Community Details at a Glance
The Homes
Type
Attached townhomes
Style
Mediterranean
Setting
La Cita golf community
Layout
2 to 3 bed typical
Costs & Fees
HOA
Confirm per home
Club membership
Optional, separate
Insurance
Quote early
Amenities
Golf
Lee Trevino / Ron Garl course
Club
Pool, tennis, dining (membership)
Setting
Deed-restricted, golf views
Lifestyle
Lock-and-leave
Location
Setting
Titusville, La Cita community
Job corridor
Kennedy Space Center reachable
Highway
US-1 and I-95 access
The Homes: Mediterranean Townhomes
La Cita Towns is built as Mediterranean-style attached townhomes, typically two to three bedrooms, many with private courtyards. Some back to the golf course for a view; others are interior units that trade the view for a better entry price.
Because these are attached homes in an HOA, the spread between units is about condition and golf exposure. A renovated unit on the course commands a premium; an interior unit in standard condition is the value entry. The HOA governs the exteriors, so what you are really buying inside is the interior condition and the association's health.
For snowbirds and downsizers, that is the appeal: a finished interior on a healthy association lets you lock the door and travel without worry. We read the interior condition and the HOA budget together before you commit.
What Living Here Is Actually Like
The rhythm of La Cita Towns life, from the community and our time in it:
A typical week
The membership question
The commute factor
What residents grumble about
The La Cita Towns Buyer Checklist
- Read the HOA budget and reserves, not just the monthly dues.
- Confirm the club membership terms and cost separately with the club.
- Clarify the insurance split under the master policy on the unit.
- Get the rental policy in writing if leasing is part of your plan.
- Comp by unit and golf exposure, not the enclave average.
- Check for pending assessments at the association level.
- Walk the interior, condition is what you are really buying.
La Cita Towns is a clean fit for buyers who want golf-community living without a yard to maintain. The one thing I make sure of every time is the HOA reserve picture. On attached townhomes, a healthy reserve fund is worth more than a low dues figure, because a thin reserve eventually shows up as a special assessment.
The other clarity I provide up front is the club. Membership is optional and separate, so I make sure buyers know exactly what they are signing up for, and what they are not, before they offer.
La Cita Towns vs. the Alternatives
The honest comparison set for a La Cita Towns buyer in Titusville:
| Community | Type | Fees (approx.) | The trade |
|---|---|---|---|
| La Cita Towns | Townhomes, golf community | HOA + optional club | Lock-and-leave, golf at the door |
| Sherwood Forest | Deed-restricted, golf setting | Confirm HOA dues | Golf-course setting, single-family and townhome mix |
| Nova Villas | Residential villas | Confirm HOA | Low-maintenance villas, value entry |
| Hickory Hill | Single-family resale | Confirm HOA (modest or none) | Single-family yard, value-tier |
The pattern: La Cita Towns wins on lock-and-leave golf-community living; Sherwood Forest on the golf-course setting; Nova Villas on villa value; Hickory Hill on the single-family yard. There is no wrong answer, only a wrong match for your priorities.
The Honest Pros & Cons
What La Cita Towns gets right
- Lock-and-leave townhome living, ideal for travelers
- Inside an established deed-restricted golf community
- Optional golf, pool, tennis and dining via the club
- Lower-maintenance than a single-family home
- Practical Titusville location near the job corridor
- Mediterranean style with private courtyards
What to go in eyes-open about
- HOA budgets and reserves vary; read them carefully
- Country-club membership is an extra, separate cost
- Shared walls and HOA-governed exteriors
- Insurance split and any assessments must be confirmed
- Not for buyers who want acreage or privacy
- Deed-restricted leasing rules may limit rentals






















