The 60-Second Overview
Oak Ridge is what happened when the largest homebuilder in the country came to a town of local builders. D.R. Horton platted the community off US-441 and Martin Luther King Boulevard on the southeast side of High Springs, built one- and two-story homes from roughly 1,408 to 2,516 square feet circa 2021-2023, priced the plans from about the $333s to the $377s - and sold out around April 2023. Today there is no sales office and no model home; Oak Ridge trades as a young-resale market, and that changes everything about how you buy here.
The numbers are the story. Recent recorded closings include a 1,640 sq ft three-bedroom at $335,000 in May 2024, a 1,597 sq ft three-bedroom at $329,500 in April 2025, and a 1,774 sq ft four-bedroom at $290,000 in May 2025 - which means some homes have traded below what comparable plans sold for new. In a region where new construction starts in the mid $300s and Weston Oaks new builds reach the $540s, a circa-2022 home in the $290s-$330s is the lowest practical entry into 2020s construction in springs country.
The trades are real: production lot sizes rather than the third-to-half-acre lots High Springs is known for, one builder spec rather than choice, and no new-build or incentive option left. What you get back is certainty - same builder, same era, same included package (granite kitchens, stainless appliances, the Home is Connected smart-home system) across the whole plat, young roofs and HVAC that insurers like, and a $40-$42 reported monthly HOA. Downtown Main Street is five to eight minutes; the springs are just past it.
The builder left in 2023 - what remains is the cheapest way into a 2020s-built home in High Springs, if you buy the resale right.
The fee stack: light, but verify it anyway
The reported Oak Ridge HOA runs $40 to $42 per month - a light assessment that covers common-area basics, because there is no pool or clubhouse to fund. Confirm the current amount, what it covers and the association documents in writing during purchase, as we do on every transaction. We are not aware of a CDD, and at this price point in High Springs we would not expect one - but the honest move is the one we make everywhere: pull the proposed tax bill for the specific parcel and read it line by line.
The cost conversation that matters more here is the young-home advantage. A circa 2021-2023 build carries a roof, HVAC and water heater that are all years from replacement, current-code construction and wind mitigation features that insurers typically reward. Get insurance quotes early - they are usually one of the pleasant surprises of this community - and ask whether any remaining builder warranty coverage transfers, because the longer structural coverage often survives a resale if handled correctly.
D.R. Horton vs. the local builders: the High Springs decision
High Springs is local-builder country - across town in Weston Oaks, operators like Square D Construction and Duration Builders put custom-leaning homes on third-to-half-acre wooded lots, with new construction still available from roughly the $450s to $549K. Oak Ridge is the opposite model: one national builder, standardized plans, production lots, and pricing that started in the $330s new and now starts in the $290s resale. Understanding that split is most of the High Springs decision.
The national-builder case, even post-closeout: price, predictability and process. Every Oak Ridge home came off the same spec sheet - granite, stainless, the smart-home package - so the comp set is clean and you know what you are buying. The homes carry national-builder warranty programs with structural coverage that can survive a resale. And because D.R. Horton built at volume and speed, the entry price undercuts everything comparable in town by a wide margin. When the community was selling, buyers also got the DHI Mortgage incentive machine - that lever is gone now, which is itself a negotiating fact: today you negotiate with an individual owner, not a corporate sales office, and individual owners respond to real comps and inspection findings.
The local-builder case is everything Oak Ridge is not: bigger wooded lots, plan flexibility, principals who negotiate directly, and construction you can spec - at meaningfully higher prices and with the comparison work on you, since no two local builders build alike. Our honest read: if budget leads and you want a young home near the springs, an Oak Ridge resale is the value play in town. If land and customization lead and the budget reaches the mid $400s and up, Weston Oaks and the local builders earn the premium. We walk both paths with current numbers on every High Springs search.
Springs country: what living here actually means
High Springs is the gateway town to the Santa Fe River springs corridor, and Oak Ridge puts it all within reach: Poe Springs, the county park with the swimming lagoon, runs about thirteen to sixteen minutes; Ginnie Springs, the famous private dive-and-tube park, sixteen to nineteen; Blue Springs and the river launches fill in around them. That is weekday-evening-swim distance in a North Florida summer - 72-degree spring water as a routine, not a road trip.
Town holds up its end. Downtown Main Street is a genuine walkable historic district - antiques, diners, local restaurants, a small-town festival calendar - five to eight minutes from the community. And because Oak Ridge sits on the southeast side of town off US-441, it is closer to the Alachua Publix (nine to twelve minutes) and I-75 (twelve to fifteen) than most of High Springs, which softens the small-town-services trade. Homes here are on city-side infrastructure rather than the well-and-septic acreage common outside town - verify utilities on the specific lot, but expect the subdivision standard.
The honest counterweight: big-box, hospitals and most employment mean Gainesville at 30-35 minutes, and tubing season brings weekend traffic through town on the river roads. Buyers who want the springs and a working Main Street take the trade happily; buyers who need ten-minute everything should look down the corridor toward Alachua or Gainesville.
The homes: four plans, one spec, one era
Oak Ridge built from a tight plan series. The one-story core: the Aria at 1,619 square feet (3 bed, 2 bath, sold new from the $333s) and the Cali at 1,744 square feet (4 bed, 2 bath, from the $343s) - the workhorse D.R. Horton plans you will find across Florida, which means their layouts are well documented and their resale behavior is predictable. The two-story options: the Ensley at 2,288 square feet (4 bed, 3 bath, from the $367s) and the Hayden at 2,516 square feet (5 bed, 3 bath, from the $377s) - the most space per dollar in town when new, and rarely on the resale market since.
Every home was delivered with the same included package: granite kitchen counters, stainless appliances and Home is Connected, the D.R. Horton smart-home system. Because the builder spec was uniform, what separates one resale from another is what owners added since closing - fencing, gutters, blinds, water treatment, screened lanais, epoxy garage floors - and condition. That makes Oak Ridge one of the easiest communities in the county to comp accurately, and it makes the owner-upgrade list a real line item in the negotiation. We price the additions, not just the square feet.
Schools: the High Springs feeder
Oak Ridge sits in the High Springs pattern - historically High Springs Community School for PK-8, currently 7/10 on GreatSchools and one of the stronger-rated schools in the western county, then Santa Fe High, currently a 4/10 and only about 1.4 miles from the community on US-441. That split is the honest read: the K-8 years are a genuine selling point, the high-school feeder deserves a clear-eyed conversation if it drives your search, and the short drive to Santa Fe High is at least a logistical win. Ratings are one input, not a verdict - verify the current assignment for the exact lot with the district.
What living here is actually like
Oak Ridge runs on value and routine: young low-maintenance homes, a light HOA, a quick run to Main Street or the Alachua Publix, and the springs as the standing summer plan.
Who actually lives here?
First-time buyers and young families who bought from the builder in 2021-2023, plus the second wave now arriving through resales - people who priced Gainesville and Alachua and found the same-age home for less in High Springs.
How is the commute?
Downtown High Springs 5-8 minutes, Alachua and its Publix 9-12, I-75 at the Alachua exit 12-15, UF and Shands 30-35. The southeast-of-town position makes this one of the better-connected addresses in High Springs.
What is nearby for errands?
Main Street and the local market for dailies, the Alachua Publix plaza for the weekly run, Gainesville for big-box and hospitals - the small-town equation, with a shorter-than-usual drive to the middle piece.
Is there any construction left?
No - the builder closed out around 2023, so the community is finished and settled. What turnover exists comes through resales, which keeps inventory thin.
Five costly mistakes Oak Ridge buyers make
The avoidable five:
Ignoring what the home sold for new
Every Oak Ridge home has a public builder-sale price from 2021-2023, and some resales have closed below comparable new-sold figures. We anchor every offer to that record.
Skipping the inspection because the home is young
These homes went up during the industry-wide 2021-2023 building sprint. A full inspection on a three-year-old production home is cheap insurance and can surface items while warranty windows are still open.
Losing the warranty transfer
Portions of the D.R. Horton warranty - especially structural coverage - can survive a resale, but terms and paperwork matter. We confirm what transfers before closing, not after.
Paying upgrade prices for the base spec
The builder package was uniform - granite, stainless, smart home. If a listing trades on upgrades, verify they exist beyond the spec sheet: fence, gutters, blinds, lanai, water treatment.
Taking the fee stack on faith
The $40-$42/month HOA figure is reported, not gospel - and young associations transition from builder control. Confirm the current assessment, the documents and the tax bill before terms harden.
