The 60-Second Overview
Ocean View Manor is the eight-story, 111-unit direct-oceanfront condominium at 3600 S Oceanshore Blvd in south Flagler Beach, completed in 1984, the largest single oceanfront building in a town that has since zoned anything taller out of existence. It is also the cheapest oceanfront front door in Flagler County: one-bedroom residences of 654 to 720 square feet have recently started around $175,000, a number no other true-oceanfront address in the county can touch.
What you get for it is a genuinely deep amenity stack: an oceanfront pool with cabana, private beach access with no road to cross, a fitness room with showers and a sauna, a workshop area, tennis and pickleball, shuffleboard, and a community room. The setting is Flagler Beach at its most Flagler Beach, the deliberately low-rise, no-chain stretch of Florida coast, two and a half miles south of the wooden pier and the locally owned restaurant strip.
At a 1984 oceanfront tower, the documents are not paperwork, they are the price. The milestone inspection, the SIRS, the reserve schedule, and the insurance renewal explain why a $175K oceanfront condo costs $175K.
That is the honest frame for everything below. Florida's post-Surfside rules require milestone structural inspections and structural integrity reserve studies for buildings of this age and height, and the spread between an association that has done the work and funded the reserves and one that has not is the spread between a real bargain and a deferred invoice with an ocean view. We pull and read the full health file on every Ocean View Manor deal before our buyers write a number.
Fees & the Documents
Published fee figures for this building vary widely, roughly $438 to $992 per month depending on unit size and source, with prior agent research citing about $798 on typical units and recent listings near $831. We will not print a single number as gospel, because in a 1984 tower the fee moves with the insurance renewal and the reserve schedule; what the fee carries, common-area and grounds maintenance, building maintenance, the pool, security, is consistent across sources. Confirm the current monthly amount for your exact unit, the inclusions, and the budget behind it before you offer.
The health file we pull is the same five-document set every Florida condo buyer should demand, with extra weight here because of the age, the height, and the salt air: the milestone inspection status and findings, the structural integrity reserve study (SIRS) and its funding schedule, the master insurance renewal with premium and deductibles, twelve months of board minutes, and the estoppel's answers on special assessments, levied, pending, or discussed. Concrete restoration, balcony and railing cycles, roof, elevators, and pool-deck and walkover maintenance are the recurring line items at an oceanfront tower; the minutes tell you which are coming.
Want this quarter's verified fee and the milestone/SIRS status? We will pull both before you tour.
Get the documents →The Entry Math: Fee-per-Month vs. Price-per-Foot
Here is the honest arithmetic behind the headline. A $175,000 one-bedroom at 654 square feet is roughly $268 per square foot, cheap for true oceanfront anywhere in Florida. But if that unit carries a fee in the high-$700s or $800s a month, the fee alone runs close to what the principal-and-interest payment does on the purchase price. On a small unit, the fee is not a footnote to the price, it is effectively a second mortgage that buys you the building: the insurance, the concrete, the pool, the elevators, the beach access.
That math is not a reason to walk, it is the reason the price starts with a 1. The market has already discounted these units for the carry; your job is to make sure the carry is buying a healthy building. A funded SIRS and a clean milestone report mean the fee is maintenance you would want anyway. An underfunded reserve schedule means the real fee is the printed one plus the assessment that has not been levied yet. Run the total monthly, fee plus loan plus taxes plus HO-6, against renting the same view, and against a pricier unit in a better-documented building; sometimes the $175K door is the deal of the county, and sometimes the honest spreadsheet says otherwise. We build that spreadsheet for every buyer here.
Want the full carry math on a specific unit? Fee, loan, taxes, insurance, and the assessment risk, on one page.
Run my numbers →The Amenity Deck
For this stretch of A1A, the amenity load is the building's second headline after the price. The oceanfront pool with its cabana sits on the dune; private beach access means the sand is stairs, not a crosswalk. Inside, there is a genuine fitness room with showers and a sauna, rare at this price point on this coast, plus a workshop area for the project-minded, a community room that anchors the social calendar, and tennis, pickleball, and shuffleboard courts.
The honest read: every one of those amenities is also a maintenance line. The pool deck, the courts, the gym equipment, the sauna, and the elevators that serve eight floors all live in the budget you are buying into, which is why the fee here runs above the boutique buildings nearby and why we read the reserve schedule against the amenity list. When the reserves are funded, this is the best amenity-per-dollar package in the county; the documents tell you whether it is.
The Condos
The building's 111 units run from the headline 654-to-720-square-foot one-bedrooms up through two-bedroom plans, with portal data showing the largest residences at roughly 2,478 square feet. Floor height and exposure drive price inside each plan type: direct-ocean east faces lead, upper floors carry premiums for view and quiet, and west-facing units trade the surf for Intracoastal sunsets at a discount. Recent two-bedroom asks have run roughly $487,000 to $550,000 at the prime positions, against the ~$175,000 one-bedroom entries, one building, two markets.
Finish levels span original-1984 to fully renovated, and at the entry tier the renovation spread is a real strategy: an original one-bedroom discounts enough to redo into equity, if the building file is clean and you budget the work at coastal prices, including impact-rated sliders and windows, the single best upgrade on this dune for insurance, noise, and resale. On income: the association has allowed short stays, with a one-week minimum reported per the HOA, unusual flexibility for this coast, but verify the current rental policy in writing along with the city of Flagler Beach's short-term-rental rules before underwriting a single dollar of income.
Schools
Ocean View Manor's buyer mix skews second-home owners, snowbirds, and beach retirees, but it is all-ages and feeds Flagler County schools, typically Old Kings Elementary, Buddy Taylor Middle, and Flagler Palm Coast High. The school run crosses the Intracoastal via SR-100, a practical consideration for daily logistics. Verify current assignments with Flagler Schools before you commit.
Relocating with kids? We will confirm zones and the real school-run timing from south Flagler Beach.
Ask us →More on Living at Ocean View Manor
What buyers actually ask:
Is $175K for oceanfront real, or is there a catch?
It is real, and the catch is printed in the documents: small footage, a fee that is large relative to the price, and a 1984 building whose milestone, SIRS, and insurance story you must read. Price the carry honestly and some of these units are the best value on the coast; skip the reading and you are guessing.
What is the vibe, resort or residential?
Residential with a social spine. The community room, courts, and pool anchor a real owner community, heavier in winter when the snowbirds arrive. The one-week rental minimum brings some turnover in season, but this is not a rental-machine resort campus.
Are rentals allowed?
A one-week minimum stay has been reported per the HOA, which is unusually rental-flexible for this coast. The association sets the rules and the city of Flagler Beach regulates short-term rentals separately; verify both layers in writing before underwriting income.
How is hurricane season here, honestly?
This dune takes weather. Recent seasons brought erosion and A1A damage to parts of Flagler Beach, followed by major renourishment work. The building has stood since 1984; the questions are the master policy, the reserves, and the impact rating of your unit's openings. We check all three.
5 Mistakes Buyers Make at Ocean View Manor
The expensive ones:
Buying the price before the documents
A $175K oceanfront condo in a 1984 tower without a read milestone report, SIRS, and reserve schedule is not a bargain, it is an unpriced liability. Documents first, offer second.
Ignoring the fee-to-price ratio
On a small unit the fee can rival the mortgage payment. Run total monthly carry, fee, loan, taxes, HO-6, before you fall for the headline number.
Assuming the estoppel is clean
Special assessments at this vintage are a live possibility. Get the estoppel's answers on levied, pending, and discussed assessments in writing before you remove contingencies.
Financing blind
Warrantability, reserves, insurance, owner-occupancy, litigation, decides your loan options at an oceanfront tower and can change yearly. Lender screens the association before you tour.
Underwriting rental income on a rumor
The one-week minimum makes income plans tempting. Verify the current association policy and the city's short-term-rental rules in writing, then underwrite, not the other way around.
Buying here? We verify the documents, the fee, the insurance, and the assessment picture before you sign anything.
Talk to us first →Which Positions Hold Value Best
Want floor-by-floor notes? We track view lines, sound, and exposure across the building.
Get the breakdown →What to Check Before You Offer
- Pull the health file. Milestone status and findings, SIRS and funding, insurance renewal, minutes, estoppel.
- Confirm this quarter's fee for your exact unit. Verified against the budget, not quoted from a listing; published figures here span $438–$992.
- Run the full carry math. Fee plus loan plus taxes plus HO-6, against the small footage, before you anchor on the price.
- Ask the assessment question three ways. Levied, pending, discussed, in writing.
- Pre-screen financing. Association warrantability before touring sets your real budget at an oceanfront tower.
- Check the openings. Impact-rated sliders and windows are the dune upgrade that pays everywhere: insurance, noise, resale.
- Verify the rental rules, both layers. The reported one-week minimum at the association, and the city's short-term-rental rules.
- Walk the balconies, pool deck, and beach access. Concrete condition tells you what the next maintenance cycle costs.
Ocean View Manor is where Flagler County's oceanfront market starts: nothing else on this coast puts a private-beach-access front door under $200K, and the town's low-rise zoning means no one is building its replacement. That scarcity is the asset.
But at a 1984 tower, we tell every buyer the same thing: the unit is the photo, the building is the investment, and the fee is the second mortgage that maintains it. Read the milestone, the SIRS, and the insurance renewal first, run the carry math honestly, and this address rewards you; skip the homework and the ocean will not save the spreadsheet.
Ocean View Manor vs. the A1A Neighbors
The honest cross-shops, on the same stretch of coast and beyond:
| Community | Ocean story | Scale & vintage | Character | Typical buy-in |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ocean View Manor | Direct oceanfront, private beach access | Eight stories, 111 units, 1984 | Full-amenity tower | ~$175K (1-bed) to $550K+ |
| Ocean Club | Direct oceanfront, private walkover | Two boutique buildings, late 1970s | Quiet, residential | ~$299K–$425K |
| Beach Park Village | Beachside, steps to sand | Low-rise community | Beach-town residential | See guide |
| Surf Club | Oceanfront towers, gated | 2000s construction | Newer resort-style towers | See guide |
| Sea Colony | Gated oceanfront, houses | Single-family, gated | House economics by the sea | See guide |
| Veranda Bay | New construction near the ICW | 2020s, building out | No legacy-building risk | See guide |
The verdict: on this stretch of A1A the cross-shop is tower versus boutique. Ocean View Manor is the full-amenity, 111-owner play, the deepest amenity deck, the most shoulders under every bill, and the only sub-$200K oceanfront door in the county, against Ocean Club's quieter two-building simplicity at a higher entry. Both are documents-first purchases at their vintage. Buyers who want newer concrete pay up at Surf Club in Palm Coast; buyers who want a house by the ocean look at Sea Colony; buyers who want zero legacy-building risk go new at Veranda Bay and give up the oceanfront entirely. For the lowest realistic price on a true oceanfront front door, this is the address.
Touring the A1A condos? One route: Ocean View Manor, Ocean Club, and the rest of the strip, with the document health of each.
Plan the tour →The Honest Trade-offs
Why people love it
- The cheapest true-oceanfront entry in Flagler County, ~$175K
- Oceanfront pool, cabana, and private beach access
- Real gym with sauna, plus tennis, pickleball, shuffleboard, workshop
- 111 owners sharing the big bills, scale the boutiques lack
- Rental-flexible reported one-week minimum, rare on this coast
- Flagler Beach's protected low-rise, no-chain character
Why people pass
- 1984 milestone/SIRS diligence is non-negotiable
- The fee is large relative to the entry prices, the carry math is real
- Master wind insurance on an eight-story dune tower is volatile
- Special-assessment risk is live at this vintage
- One-week rentals mean some seasonal turnover in the halls
- Warrantability can complicate financing year to year
The Ocean View Manor Playbook
How we run a purchase here:
- Day one: health file requested, milestone, SIRS, reserves, insurance, minutes; lender screens the association in parallel.
- Targeting: position matrix (floor, exposure, noise, condition) across all eight floors before any tour, plus the carry-math sheet for each candidate.
- Diligence: estoppel assessment answers in writing; balconies, pool deck, and beach access walked; renovation priced at coastal rates.
- Offer: document findings used as negotiation points, a weak reserve schedule is a price conversation, not a deal-killer.
- Closing: estoppel verified, HO-6 bound deductible-matched, rental rules confirmed in the file, both association and city.
Questions We'd Ask Before Buying Here Ourselves
Six questions that decide it:
- What do the milestone and SIRS findings say, and what is actually funded? The single biggest question at a 1984 tower.
- What did the master wind policy renew at? Premium, deductibles, and what the board expects next year.
- Any special assessments levied, pending, or discussed? Estoppel and minutes, cross-checked.
- What is the exact fee for this unit, and what is the carry math against the footage? Published figures span $438–$992; the spreadsheet decides.
- Is the association warrantable for my loan today? Lender answer, before the tour.
- What are the rental rules right now, association and city? The reported one-week minimum, verified in writing, both layers.
Ocean View Manor May Not Be Right For You If
The honest fit test:
Consider elsewhere if you want
- New construction with no legacy-building risk (see Veranda Bay)
- Newer oceanfront concrete and resort polish (see Surf Club)
- House economics by the ocean (see Sea Colony)
- A small, quiet boutique building over a 111-unit tower (see Ocean Club)
- Intracoastal boating instead of surf (see Tidelands)
- Zero exposure to assessment risk, that buyer should not buy 1980s oceanfront at all
Ocean View Manor fits if you want
- The county's cheapest true-oceanfront front door, around $175K
- A full amenity deck, pool, sauna, gym, courts, on the dune
- Private beach access with no road to cross
- Scale: 111 owners sharing every major bill
- Rental flexibility, pending written verification of the current rules
- A documents-first purchase done properly, with us reading the file
