The 60-Second Overview
Orchard Park is the answer to the most common question we hear in St. Johns County: what is the cheapest credible way into this school district? KB Home townhomes off SR-207 in southwest St. Augustine, 2-3 bedrooms and 3 full baths in 1,259-1,567 square feet, builder pricing that has started around $252,990, an HOA around $150 a month, and no CDD.
The amenity strategy is the clever part. Instead of a fee-funded clubhouse, Orchard Park keeps a playground and dog park in-community and leans on Treaty Park, a major St. Johns County park within walking distance, for the courts, skate park, trails, and pavilions. The county pays for the lifestyle; your HOA stays modest.
Orchard Park is the sub-$300s door into St. Johns County schools, with a county park doing the clubhouse's job and a fee line clean enough to actually qualify on.
The honest catch is the format: shared walls, a 1-car garage on every plan, and a young community still pricing itself while the builder sells next door. The finish level, 9-foot ceilings, LVP, quartz, stainless, is genuinely strong for the tier, but nobody should buy here for resort amenities that do not exist. You buy here for the district, the park, and the math.
The Fee Story: No CDD, One Modest HOA
In a county where many new communities stack an HOA on top of a four-figure CDD assessment, Orchard Park's fee line is almost suspiciously short: an HOA that builder marketing has put around $150 a month, and no CDD on the tax bill. That is not an accident; it is the direct result of the park strategy. No clubhouse to staff, no resort pool to chlorinate, no amenity debt to service, because Treaty Park, funded by every St. Johns taxpayer, carries the lifestyle load next door.
What the HOA actually covers, exterior layers, common grounds, insurance splits, varies by document and matters enormously at this price point: the coverage defines both your real monthly and your own insurance bill. Confirm the current amount and the exact coverage in writing, never from a listing field, before you offer.
Treaty Park: The Amenity You Do Not Pay Dues For
Walk up Wildwood Drive and you reach Treaty Park, one of St. Johns County's flagship public parks: tennis and pickleball courts, a skate park, walking and biking trails, a dog park, playgrounds, and picnic pavilions. It is, functionally, Orchard Park's amenity campus, with one difference from every master-plan clubhouse in the county: the dues are zero, because the county already runs it.
For the right buyer this flips the usual townhome comparison. The amenity-heavy rivals charge you, through HOA-plus-CDD stacks, for pools and fitness lodges you may or may not use; Orchard Park hands you courts, trails, and a skate park at the price of a short walk. The trade is privacy and exclusivity: a county park is public, busy on weekends, and not yours. For buyers who want a quiet private pool deck, that matters. For buyers who want their Saturday on a pickleball court without funding the building around it, this is the better deal in the county.
Inside the community itself, the footprint stays deliberately light: a playground and a dog park, enough for the daily routine, with the heavy equipment next door. Under 10 miles further east, the Atlantic beaches finish the lifestyle picture.
The Entry Math: St. Johns Schools at the County Floor
St. Johns County's school district is the engine under every price in this market, and the entry tickets keep getting more expensive: most new single-family communities in the district start well into the $400s, and even townhome rivals with resort amenities push past $300,000 once the fee stack is modeled. Orchard Park has sold from roughly $252,990, which makes it one of the lowest legitimate purchase prices in the district, with new-code construction and a finish level that does not read like an entry price.
Run the math the way a lender does: the no-CDD line plus the modest HOA means more of the monthly payment goes to the house and the district, not the amenity overhead. For the first-time buyer, the relocating teacher or nurse, or the parent who cares about the school assignment more than the clubhouse calendar, this is the rational entry point, and it is also why these townhomes should hold a durable resale floor: every year the district's single-family prices climb, the pool of buyers priced down into Orchard Park grows.
The Townhomes: 3 Baths, 9-Foot Ceilings, 1 Garage Bay
KB Home's plans run 1,259 to 1,567 square feet in two formats, 2-bedroom/3-bath and 3-bedroom/3-bath, and that bath count is the detail to decode. Three full baths in a 2-bedroom plan means every bedroom lives like a suite with a main-level bath for guests: it makes the smaller plan work for roommates splitting a mortgage, a multigenerational arrangement, or an owner with a real home office and real guest capacity, and it widens the resale buyer pool in a way square footage alone never does.
The finish level punches above the price: 9-foot ceilings, wood-look luxury vinyl plank on the main level, upgraded carpet in the bedrooms, quartz counters and stainless appliances, and ENERGY STAR certified lighting. The format's honest limits: a 1-car garage on every plan (plus driveway), shared walls, and townhome lot lines. While KB Home sells, every purchase is a two-option negotiation, the new release with its incentives (often lender-tied; run that math against outside financing every time) versus early resales that must price below the equivalent new package to be rational.
Schools
The district is the headline: Orchard Park sits inside the St. Johns County School District, the A-rated system whose reputation built this county's housing market, at one of the lowest purchase prices anywhere in it. That combination, district brand at entry price, is the community's entire investment thesis.
Confirm the exact zoned elementary, middle, and high school by address with the district before you rely on it; the SR-207 corridor is growing and assignments evolve with new capacity.
More on Living at Orchard Park
The depth without the wall of text. Open what matters to you.
Location and commute
The townhome format in practice
Daily life on the park corridor
Insurance and flood
5 Mistakes Buyers Make at Orchard Park
A builder-active entry-price community has its own traps. These five cost buyers the most, and every one is avoidable.
Taking lender-tied incentives at face value
KB Home credits tied to the builder's lender can cost more in rate than they give in credit. Run the math against outside financing every time, at this price point a quarter point of rate is real money.
Skipping the HOA coverage read
A roughly $150 HOA is only cheap if you know what it covers. Roofs, exteriors, and insurance splits vary by document and change your own insurance bill. Read it before the offer, not at closing.
Buying the wrong plan for the exit
The 2-bed/3-bath and 3-bed/3-bath plans serve different resale pools. Pick for how the next buyer lives, not just how you do, the bath count is the asset; use it deliberately.
Underweighting the garage question
One covered bay is the format, full stop. If a second car, a workshop, or storage volume is actually non-negotiable for you, discover that before contract, not after the first rainy month.
Negotiating without the builder sheet
While KB Home sells, the live new-build package is every resale's ceiling and every release's anchor. Walking in without it is negotiating blind, in both directions.
Which Positions and Plans Hold Value Best
In a one-builder townhome community, plan and position are the lot
With one builder and one era, end units add light, one fewer shared wall, and side yards worth real money at resale, and the 3-bed/3-bath plans own the family-buyer pool the district attracts. Mid-row 2-beds are the value lane, priced as such.
The district is the equalizer: every plan buys the same schools, which keeps even the value lane resilient here.
What to Check Before You Offer
Before you sign on any Orchard Park townhome, new or resale, run this list. Missing any one of them is how buyers overpay or inherit a problem.
- The current HOA amount and coverage in the documents, including the insurance split
- The tax bill verified CDD-free: confirm no district assessments apply to the parcel
- The builder's live sheet: current pricing and incentives for the comparable plan
- Lender-tied incentive math against your own outside financing
- Position-matched comps: end versus mid-row, 2-bed versus 3-bed
- School zoning confirmed by address with the district, not the listing
- Leasing rules if roommate or rental flexibility is part of your plan
- A third-party inspection, even on new construction
Orchard Park solves a problem this county created for itself: the schools that make St. Johns famous priced most first buyers out of the district years ago. A sub-$300s townhome with quartz counters, three full baths, no CDD, and a county park as the amenity deck is the most honest answer I have seen to that problem. The park strategy is the part I respect, instead of charging owners for a clubhouse, the community borrowed Treaty Park and kept the dues down.
Cross-shop it honestly against the Beacon Lake Townhomes for the amenity-stack alternative and Antigua for the established-resale comparison. If the district is your reason and the math is your discipline, Orchard Park is the rational door, and we will prove it or disprove it with your numbers.
Orchard Park vs. Comparable Communities
The honest way to place Orchard Park is against the other townhome and entry-price options a St. Johns buyer is realistically weighing. Each trades something different.
| Community | How it compares to Orchard Park |
|---|---|
| Beacon Lake Townhomes | The amenity-stack rival: a 43-acre paddling lake and fitness lodge, paid for through HOA plus CDD. More resort, heavier fee line; the head-to-head is amenity value versus carrying cost. |
| Antigua | The established townhome alternative in St. Augustine: settled comps and a known fee history versus Orchard Park's new construction and builder incentives. |
| St. Augustine Lakes | The entry-price single-family fork: a detached house and yard at overlapping budgets, with its own fee structure. The format question, run honestly. |
| Enclave at Treaty Oaks | The neighbor on the same park corridor: a different format sharing the Treaty Park advantage. Position and product, not lifestyle, separate them. |
| Bridgewater | The big townhome phase up the county: more scale and selection on the northern corridor, a different commute and its own stack. |
| Beachwalk | The philosophical opposite: crystal-lagoon spectacle with the fee intensity to match. Resort glamour versus park-and-no-CDD discipline. |
Orchard Park's case is discipline: the district at the county's entry price, with the cleanest fee line in the comparison. The case against it is the format, one garage bay, shared walls, no private resort, and a young resale market still finding its comps.
The Honest Trade-offs
Pros
- St. Johns County schools at one of the district's lowest purchase prices.
- No CDD and a modest HOA: the cleanest fee line in the comparison set.
- Treaty Park's courts, trails, and skate park a walk away, county-funded.
- 3 full baths in every plan: roommate, multigenerational, and resale flexibility.
- New-code KB Home construction with 9-foot ceilings, quartz, and LVP.
- Beaches under 10 miles, downtown St. Augustine about 15 minutes.
Cons
- 1-car garage on every plan; storage and second-car math is real.
- No private pool, clubhouse, or fitness center; the park is public.
- Shared walls and townhome density.
- Young community: thin resale comps while the builder sells.
- SR-207 is a drive-first corridor; tourist-season traffic is a factor.
- Builder incentives require disciplined lender math.
The Orchard Park Playbook
If we were buying here, this is the order of operations we would run, and the one we run for our clients.
- Verify the fee line first. Current HOA amount and coverage in the documents, and the parcel confirmed CDD-free.
- Get the builder sheet. Live KB Home pricing and incentives anchor every negotiation, both directions.
- Run the lender math. Tied incentives against outside financing, rate and credit together.
- Pick the plan for the exit. 2-bed/3-bath flexibility or 3-bed family format, chosen for the next buyer too.
- Pay for position deliberately. End unit or mid-row value, priced as exactly that, with position-matched comps.
Questions We'd Ask Before Buying Here Ourselves
The questions a local who knows the SR-207 corridor asks are different from the ones a portal answers. On any specific townhome, we want to know:
- What is the current HOA amount, and what does it actually maintain and insure, in the documents?
- Is the parcel verifiably CDD-free, with no special assessments pending?
- What is KB Home's live package for the comparable plan this month, and what does the lender-tied incentive really cost?
- What did position-matched units actually close at, end versus mid-row, 2-bed versus 3-bed?
- What are the exact zoned schools for this address, confirmed with the district?
- What are the leasing rules, and what is the community's owner-occupancy trajectory?
Orchard Park May Not Be Right For You If
We would rather tell you the truth than sell you the wrong community. Orchard Park may not be the right fit if any of these are deal-breakers, and that is a property question, not a personal one.
Consider elsewhere if you want
- A 2-car garage or serious storage volume.
- A private resort pool, clubhouse, and fitness center.
- A detached house with a private yard.
- Deep resale history and settled comps.
- A walkable-downtown or beachside address.
Orchard Park fits if you want
- St. Johns schools at the county's entry price.
- The cleanest fee line in the townhome comparison: no CDD, modest HOA.
- Treaty Park's courts, trails, and skate park as your amenity deck.
- 3-bath flexibility for roommates, family, or resale.
- New construction with a finish level above the price.
