hazard area and about 20 percent for homes inside one.
The reliable move is to pull the FEMA flood designation for the exact Kings Preserve address before you write an offer, since two homes in the same area can fall in different zones. A home in Zone X can cost far less to insure than one near water in Zone AE. Get a bindable flood and homeowners quote during your inspection period, so the cost is in your monthly math before you commit, not after.
The Jacksonville metro is served by Xfinity (Comcast) cable across nearly all addresses and by AT&T with DSL almost everywhere plus fiber to a growing share of homes. If working from home matters, confirm the options, and fiber in particular, at the specific Kings Preserve address rather than assuming.
Duval County total millage runs roughly 17.9 to 18.5 mills depending on the taxing district. The Florida homestead exemption for 2026 is 51,411 dollars for those who qualify, and the deadline to file a new homestead exemption is March 1.
The trap to plan for is the post-sale reset: when you buy, the Save Our Homes cap from the previous owner ends and the assessed value resets to the new just value, so your second-year tax bill is often higher than the seller current one. Budget the true number, and confirm whether the specific home carries a CDD or other assessment that is billed separately from the millage and is not reduced by the homestead exemption.
Comparisons
Kings Preserve's cross-shops are the other attainable new-construction master plans on the metro's western and northern edges. Against the big built-out Westside communities like Argyle Forest and the Panther Creek corridor, Kings Preserve gives up an established setting and mature retail, but it offers a brand-new home, a conservation footprint that protects more than half its land, and a shorter run to the airport and I-295. Against Kings Landing, the smaller infill community to the south, Kings Preserve trades the inside-the-loop, twelve-minute downtown commute for scale, a planned amenity center, and preserve-backed lots. The honest read: Kings Preserve wins on amenities, conservation, and the size of its plan, and gives ground on the maturity of its surroundings and on the fee picture, where a nominal HOA sits next to a reported annual assessment that buyers must underwrite.
Who It Fits
Kings Preserve fits the first-time or move-up buyer who wants a new home with a planned amenity campus and conservation views at an attainable price, the logistics and airport-corridor worker who values the I-295 and airport access, and the buyer who will trade commute time for square footage and a preserve-backed lot. It also fits the buyer willing to play three builders against each other on incentives. It does not fit the buyer who needs a built-out, established setting today, the buyer who wants an inside-the-loop downtown commute, or the buyer who reads a 3-dollar HOA as the whole cost and skips the reported annual assessment. For those buyers, underwrite the full fee stack first, or look to a smaller infill community closer in.



































