The 60-Second Overview
The Sawgrass community in Ponte Vedra Beach has dozens of named pockets, but only one of them puts a single-family backyard on the Atlantic. Ocean Ridge is a cul-de-sac of four oceanfront estates inside the Sawgrass Beach Club gated entrance off Ponte Vedra Boulevard, just south of the Beach Club itself and the Spinnakers Reach, Hallmark, and Windemere oceanfront condos, per local listing descriptions. Listings describe it plainly: a double-gated four-residence cul-de-sac, the staffed community gate first and the neighborhood's own gate second.
The four estates went up between roughly 1989 and 2002 per county records, and they carry real scale: roughly 6,400 to 8,000-plus square feet, 5 to 8 bedrooms, elevators and pools in the records, and lots that run to an acre-plus with direct ocean frontage; the 2021 sale advertised about 150 feet of beach. The Sawgrass community association lists Ocean Ridge among the named single-family neighborhoods of Sawgrass Country Club, which makes these four homes the smallest, and the only oceanfront, single-family pocket in the community.
The verified numbers are honest and very thin: per third-party listing data, 1 Ocean Ridge Court closed at $4,750,000 in October 2020, and 4 Ocean Ridge Court, completely renovated with roughly 150 feet of frontage, closed at $8,325,000 in October 2021. Nothing has traded publicly since. Four homes do not make a market; they make occasional events, and the next one gets priced from current oceanfront comps, not from those prints.
Four estates, two gates, one beach. Ocean Ridge is the Sawgrass address where the scarcity is the amenity.
One framing note before the deep dive: this page is the close-up. For the gates, the master HOA, the club economics, and the full menu of neighborhoods, start with our complete Sawgrass Country Club guide and come back here for the cul-de-sac-level detail.
Fees: A Thin Stack, a Big Tax Line
The fee stack here is short but unusually opaque, because portals handle four-home associations badly. Layer one is the Sawgrass master association, which funds the staffed community gates and resident access. Layer two is whatever the Ocean Ridge cul-de-sac itself assesses for its own gate and shared elements; with four owners, that can be a formal sub-association or a simpler cost-sharing arrangement, and at least one portal record shows no HOA line at all, which tells you the data is unreliable, not that the obligation is zero. Confirm the full current stack, the amounts, and exactly what each layer covers in writing before you rely on any figure.
There is no CDD anywhere in Sawgrass, which keeps the recurring stack clean. The line that actually dominates the carrying cost at this address is taxes and insurance: the county assessed one un-traded Ocean Ridge estate at about $6.05 million for 2025 with a tax bill around $28,700 per county records via Trulia, and direct-oceanfront wind and flood coverage is its own six-figure-adjacent conversation. Underwrite the full carry, not just the dues.
The third line is optional but relevant here more than anywhere in Sawgrass: club membership. The Sawgrass Beach Club building, with its pools and oceanfront dining, sits steps north of the cul-de-sac, and the club announced initiation moving from $85,000 to $125,000 effective December 2025 with membership at capacity and a waitlist. None of it is owed by an owner who does not join, and the beach itself requires no membership from these homes, but if the Beach Club is part of the picture, settle the category, the price, and the queue with the club before you go under contract.
The Cul-de-sac and the Estates: Four Lots on the Atlantic
Ocean Ridge Court is one short street behind its own gate, and the four estates on it are individually documented in county and listing records: a 5-bedroom of roughly 6,467 square feet built in 1989 and renovated in 2014-15 at number 1; an 8-bedroom of roughly 8,028 square feet built in 2002 at number 2; a 5-bedroom of roughly 7,064 square feet on a 1.11-acre lot built in 1995 at number 3; and a 5-bedroom of roughly 6,428 square feet built in 1990 and since completely renovated, with about 150 feet of ocean frontage, at number 4. Four homes, four eras, one beach.
Two things follow from that roster. First, there is no typical Ocean Ridge home: each estate is its own architecture, its own renovation history, and its own frontage, so any pricing exercise is estate-specific from the first minute. Second, the build years run 1989 to 2002 on direct salt air, which means the renovation and maintenance file is the real biography of each home. The 2020 and 2021 sales both traded on deep renovations: new roofs, systems, kitchens, cabanas, a wine cellar, a garage apartment. The delta between maintained and deferred on this beach is measured in seven figures.
The honest caveat is the obvious one: this is direct Atlantic oceanfront. Erosion, dune condition, wind exposure, and the insurance market are structural facts of the address, not inspection footnotes. Walk the dune line, pull the erosion and permitting history, and price the envelope work like a coastal engineer would, because at this scale the ocean is both the amenity and the adversary.
The Beach Club Side: Two Gates and a Walk to the Clubhouse
Ocean Ridge sits on the east side of the Sawgrass community, inside the Beach Club gated entrance off Ponte Vedra Boulevard rather than the main Country Club gates across the road. That geography is the whole pitch: the staffed gate, then the cul-de-sac's own gate, then the Atlantic. The neighbors are the oceanfront condo buildings, Spinnakers Reach, The Hallmark, Windemere and the rest, and the 24,000-square-foot Sawgrass Beach Club itself, with its family pool, adults-only Oasis pool, and oceanfront dining, sits steps north for members.
The club structure works the same here as everywhere in Sawgrass: membership in Sawgrass Country Club, with the 27 Ed Seay-designed holes, 13 Har-Tru courts, and fitness across the Boulevard, is optional and separate, and the Beach Club comes with it. The current reality deserves eyes-open planning: the club reported initiation rising to $125,000 effective December 2025, membership at capacity, and a waitlist. The difference at this address is that an Ocean Ridge owner needs none of it for the beach; the sand is deeded scenery. The club question here is purely about the clubhouse lifestyle next door.
One naming trap to retire now: this Ocean Ridge, inside the Sawgrass community in Ponte Vedra Beach, is not the Ocean Ridge subdivision in St. Augustine Beach, and the Sawgrass Country Club east of A1A is not the Sawgrass Players Club at TPC Sawgrass west of it. Different gates, different markets; we cover each in its own guide.
Schools: The Zone Behind the Price
Ocean Ridge is zoned to the Ponte Vedra feeder pattern of the St. Johns County district, the school zone that anchors valuations across 32082: typically Ponte Vedra Rawlings Elementary, Alice B. Landrum Middle, and Ponte Vedra High. At this price point many buyers run the private-school math up JTB to Bolles and Episcopal instead, but the public zone underwrites the resale either way. Verify current assignments by address before you rely on them.
What Living Here Is Actually Like
Private to the point of invisible. Two gates filter the world down to four households and their guests, the soundtrack is the Atlantic, and the busiest thing in sight is the Beach Club at brunch hour. It is the Sawgrass rhythm with the community dialed down to a whisper and the ocean dialed up to everything.
The ownership profile
Four estates, long-tenured owners, and a public sales record you can count on one hand. These homes change hands quietly when they change hands at all; local agents note they rarely reach the MLS. If you want one, register your interest early, because the window may open as an off-market conversation rather than a listing.
The ocean, up close
Direct frontage means the dune is yours to steward: vegetation rules, walkover permitting, and erosion cycles are part of ownership. Ask for the permitting and erosion history, walk the dune line at high tide, and budget the beach-side envelope, decks, walkovers, glazing, like the consumable it is in salt air.
Salt-air stewardship
The build years run 1989-2002, and everything between the studs and the weather has been replaced at least once on the well-kept homes; the 2020 and 2021 sales both traded on documented renovations. The maintenance file is the estate's real biography, and at this price your inspector should read it forensically.
The weekly rhythm
Publix and Sawgrass Village across A1A in about five minutes, Mayo Clinic in fifteen, TPC Sawgrass up the road, and the Beach Club a barefoot walk for members. The double gate adds thirty seconds to every trip and subtracts every stranger from the street.
Five Costly Mistakes Ocean Ridge Buyers Make
A four-home oceanfront cul-de-sac with two comps and seven-figure spreads concentrates very specific errors:
Anchoring to the 2021 print
The $8,325,000 sale was a fully renovated estate with about 150 feet of frontage, closed in October 2021. Oceanfront 32082 has moved since, in both directions by segment. Rebuild the number from current oceanfront sales along the Boulevard, adjusted for the double gate, not from a four-year-old headline.
Treating the four estates as comparable to each other
Build years of 1989, 1990, 1995, and 2002, square footage from 6,400 to 8,000-plus, and frontage and renovation depth that vary lot to lot. Each estate prices on its own file; the neighbor's sale is context, not a comp.
Underwriting dues instead of the full carry
The HOA stack is thin, but the 2025 county assessment on one estate was about $6.05 million with a tax bill near $28,700, and direct-oceanfront wind and flood coverage is its own major line. Price taxes, insurance, and envelope upkeep before you fall in love.
Inspecting it like an inland estate
This is 1989-2002 construction on direct salt air. Roof systems, glazing, decks, walkovers, seawall or dune condition, and the erosion and permitting history all need specialist eyes, and the renovation delta belongs in the offer math explicitly.
Waiting for a normal listing
These homes rarely reach the MLS, and years pass between sales. If you wait for a yard sign behind two gates, you will never see one. Register the target and let your agent work the cul-de-sac off market.
Frontage, Files, and Value
When every lot is oceanfront, the file is the market
All four Ocean Ridge lots front the Atlantic, so the usual view hierarchy collapses into three variables: frontage width, lot depth and acreage, and the depth of the renovation file. The 2020-21 record makes the point: roughly comparable square footage traded at $4.75 million and $8.325 million a year apart, and frontage plus renovation explained most of the gap. The value play, if it ever appears, is the structurally sound dated estate: the lot at a relative discount with the rebuild on your terms, on a beach where the lot is the asset.
With four homes, the right answer is whichever estate actually becomes available in your lifetime as a buyer; optionality is not on the menu here.
The Ocean Ridge Buyer Checklist
- Confirm the full fee stack in writing: Sawgrass master dues plus the cul-de-sac's own gate and cost-sharing arrangement; portal records are unreliable at four-home scale.
- Pull whatever association file exists: budget, any reserve, assessment history, and the terms that govern four owners splitting shared costs.
- Verify the frontage and the lot: width, depth, acreage, and the dune line against the survey and county records.
- Inspect the 1989-2002 envelope like coastal engineering: roof, glazing, decks, walkovers, systems, and the full renovation file with permits.
- Pull the FEMA designation, the erosion history, and real wind and flood quotes for the exact address, inside the window.
- Underwrite the full carry: taxes (one estate assessed near $6.05M for 2025), insurance, and oceanfront upkeep, not just dues.
- Settle the club question early if it matters: initiation reported at $125,000 effective December 2025 with a waitlist, confirmed with the club.
- Work the cul-de-sac off market: register your target; these four homes rarely produce a conventional listing.
Ocean Ridge is the purest scarcity trade in the Sawgrass community: four oceanfront estates behind two gates, with a public sales record you can recite from memory. That is exactly the setup where buyers overpay on emotion or walk away from a once-a-decade window because the comps look stale, and both mistakes cost seven figures here.
Our job is to do the homework before a window exists: track the cul-de-sac on and off market, rebuild pricing from current oceanfront sales rather than the 2021 print, and read the renovation and erosion files the way the next buyer's inspector will, so that when one of these four doors opens, you are the buyer who is ready.
Ocean Ridge vs. the Realistic Alternatives
The realistic cross-shop for an Ocean Ridge buyer:
| Community | Format | The honest one-liner |
|---|---|---|
| Sawgrass Country Club | The umbrella community | The full menu behind the gates; shop here first, then narrow to the pocket. |
| Sea Hammock | Oceanfront condos, same beach side | The lock-and-leave way to own this stretch of sand; shared walls and condo fees instead of an acre and a gate. |
| Old Barn Island | 86 custom homes, main gates | The big custom-estate alternative inside the Country Club gates; more inventory, no oceanfront. |
| Lighthouse Bend | 55 homes, main gates | The view-guaranteed peninsula at a fraction of the price; lagoon and golf instead of the Atlantic. |
| Ponte Vedra Beach | The broader area | Oceanfront estates up and down the Boulevard without the double gate, plus everything inland. |
Ocean Ridge's lane: the only double-gated single-family oceanfront pocket in the Sawgrass community, four estates deep. If you want oceanfront with liquidity, shop the Boulevard estates or the Beach Club condos; if you want the address almost no one can have, this cul-de-sac is the entire supply.
The Honest Pros and Cons
Pros
- Direct Atlantic oceanfront; the sand is the backyard
- Two gates and four households of total privacy
- Acre-scale lots and 6,400-8,000-plus square feet of estate scale
- The Beach Club steps away for members; beach needs no membership
- No CDD; club membership optional
- Scarcity that protects value: four homes, period
Cons
- Almost no inventory; years pass between sales
- Two verified comps in the modern record make pricing genuinely hard
- 1989-2002 construction on direct salt air: serious envelope diligence
- Oceanfront taxes, insurance, and upkeep dominate the carry
- Erosion and dune stewardship are structural facts of the address
- The verified record runs $4.75M-$8.325M and the market has moved since
Our Ocean Ridge Buyer Playbook
How we run an Ocean Ridge purchase, in order:
- Register the target and work off market: with four homes that rarely list, we watch the cul-de-sac and the owner grapevine so you hear about a window first.
- Rebuild the comp from current oceanfront sales: the Boulevard estates and the 32082 oceanfront record, adjusted for the double gate and the Beach Club walk, not the 2021 print.
- Pull the survey, frontage, dune, and erosion file on day one, alongside whatever association documents the four owners keep.
- Underwrite the envelope and the full carry before offering: coastal inspection, wind and flood quotes, taxes, and the renovation delta, in writing.
- Settle the club question in parallel if it matters: category, current initiation, and the waitlist, confirmed with the club while the contract moves.
Questions We Ask Before You Sign
Six answers we get in writing on every Ocean Ridge contract:
- What is the full current fee stack, master and cul-de-sac, and exactly how do four owners split shared costs?
- What does the survey show: frontage width, lot depth, the dune line, and any encroachments or easements?
- What is the erosion and permitting history for this stretch of beach, walkovers included?
- What was replaced and when: roof, glazing, decks, systems, and additions, with permits, across the home's full renovation file?
- What are the real wind and flood quotes for this exact oceanfront address, structured how?
- What do current 32082 oceanfront comparables say, frontage-adjusted and condition-adjusted, on and off market?
Is Ocean Ridge Not For You?
The honest cut, both directions:
Consider elsewhere if you want
- Inventory you can actually tour this year
- New construction or modern systems out of the box
- Lock-and-leave oceanfront with the envelope handled for you
- A carry dominated by dues you can budget, not coastal insurance
- Data-rich pricing with fresh, comparable comps
- A budget below the high seven figures for renovated oceanfront
Ocean Ridge fits if you want
- A fee-simple estate with the Atlantic as the property line
- Two gates and three neighbors
- Acre-scale oceanfront land in a market that builds none of it
- The Beach Club a barefoot walk away, if you join
- The patience to wait for a four-home market to open
- Scarcity that does the appreciating for you
