Melrose Bay. Know what matters before you buy.

Historic village waterfront · Melrose Bay inlet · ZIP 32666

The walk-to-town water: the historic inlet off Big Lake Santa Fe at downtown Melrose, where steamboats once docked, the bay is a protected no-wake zone, and select parcels carry deeded bay access with a 25-foot easement and shared dock connecting to ~5,800 acres of spring-fed lake.

Location~30 minTo Gainesville / UF
Highlights25 ftDeeded easement on select parcels
Notes~5,800 acLake Santa Fe system beyond the bay
CountyPutnam CountyNortheast Florida
SchoolsPutnam County SchoolsMelrose, Interlachen Jr-Sr HS
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Tell us what you are after on Lake Santa Fe and we will send Melrose Bay and village inventory with honest access, easement and condition notes — no spam, no pressure.

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A Momentum Realty Melrose Bay specialist will reach out personally, usually the same day. Check your inbox for a confirmation.

The Homes

Housing stock

A mix spanning a century-plus: Victorian-era and early-1900s village homes near the Historic District, mid-century lake cottages, and newer custom builds — no production builders

Lot pattern

In-town village lots through acreage parcels; some carry direct bay frontage, others carry deeded bay access via a recorded 25-foot easement with shared dock

Builders

Custom and resale only — the historic fabric is the product

Rentals

No master HOA known — deed restrictions and Putnam County zoning govern per parcel; verify the recorded documents before underwriting any rental

Costs & Governance

HOA / CDD

No master association or CDD known for the bay pocket — access rights live in recorded easements and plat documents; confirm any shared-dock cost arrangement per parcel

Utilities

Mostly private well and septic — budget full inspections; confirm utilities per address

Insurance

Bayfront and low parcels need the FEMA panel pulled and possibly an elevation certificate; historic structures can change insurer appetite — quote early

Amenities & Lifestyle

Deeded bay access

Select parcels carry recorded access via a 25-foot easement and shared dock to Melrose Bay and on to Lake Santa Fe — verify the recorded instrument per parcel

Melrose Bay Park

Community park at the foot of Trout Street: concrete ramp (boats 12hp or less), sandy beach, lighted lot — the paddler’s gateway to the lake

Big-boat launch

Full-size boats launch at Santa Fe Lake Park off SR-26 about a mile west; the bay itself stays no-wake

The village

Walking distance to galleries (including the Melrose Bay Art Gallery), restaurants, Heritage Park and the Historic District’s self-guided tour

Location & Nearby

Setting

The inlet off Big Lake Santa Fe at downtown Melrose, where SR-26 meets SR-21 and four counties (Alachua, Bradford, Clay, Putnam) meet; the bay pocket sits in Putnam

The water

Melrose Bay — a protected no-wake arm of spring-fed Lake Santa Fe (~5,800 acres across Big and Little Santa Fe, the lake itself in Alachua County)

Access

Walk to the village; ~9 mi / ~14 min to Keystone Heights, ~22 mi / ~30 min to Gainesville, ~20 mi / ~30 min to Palatka

Public schools & ratings

The bay pocket sits in Putnam County, so Putnam County School District is the default zoning — but Melrose addresses straddle four counties, and some local families use other-county options; confirm zoning for the exact parcel before you write.

SchoolGreatSchoolsLinks
Melrose Elementary (PK-6, Putnam)Above avg.GreatSchools
Interlachen Jr-Sr High (Putnam)3/10GreatSchools

Ratings move year to year and Melrose zoning is genuinely county-line-sensitive — confirm current ratings, zoning, school-choice options and bus routes with Putnam County School District before you write an offer.

Melrose Bay is the rare North Florida combination: real Lake Santa Fe water you can walk to town from. The historic inlet where steamboats once met the village is now a protected no-wake bay where select parcels carry deeded access via a 25-foot easement and shared dock — in-town Victorian-village character with ~5,800 acres of spring-fed lake at the end of the dock.

The short version

The sixty-second version: the in-town waterfront pocket at downtown Melrose — the protected inlet off Big Lake Santa Fe where the 1880s steamboats docked — with a mix of bayfront homes and deeded-access parcels (25-foot easement, shared dock), the Trout Street community park and ramp, and the Historic District’s Victorian streets a short walk away. Distinct from Melrose Landing, the fly-in airpark community east of town.

  • Deeded bay access is the differentiator: select parcels carry a recorded 25-foot easement and shared dock connecting to Lake Santa Fe — lake life without lakefront taxes
  • Melrose Bay is a protected no-wake zone; the Trout Street ramp serves boats 12hp or less, and full-size boats launch at Santa Fe Lake Park off SR-26 a mile west
  • Lake Santa Fe is the prize beyond the bay: ~5,800 spring-fed acres across Big and Little Santa Fe — the lake itself sits in Alachua County
  • Walk-to-village living is real here: galleries, restaurants, Heritage Park and the 250-acre Historic District (NRHP, 1990) with its 65 contributing buildings
  • Melrose sits where four counties meet — the bay pocket is Putnam, which sets taxes and default school zoning; verify per parcel
  • No master HOA or CDD known — access rights and any restrictions live in recorded easements and deeds; reading them is the core homework
  • Mostly well and septic, with thin micro-market comps — this is a watch-list pocket, not a subdivision with steady inventory
Quick verdict: is Melrose Bay right for you?

Great if you want

  • Lake Santa Fe access at in-town, non-lakefront pricing on deeded-access parcels
  • Protected no-wake bay water — calm docks, easy paddling, kid-friendly
  • Genuine historic-village setting: walk to galleries, restaurants and Heritage Park
  • No master HOA dues known — recorded easements do the work
  • Four-county crossroads keeps Gainesville, Palatka and Keystone all within ~30 minutes

Look elsewhere if you want

  • Easement and shared-dock rights vary parcel to parcel — document-reading is mandatory
  • No-wake bay means the ski boat lives at a ramp, not your dock
  • Putnam default schooling (Interlachen High rates 3/10) is the family filter — zoning needs parcel-level confirmation
  • Well/septic, flood and historic-structure homework on most purchases
  • Tiny micro-market — inventory is sporadic and comps are hand-built
Village & access lots
Confirm current

In-town lots and acreage, some with deeded bay access via the recorded easement. Verify buildability, perc, the easement instrument and any dock rights before pricing anything.

Sporadic · verify access
Deeded-access homes
Confirm current

The pocket’s signature product: homes near the bay with the 25-foot easement and shared dock to Lake Santa Fe. They trade above comparable no-access village homes and below true frontage — the access premium is real but parcel-specific.

Signature · easement homework
Bayfront & historic
Confirm current

Direct Melrose Bay frontage and the pocket’s historic homes — the ceiling, trading on scarcity, dock quality and the village address when they appear at all.

Scarce · appraisal care

We deliberately publish bands as confirm-current here: this micro-market is too thin for honest published ranges. Ask us for the live comps — we hand-build every Melrose Bay valuation from bay and Lake Santa Fe trades.

Recently sold in Melrose Bay

List prices tell you what sellers want. Closed sales tell you what buyers actually paid. We pull the verified recent solds for the exact homes and views you are weighing.

Access parcel · acreage
Deeded easement · buildable
Sold price Confirm
🔒 Unlock the real number
Deeded-access home
3 bed · shared dock rights
Sold price Confirm
🔒 Unlock the real number
Bayfront · village
Frontage · historic character
Sold price Confirm
🔒 Unlock the real number
Want the verified closed prices for the exact homes you care about in Melrose Bay?
See What Buyers Actually Paid →
DestinationApprox. distanceApprox. drive
Downtown Melrose (galleries, dining)walkable
Melrose Bay Park & Trout St rampon-bay
Santa Fe Lake Park (big-boat ramp)~1 mi~3 min
Keystone Heights~9 mi~14 min
Gainesville (east side)~22 mi~30 min
Palatka (county seat, hospital)~20 mi~30 min
Gainesville Regional Airport~20 mi~30 min

Drive times are off-peak estimates; SR-26 runs straight to Gainesville and SR-21 connects Keystone Heights to Palatka country.

Gainesville and UF are the realistic daily commute; Palatka and Keystone Heights cover county services and errands.

~5,800 ac
Lake Santa Fe system beyond the bay
25 ft
Recorded easement width on access parcels
12 hp
Motor limit at the Trout Street ramp
4
Counties meeting at Melrose
● a handful of bay-pocket trades a year
Price tiers
Village, no access
Base
Deeded bay access
Premium
Bayfront / historic
Ceiling
Relative value ladder, not published prices — the pocket is too thin for honest ranges. Access rights, dock quality and historic condition move individual parcels; ask us for live comps.

Sources: Melrose-area MLS and portal listing history (Zillow/Homes.com, spring 2026), CB Isaac Realty listing notes on the 25-ft easement, melrosefl.com community records.

Want the real Melrose Bay comps and a full carrying-cost read, not a Zestimate?
Get Real Comparable Sales →

The 60-Second Overview

Most Lake Santa Fe water asks you to choose: open-lake frontage with open-lake prices, or a village address with no water at all. Melrose Bay is the third option — the historic inlet where the 1880s steamboats F.S. Lewis, Alert and City of Melrose once met the village, now a protected no-wake bay at the foot of downtown Melrose where select parcels carry deeded bay access via a recorded 25-foot easement and shared dock, connecting straight out to roughly 5,800 acres of spring-fed lake.

The setting is genuinely unusual for North Florida: Melrose sits where four counties meet (Alachua, Bradford, Clay and Putnam — the bay pocket is Putnam), and its 250-acre Historic District — listed on the National Register in 1990 with 65 contributing buildings — runs down to the bay itself. Galleries, restaurants and Heritage Park are a walk, not a drive. The Trout Street community park puts a sandy beach and a 12hp-or-less ramp on the bay; full-size boats launch a mile west at Santa Fe Lake Park.

Deeded access is the whole game here: the difference between a charming village house and a lake property is one recorded instrument — and we read it before you offer, every time.

The homework is real: easement and shared-dock rights vary parcel to parcel, most homes run well and septic, flood and historic-structure questions are address-specific, and the county line itself needs verifying near the edges. A pocket this small also means a thin market — this is a watch-list purchase, not a weekend decision. One more distinction worth naming: Melrose Bay is the in-town waterfront pocket, not Melrose Landing, the fly-in airpark community east of town — different product, different buyer.

Access & Fees: Rights Without Dues

The structure is the best kind of simple: no master HOA and no CDD that we know of for the bay pocket. What replaces them is recorded paper — the deeded access lives in easement instruments, typically a 25-foot easement running to the bay with a shared dock at the end. That paper is the asset. It is also the homework: easements vary in width, maintenance language, who may use the dock, and whether dock rights were ever formalized at all. Confirm any cost-sharing arrangement for the shared dock before you count on it — informal arrangements work until they do not.

Carrying costs are Putnam County taxes, insurance, and well/septic upkeep on most parcels. The inspection stack is rural-Florida standard with a historic twist: well yield and quality, septic tank and drainfield with permit history, the FEMA panel (elevation certificate on low parcels), a survey that actually shows the easement, and — on the older homes — a structural and systems review calibrated to century-old construction. Insurers price historic homes differently; quote early, not at clear-to-close.

Read the easement, not the listing: “deeded lake access” in a listing can mean a recorded 25-foot easement with dock rights — or a neighborly handshake from 1985. The recorded instrument answers in ten minutes what marketing copy blurs. We pull it on every Melrose Bay deal, and we have seen the difference move price by real money.

Want the recorded easement and the real carrying costs on a specific parcel? We will pull both before you offer.

Talk to us first

The Bay: Protected Water, Big Lake Beyond

Melrose Bay is the calm room of Lake Santa Fe: a no-wake zone with no current, which makes it some of the easiest paddling water in the region — kayaks, canoes, paddleboards, kids off the dock. The Trout Street ramp at Melrose Bay Park serves boats with 12hp motors or less; the park adds a sandy beach and a lighted lot. When you want the big water — skiing, sailing, serious bass runs — you idle out of the bay onto Big Lake Santa Fe, or trailer to Santa Fe Lake Park off SR-26 a mile west, where the full-size ramps are.

Know which water you are buying. The bay rewards the pontoon-and-paddle owner and quietly frustrates the buyer who pictured a ski boat on a lift at the back door — that buyer belongs on the open lake, and our Lake Santa Fe guide covers that market. The lake itself — roughly 5,800 acres across Big and Little Santa Fe, spring-fed, historically far more stable than the Keystone sandhill chain — sits entirely in Alachua County even though the bay pocket answers to Putnam. Walk the shoreline twice, in different seasons, before pricing any view.

The Village: Melrose’s Historic Heart

This is the part no other Lake Santa Fe address can offer: the bay pocket sits against downtown Melrose and its National Register Historic District — 250 acres, listed in 1990, 65 contributing buildings at listing, bounded in part by the bay itself. The settlement began here after the Civil War (the first name was, honestly, “Shake Rag”; the Melrose plat was recorded in 1877), and the 1881 Santa Fe Canal turned the bay into a steamboat port linking the village to the railroad at Waldo before the freezes of the 1890s ended the citrus era.

What survives is the texture buyers actually feel: Victorian and early-1900s homes on tree-lined streets, the self-guided walking tour from Heritage Park, galleries including the Melrose Bay Art Gallery, restaurants, and a genuine small-arts identity that pulls from Gainesville. Walking distance to all of it is the bay pocket’s second amenity — and for many buyers here, the first.

The Homes: A Century of Stock

There is no tract product here. The stock runs from Victorian-era and early-1900s village homes through mid-century lake cottages to newer custom builds on acreage, and the value ladder is consistent even when prices are not publishable: village homes without water rights set the base, deeded-access parcels with the 25-foot easement and shared dock trade at a premium, and direct bayfront or significant historic homes sit at the ceiling. We deliberately do not print ranges — the pocket trades a handful of times a year and honest numbers are hand-built from live comps.

Market mechanics follow from the thinness: appraisals need bay-and-lake comp work, sellers price on conviction, and prepared buyers — easement read, inspections lined up, county line confirmed — win the rare good listing. Condition stratifies everything: a documented dock and updated systems move a home up the ladder faster than square footage does.

Schools: The Four-County Question

The bay pocket is Putnam County, so Putnam County School District is the default: Melrose Elementary is in town (PK-6, small, and rating above average on GreatSchools), feeding toward Interlachen Jr-Sr High, which rates 3/10 — the honest filter for relocating families. But Melrose is a four-county town, and some local families use other-county options through school choice or by buying on a different side of the line. That makes school zoning a parcel-level question here, not a town-level one — confirm zoning, choice eligibility and bus routes for the exact address before you write.

School fit is family-specific — and county-line-specific here. We will pull current ratings, zoning and choice options for any address.

Ask us about zoning

Daily Life on Melrose Bay

Village rhythm with lake access — the rare combination. Day to day:

Weekends

Coffee in the village, the kayak off the shared dock or the beach at Trout Street, the big lake by pontoon when the weather calls for it — and gallery walks or Heritage Park events without touching the car.

Commuting

Gainesville and UF at ~30 minutes is the realistic daily; Palatka ~30 minutes for county business; Keystone Heights ~14 minutes for groceries and errands.

Services & healthcare

Melrose covers basics and Keystone Heights fills the gaps; hospitals are in Gainesville (UF Health Shands) and Palatka — weigh the distances honestly for retirees.

Connectivity

Address-specific in a four-county town — verify the actual parcel with providers and ask the neighbors what actually works.

The Five Buyer Mistakes We See Here

All five from real lake-region transactions; all five avoidable.

1

Trusting “deeded access” without reading the instrument

The recorded easement defines width, route, dock rights and maintenance. A vague listing bullet is not a property right — the document is.

2

Buying no-wake water for a wake-boat life

The bay is protected, calm and 12hp at the community ramp. If the dream is a ski boat on a lift, buy the open lake instead — we will tell you which you are looking at.

3

Ignoring the county line

Four counties meet at Melrose. Taxes, schools and services change across a street — verify which courthouse a parcel answers to before comparing it to anything.

4

Pricing the charm, not the systems

Century-old homes carry century-old questions: structure, wiring, plumbing, insurability. Inspect to the home’s age and price from quotes, not from the porch.

5

Rushing a watch-list market

Good bay-pocket listings are rare but not instant. Easement-read, inspections-first preparation beats deadline pressure every time.

We run this checklist on every Melrose Bay deal. It costs you nothing as a buyer.

Put us to work

Access & Lots: Where Value Lives

In this pocket, the recorded paper sets the floor and the water sets the ceiling: documented easement and dock rights separate otherwise similar village parcels, and direct bay frontage tops the ladder.
Direct bayfront · documented dock
Deeded access · recorded easement & shared dock
Village & historic · no water rights
Unbuilt lots (pre-verification)

Relative desirability (and price resilience) by access class, from how in-town lake pockets actually trade — not an appraisal scale.

Not sure what a parcel’s access actually is? Send it to us — we will pull the recorded instrument and walk the easement.

Get the access read

The Melrose Bay Buyer Checklist

  • Pull the recorded easement or frontage rights — width, route, dock language, maintenance.
  • Verify the shared-dock arrangement — who uses it, who pays, what is in writing.
  • Confirm the county line and school zoning for the exact parcel.
  • Inspect well and septic fully — yield, quality, tank, drainfield, permits.
  • Check the FEMA panel; elevation certificate on low parcels.
  • Inspect to the home’s age — structure, wiring, plumbing on historic stock; quote insurance early.
  • Run full title and a current survey that actually shows the easement.
  • Walk the bay shoreline twice — different seasons if possible.
Jon Brooks · Co-Founder, Momentum Realty

Melrose Bay is the address I bring up when buyers tell me they want Lake Santa Fe but keep describing a town: the gallery walk, the porch, the kayak before coffee. The deeded-access parcels are the quiet bargain of this lake — real water rights at a fraction of frontage money — but only when the easement actually says what the listing implies. That is a ten-minute document pull that has saved our buyers from more than one expensive assumption.

We represent you, not the seller. In a pocket this small, most of our work happens before anything lists: knowing the bay’s real comps, which docks have real paper behind them, and which owners are a season away from selling.

Melrose Bay vs. the Alternatives

The honest matrix for lake-region money:

CommunitySettingThe waterFeesThe trade
Melrose BayHistoric village waterfront pocketProtected no-wake bay to Lake Santa FeNone knownWalk-to-town water; easement homework, thin inventory
Lake Santa Fe (open water)Frontage around the big lake~5,800-acre spring-fed lakeNone on mostThe full ski-and-sail life at frontage prices
Keystone HeightsLake-district townSandhill chain lakesVariesMore services and inventory; hydrology homework
Lake GenevaBig sandhill lake, city beachRecovering sandhill waterNone on most lotsBigger lake culture; water-level history
Lake BrooklynThe comeback lakeDramatic recovery storyNone on mostValue entry; the same sandhill caveats
Gator Bone Lake EstatesSmall private-lake platQuiet private waterVariesSeclusion over services

The verdict: open Lake Santa Fe wins on big-water living, Keystone wins on inventory and errands, the sandhill lakes win on entry price — and Melrose Bay wins on the combination nobody else offers: documented lake access, protected water and a National Register village you can walk to.

Weighing the lake region? We will walk the shorelines — and the easements — with you honestly.

Compare with us

Honest Pros & Cons

What Melrose Bay gets right

  • Deeded Lake Santa Fe access without frontage prices
  • Protected no-wake bay — calm docks, easy paddling
  • Walkable National Register village with a real arts scene
  • No master HOA dues known — recorded rights do the work
  • Spring-fed lake with a stronger water-level history than the sandhill chain
  • Gainesville, Palatka and Keystone all within ~30 minutes

What it asks of you

  • Easement and dock rights vary — document homework on every parcel
  • No-wake bay; the ski boat launches a mile away
  • Putnam default schools (Interlachen High 3/10) with county-line complexity
  • Well/septic, flood and historic-structure inspections
  • Tiny market — watch-list patience required
  • Thin comps; careful appraisals

Our Buyer Playbook for Melrose Bay

The sequence we actually run, in order:

  • Get on the watch list first — pocket inventory rarely waits for shoppers who start later.
  • Read the recorded easement before touring anything marketed with access.
  • Confirm the county line and zoning early — it reframes value and schools.
  • Run the kill-list — well, septic, flood, title, dock paper, historic systems.
  • Comp on the bay and Lake Santa Fe only and write with appraisal strategy.

Questions We Ask Before You Offer

Six questions that decide whether a Melrose Bay listing is right:

  • What does the recorded access instrument actually grant — and to whom?
  • What is the shared dock’s real arrangement — rights, condition, costs?
  • Which county and which schools does this exact parcel answer to?
  • What are the well, septic, roof and structural conditions, documented to the home’s age?
  • Which bay and lake comps support the price?
  • Does protected no-wake water fit how you will actually use the lake?

Is Melrose Bay For You?

A small historic pocket sorts its buyers quickly — and honestly:

Consider elsewhere if you want

  • A ski boat on a lift at your own dock — buy the open lake
  • New construction with warranties and an HOA pool
  • Immediate inventory to choose from
  • Top-rated default schools driving resale
  • City utilities and zero document homework
  • Suburban conveniences within five minutes

Melrose Bay fits if you want

  • Documented Lake Santa Fe access at village prices
  • Calm, protected water — paddles, pontoons, kids off the dock
  • A National Register village you can walk to
  • Historic character that no builder can reproduce
  • No HOA dues, with recorded rights doing the protecting
  • Old Florida at the steamboat landing, kept alive on purpose

Get the inside read on Melrose Bay

Pockets this small trade by word of mouth before they trade on portals. Tell us what you are after and we will watch Melrose Bay and the village for you — and pull the recorded easement on anything that surfaces before you fall in love with it.

We respond personally, usually the same day. Your information is never sold.

You are all set.

A Momentum Realty Melrose Bay specialist will reach out personally, usually the same day.

Momentum listings (YTD)
97.98%
Sold-to-list ratio across our markets for our agents, sellers keeping more of their price.
Market average (YTD)
96.73%
The broader metro average sold-to-list ratio over the same period.
Momentum days on market
64 days
Median days on market for our listings, faster sales mean less carrying cost and stronger leverage.
Market days on market
72 days
The broader metro median over the same period.

Sold-to-list and days-on-market figures reflect Momentum Realty listings versus the metro average, year to date. Your home's result depends on pricing, condition, lot, view, and preparation.

The no-wake bay is an amenity, not a limitation

Protected water, calm docks, kayaks at sunrise and the village a short walk away — that combination photographs beautifully and sells to exactly the buyer who pays the premium. Sellers who lead with the documented easement and the lifestyle (and price to bay comps, not open-lake frontage) sell on the first serious showing.

What is your Melrose Bay home worth?

Get a no-obligation home value based on real comparable sales in Melrose Bay matched to your condition, lot, and view, not an automated guess. Tell us about your home and we will personally prepare your numbers and a pricing strategy. No obligation, no spam.

Real comps, not a Zestimate. Prepared personally, never sold.

Thank you.

We will prepare your Melrose Bay home value from real comparable sales and reach out personally.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where exactly is Melrose Bay?
It is the protected inlet off Big Lake Santa Fe at downtown Melrose, where SR-26 meets SR-21 in Putnam County, ZIP 32666. The bay pocket is the in-town waterfront — distinct from Melrose Landing, the fly-in airpark community east of town.
What does deeded bay access mean here?
Select parcels carry recorded access to Melrose Bay via a 25-foot easement with a shared dock, connecting on to Lake Santa Fe. The rights live in recorded instruments, not an HOA — we pull and read the actual easement on every deal.
Is there an HOA or CDD?
No master association or CDD that we know of for the bay pocket. Access rights and any restrictions live in recorded easements and deeds — verify the documents and any informal shared-dock cost arrangement per parcel.
Can I ski or wakeboard off my dock?
No — Melrose Bay is a no-wake zone. The bay is for calm water: paddling, fishing, pontoon idling out to the lake. Big Lake Santa Fe beyond the bay carries the ski and sailing scene.
Where do I launch a boat?
The community ramp at Melrose Bay Park on Trout Street is limited to boats with 12hp motors or less. Full-size boats launch at Santa Fe Lake Park off SR-26, about a mile west.
How big is Lake Santa Fe?
Roughly 5,800 acres across Big and Little Lake Santa Fe, spring-fed and connected by a pass — one of North Florida’s premier lakes. The lake itself sits entirely in Alachua County, even though the Melrose Bay pocket is Putnam.
What is the Melrose Historic District?
A 250-acre district listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1990, with 65 contributing buildings at listing — Victorian-era and early-1900s homes and churches, bounded in part by Melrose Bay itself. The self-guided walking tour starts at Heritage Park.
What do homes cost?
We deliberately do not publish ranges here — the pocket is too thin for honest numbers. The ladder is reliable: village homes without access set the base, deeded-access parcels trade at a premium, and bayfront or significant historic homes sit at the ceiling. Ask us for live comps.
Are homes on well and septic?
Mostly, yes — budget a well yield/quality test and a full septic inspection, and confirm utilities for the specific address; the in-town location does not guarantee central services.
Is flood insurance required?
Parcel-specific. Bayfront and low parcels need the FEMA panel pulled and possibly an elevation certificate; lenders require coverage in mapped A zones. Historic structures can also change insurer appetite — quote early.
What schools serve Melrose Bay?
The pocket is in Putnam County, so Putnam County School District is the default: Melrose Elementary in town (rates above average) and Interlachen Jr-Sr High (3/10 on GreatSchools). Melrose straddles four counties and some families use other-county options — confirm zoning and choice eligibility for the exact parcel.
Why do four counties matter?
Melrose sits where Alachua, Bradford, Clay and Putnam meet. Your county determines taxes, schools and services — two homes a few streets apart can answer to different courthouses. The bay pocket is Putnam; verify the line on any parcel near it.
How often do homes come up?
Sporadically — a handful of bay-pocket listings in a typical year across bayfront, deeded-access and village homes. Keep a watch list rather than a deadline; the best access parcels often trade quietly.
Does Lake Santa Fe have water-level problems?
Lake Santa Fe is spring-fed and has historically held water far better than the Keystone sandhill chain to the north — but all Florida lakes move. See the bay and the shoreline twice, in different seasons, before pricing any view.
What should I verify before buying?
The recorded easement or frontage rights, the shared-dock arrangement, well and septic, flood zone and elevation, county line and school zoning, any historic-structure considerations, survey and full title. Several of these kill deals quietly — run them early.
Is Melrose Bay a good investment?
It is a scarcity hold: walk-to-village water on a premier spring-fed lake does not get built again, and documented access rights protect value. The thin market caps speculation — buy verified access, sound systems and honest condition, and let the village and the lake do the slow work.

Melrose Bay is the in-town heart of our Lake Santa Fe and lake-region coverage — these guides cover the open water and the alternatives.

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