The 60-Second Overview
Every great gated community has a corner the locals describe in two words. Inside Marsh Landing Country Club, North Island's two words are the marsh: an estate-lot enclave at the community's north end known specifically, in the language local brokerages use, for its estate-sized lots and expansive, panoramic marsh views. Where Harbour Island next door built its identity around a 94-slip yacht basin, North Island built its identity around the view.
The structure matters: North Island is not just a marketing name. The Marsh Landing master association lists it as HOA VIII, one of ten sub-associations inside the gates, with its own governance layer on top of the master. The housing stock is custom, not production; recent listings on Ibis Cove Place ran about 5,516 and 6,002 square feet, with builds from roughly the 1990s and 2000s, and a rare 1.25+ acre buildable lot bordered by tidal streams and a lagoon.
Recent dated activity ran roughly $1.4M to $2M+: a 5,516 sf home traded at $1,402,000 in 2017 per Redfin, and a fully remodeled 6,002 sf home listed at $1,990,000 and sold per the Lisa Barton Team. Automated estimates on past sales now sit well above those numbers, which tells you the direction but not the price; in an enclave this small, only a view-adjusted comp set does that.
In North Island you are not buying square footage. You are buying a protected panorama with a very good house in front of it, and the diligence should run in that order.
The Fee Layers: Master Plus HOA VIII
North Island's carrying structure has two documents that matter. The Marsh Landing master association governs the community-wide grounds, the 24-hour staffed gates, the parks, and the access-control procedures. North Island's own sub-association, HOA VIII in the master's roster, governs the enclave itself: its standards, its budget, its reserves.
None of this is exotic, but at this price tier the details are six-figure details. What each layer charges today, what the sub-association's reserves say about shared infrastructure like bulkheads at the marsh edge, and what the architectural review board will and will not approve on a renovation, these belong in diligence, not discovery.
The Marsh Panorama: The Asset Itself
Marsh Landing was developed slowly over three decades around its wetlands, and North Island sits where that planning pays off most visibly: lots arranged along protected tidal marsh and lagoon, looking west over the kind of open, layered estuary panorama that inland communities landscape for decades trying to imitate. Sunset over the marsh is the enclave's daily amenity, and it is the line every listing here leads with.
The diligence is specific. Protected marsh is the basis of the premium precisely because nothing gets built on it, so verify the conservation status and any easements behind the specific lot. Check the bulkhead: the recent lot offering on Ibis Cove Place advertised a 2022 bulkhead as a selling point, which tells you what the marsh edge costs to hold. And walk the lot at both tides; a panorama at high tide reads differently at low.
One honest distinction: this is view water, not navigation water. The marsh behind a North Island lot is estuary, not channel. Marsh Landing's deep-water access runs through Harbour Island and its basin next door; if a dock under your own boat is the requirement, that is the enclave to price, at roughly twice the entry.
The Homes: Custom, Not Production
There is no builder price sheet in North Island. The housing stock is custom work from roughly the 1990s and 2000s, refreshed by renovation, on estate-scale lots. The two recent reference points on Ibis Cove Place frame the product: a 5,516 sf home built in 2001, and a 6,002 sf five-bedroom that had been taken to the studs, with a new open plan, a sliding glass wall to the pool, and Intracoastal views from the outdoor living areas.
Because every home is one of one, valuation is comp art, not comp science. The variables that move six figures: view quality and orientation, lot acreage and elevation, bulkhead and marsh-edge condition, and the renovation delta between 1990s-2000s bones and current expectations. A 2026 buyer should price the renovation honestly; at this tier, kitchens and glass walls are measured in the mid six figures.
The inventory rhythm matters too: a small pocket of streets, rare listings, and marsh-front sites that hold for decades. If your criteria are specific, the registered-and-waiting approach beats refreshing the portals.
Schools: The 32082 Anchor
North Island sits in the Ponte Vedra feeder pattern of the St. Johns County district, the school zoning that underwrites demand across 32082: PVPV-Rawlings Elementary, Landrum Middle, and Ponte Vedra High in the current pattern. The district is consistently ranked among the best in Florida. Verify the assignment for the specific address, boundaries shift, and at this price point many buyers are also weighing Bolles and Episcopal, both an easy run up JTB.
What Living Here Is Actually Like
Daily life is Marsh Landing life with the volume turned down: the staffed gate, the golf corridors, then the quiet north-end streets where the lots widen and the marsh opens up. The enclave's social calendar is the sunset; the community's is the optional club in the center of the neighborhood.
The view pattern
West-facing marsh means evening light over open estuary, wading birds at low tide, and a horizon that never gets built on. It is the one amenity in Ponte Vedra that does not require a membership, a tee time, or a tide chart, just the right lot.
The commute reality
The JTB end of Ponte Vedra is the connected end: Mayo Clinic about 15 minutes, St. Johns Town Center under 20, downtown about 25. The beach itself is roughly 10 minutes through the gates, the one trade the enclave makes for its marsh.
Maintenance honesty
Marsh-edge living has marsh-edge upkeep: bulkheads where lots carry them, salt-side glass and HVAC, and landscaping at estate scale. Budget real money annually; the sellers who maintained ahead of the curve are the listings worth paying up for.
Club life, optional
Marsh Landing Country Club, owned by Concert Golf Partners since 2022, is there when you want it: the Ed Seay / Palmer-design course, ten Har-Tru courts, pool, fitness, and dining. It is not on your tax bill when you do not. Confirm current membership categories if the club is part of your plan.
Five Costly Mistakes North Island Buyers Make
Seven-figure view property generates six-figure mistakes. The five we see:
Buying the house before the view
The renovation seduces; the panorama appreciates. Verify the conservation status of the marsh behind the lot, the orientation, and the sightlines at both tides before you anchor on a price. The view is the scarce asset.
Pricing off community-wide comps
Marsh Landing has 1,100+ homes across golf, lagoon, woodland, and marsh settings. A community-wide price per square foot is noise here; North Island comps must be view-adjusted and lot-adjusted, and there are only a few of them.
Skipping the marsh-edge inspection
Bulkheads and lot edges along tidal water are real assets with real failure modes. A standard home inspection does not fully cover them; a specialist read of the bulkhead, drainage, and erosion history does.
Underwriting insurance late
Marsh-edge lots carry address-specific flood and elevation math. Get the elevation certificate and a real quote inside your inspection window, not after closing.
Shopping only the MLS
In an enclave where listings are rare and some Marsh Landing product trades quietly, the portal view is the partial view. Unrepresented buyers literally cannot see the whole market.
Lots, Views, and Where Value Hides
The hierarchy of the panorama
North Island value runs on a simple ladder: interior estate lots, partial-marsh-view lots, full-panorama marsh frontage, and the lagoon-and-tidal-stream trophy sites. Each rung roughly re-prices the same house. The inefficiency worth hunting: a structurally excellent home one rung lower than its finish level suggests, those are the buys that age best.
The reverse trap is paying panorama-rung money for a compromised sightline. The view is the rung; walk it at both tides and verify what is protected before you price it.
The North Island Buyer Checklist
- Verify the view in writing: conservation status of the marsh, easements, and what can ever be built in the sightline.
- Pull both association documents: Marsh Landing master and the North Island sub-association (HOA VIII), dues and reserves.
- Walk the lot at both tides: the panorama, the smell, and the edge all read differently at low water.
- Inspect the marsh edge: bulkhead condition, drainage, and erosion history alongside the standard inspection.
- Get the elevation certificate and a real insurance quote inside the inspection window.
- Build a view-adjusted comp set: community-wide square-foot pricing is noise without it.
- Ask about quiet availability: the visible inventory is not the whole inventory in Marsh Landing.
- Confirm club categories separately if Marsh Landing membership is part of the plan.
Every buyer who tours Harbour Island falls in love with the water. About half of them, when we ask the honest question, do not actually own a boat. North Island is where that conversation usually lands: the same gates, the same schools, the bigger sky, at a meaningfully lower entry.
The catch is patience. This is a small enclave where the right lot might list once in a few years. The buyer who gets it is the one whose agent had the comps view-adjusted in advance and could move when the call came. That is the buyer we prepare you to be.
North Island vs. the Alternatives
For a buyer set on Marsh Landing's gates and the 32082 school zone, the shortlist inside and around them:
| Community | The setting | The honest one-liner |
|---|---|---|
| Marsh Landing (broader) | Golf, lagoon, woodland | The full 1,100-home community; more inventory, fewer panoramas. |
| Harbour Island | Deep-water basin estates | The dockage sibling: 94 slips and $2M-$8M+ entry; buy it for the boat, not the view alone. |
| Swift Creek | Tidal-creek enclave | Intimate creek-side living inside the same gates, at a smaller scale. |
| Found Forest | Wooded estate pocket | Canopy and privacy instead of open marsh; the introvert's corner of Marsh Landing. |
| Ponte Vedra Beach (broader) | The whole 32082 market | Ocean, golf, and gated options across every price band; start here if the gates are negotiable. |
The pattern is clean: plenty of Marsh Landing offers the gates, the club, and the schools. North Island is the corner that adds the panorama. If the open marsh view is non-negotiable, the comparison ends quickly.
The Honest Pros and Cons
Pros
- The signature panoramic marsh views inside Marsh Landing
- Estate-sized lots, with prime sites at 1+ acres
- Own sub-association protecting the enclave standard
- Ponte Vedra school zone with no CDD
- Optional, not mandatory, club membership
- Structural scarcity protecting long-term value
Cons
- Seven-figure entry, no exceptions
- Thin, rarely listed inventory
- 1990s-2000s builds often need real renovation budgets
- Marsh-edge maintenance and insurance math
- No private dockage; the basin is next door at twice the price
- Beach is a drive, not a walk
Our North Island Buyer Playbook
How we run a North Island purchase, in order:
- Spec the view first: orientation, openness, and what is protected, then filter lots by sightlines that actually deliver.
- Register the search quietly: in a small enclave, sellers respond to qualified, specific buyers before they list.
- Pull documents before touring: both associations, ARB standards, and any marsh-edge easements.
- Inspect in two lanes: standard home inspection plus a specialist read of bulkhead, drainage, and elevation.
- Offer off the view-adjusted comps with insurance and renovation math already in the number.
Questions We Ask Before You Sign
Six answers we get in writing on every North Island contract:
- What protects the view: conservation designation, easements, and any development rights behind the lot?
- What is the bulkhead and marsh-edge condition, and when was it last rebuilt or repaired?
- What do both associations charge today, and what do their reserves and minutes say?
- What does insurance actually quote for this elevation and frontage?
- What is the true renovation delta between this home and current expectations, in dollars?
- What were the true comparable trades, view-adjusted, including any that moved quietly?
Is North Island Not For You?
The honest cut, both directions:
Consider elsewhere if you want
- A sub-$1M budget
- A dock under your own boat (that is Harbour Island)
- Walk-to-beach living
- Turnkey new construction
- Low-maintenance lock-and-leave
- Deep inventory to choose from this quarter
North Island fits if you want
- The open marsh panorama as a daily amenity
- Estate land behind a staffed gate
- The Ponte Vedra school zone
- Custom architecture, not production
- A quiet enclave with its own association
- An asset protected by structural scarcity
