Ormond Beach & Ormond-by-the-Sea Oceanfront Condos. Know what matters before you buy.

Established 1970s–2000s · Ocean Shore Blvd (A1A) no-drive corridor · ZIP 32176

A two-section, no-drive-beach condo corridor stretching from Ormond Beach proper into Ormond-by-the-Sea, with a building roster ranging from boutique townhome-style condos to 12-story towers, entry prices near $275K, and the quietest stretch of oceanfront in Volusia County.

LocationOcean Shore Blvd (A1A) no-drive corridorZIP 32176
Community1970s-2006Build-year span
Price$275K-$850K+Corridor price spread
HOA$600-$1,000+Typical monthly HOA range
Highlights12+Distinct condo buildings
Notes2 miles+North Peninsula buffer from commercial
CDDNo CDD
SchoolsVolusia County SchoolsOrmond Beach MS, Seabreeze HS
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The Homes

Building count

12+ distinct condo regimes along Ocean Shore Blvd

Built

1974/1979-2006 (widest range in the corridor)

Sizes

~420 sf studios to 2,515+ sf three-bedroom flats and townhomes

Character

Boutique privacy buildings, mid-rise towers, newer luxury

Costs & Governance

Purchase range

Entry near $275K; luxury 3BR tier $700K-$850K+

HOA fees

Typically $600-$1,000+/month; confirm per building

Reserve/SIRS

Milestone and SIRS requirements apply to 1970s-80s stock; verify per building

Amenities & Lifestyle

Beach

Direct no-drive beach access from all buildings north of Granada

Pools

Oceanfront or courtyard pools at nearly every building

Parking

Most buildings include assigned or underground parking

Common spaces

Vary by building: fitness rooms, saunas, libraries, rooftop terraces

Location & Nearby

Setting

Ocean Shore Blvd (A1A) Ormond Beach and Ormond-by-the-Sea

Daytona Beach

~10-15 min south

Flagler Beach

~15-20 min north

Public schools & ratings

The corridor falls within the Volusia County school zone; the large majority of residents are adults without school-age children, but families should verify assignment for the specific address.

SchoolGreatSchoolsLinks
Ormond Beach Middle (approx. zone)N/AGreatSchools
Seabreeze High (approx. zone)N/AGreatSchools

Zoning lines shift and depend on the exact address; confirm current assignments with Volusia County Schools for any specific unit you are considering.

This is the most residential stretch of oceanfront in Volusia County: no hotels, no T-shirt shops, two lanes of A1A, and a no-drive beach that starts at Granada Boulevard and runs all the way north through Ormond-by-the-Sea. The building roster ranges from 1974 value towers to a 2006 luxury boutique, and the honest conversation every buyer needs is about the fee and reserve math on the older stock after Florida's post-Surfside inspection laws changed the landscape.

The short version

Ormond Beach oceanfront condos in 60 seconds: a two-section no-drive-beach corridor along Ocean Shore Boulevard with 12-plus distinct buildings, entry near $275K, and fee stacks that vary sharply by building age.

  • All buildings north of Granada Blvd sit on a no-drive beach -- no cars, no ATVs, no noise from the sand
  • Ormond Beach side (south section): 89 Oceanfront (built 1974/1979, ~94 units), Aliki Atrium (1981, 27 townhome-style units), Gemini (1983, 67 units, semi-private elevators), The Tiffany (1991, 28 units, 4/floor), Tidesfall (1982, 55 units), Capriana (2006, all 3BR/3BA, 2,515 sf)
  • Ormond-by-the-Sea section (north): Ocean Watch (1986, 90 units, 2-building), Seawinds (1984), Ormondy (1985, ~12 stories), and additional mid-rise buildings along the quieter northern corridor
  • HOA fees run roughly $600 to over $1,000 per month; Florida milestone inspection and SIRS reserve requirements hit 1970s-80s buildings hardest -- verify reserve funding for each building before you offer
  • Ormond-by-the-Sea is quieter and more isolated than Ormond Beach proper; a Publix anchors a shopping plaza roughly across A1A in OBTS, but the commercial density is thin
  • No CDD anywhere on this corridor -- all fees flow through individual condo associations only
  • Price range: entry near $275K for older 1-2BR units, mid-tier $350K-$550K, boutique 3BR at Capriana $700K-$850K+
Quick verdict: is Ormond Beach & Ormond-by-the-Sea Oceanfront Condos right for you?

Great if you want

  • No-drive beach: the only oceanfront in Volusia County where no cars share your sand
  • Entirely residential corridor -- no hotels, no strip commercial
  • Building choice from boutique privacy to value high-rise
  • No CDD anywhere; simpler fee structure than gated communities
  • Ormond Beach city services without the Daytona Beach crowds

Look elsewhere if you want

  • Older 1970s-80s buildings carry real SIRS and milestone inspection financial risk
  • Monthly HOA fees $600-$1,000+ before any special assessments
  • Ormond-by-the-Sea isolation: thin dining and retail, two-lane A1A only
  • No walkable commercial strip; most errands require a car
  • Flood and wind insurance costs can be material on oceanfront condos
Entry: older 1-2BR stock
~$275K-$399K

Original-condition or lightly updated 1-2BR units in 1970s-80s buildings such as 89 Oceanfront, Tidesfall, Ocean Watch, and Seawinds. The lowest-cost way onto a no-drive beach. Budget seriously for HOA fee trajectory and SIRS-driven reserve catch-up.

1970s-80s vintage · verify reserves
Mid-tier: larger and updated
~$400K-$650K

Renovated 2-3BR units in mid-rise buildings including Gemini, The Tiffany, Ormondy, and upper floors of Ocean Watch and Tidesfall. Better finishes and semi-private or low-density elevator access; building-age fee risk still applies.

Renovated or boutique · condition-driven
Luxury: Capriana 3BR
~$700K-$850K+

The 2006 Capriana is the corridor's newest and largest-footprint building -- all units are 3BR/3BA at 2,515 square feet. Recent comparable sales include a Unit 603 closing at $850,000 in early 2026. Newest reserve picture on the corridor.

2006 build · all 3BR/3BA · premium tier

Price bands are directional, drawn from third-party listing and sale data through early 2026; individual units vary by floor, condition, renovation, and building fee trajectory. Confirm current association financials for every building.

Recently sold in Ormond Beach & Ormond-by-the-Sea Oceanfront Condos

List prices tell you what sellers want. Closed sales tell you what buyers actually paid. We pull the verified recent solds for the exact homes and views you are weighing.

Tidesfall · oceanfront
2 bed · mid-floor
Sold price $3XX,X00
🔒 Unlock the real number
Capriana · upper floor
3 bed · 2,515 sf
Sold price $8XX,X00
🔒 Unlock the real number
Ocean Watch · 2-bed
2 bed · lower floor
Sold price $2XX,X00
🔒 Unlock the real number
Want the verified closed prices for the exact homes you care about in Ormond Beach & Ormond-by-the-Sea Oceanfront Condos?
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DestinationApprox. distanceApprox. drive
Publix (Ormond Beach Mall, OBTS)~2 miles north~4-6 min
Granada Blvd commercial (Ormond Beach)~1.5 miles south~4 min
Daytona Beach International Airport~12 miles~20-25 min
Daytona Beach (Main Street)~10 miles~15-20 min
Flagler Beach~15 miles~20-25 min
I-95 (US-1 via Granada)~5 miles~10 min
Flagler Hospital / AdventHealth Palm Coast~20 miles~25-30 min

Drive times approximate from mid-corridor; vary with A1A traffic and season. A1A is two lanes through the residential corridor with no bypass.

The corridor runs north-south on Ocean Shore Blvd (A1A) between the Ormond Beach city limits and North Peninsula State Park, entirely in ZIP 32176.

$275K-$850K+
Corridor price spread (third-party data, 2024-2026)
$600-$1,000+
Typical monthly HOA range by building
25 years
Coastal milestone inspection trigger (within 3 miles of coast)
No CDD
No community development district anywhere on corridor
● Fee stack is HOA-only
Price tiers
Entry 1-2BR older stock
~$275K-$399K
Mid-tier renovated / boutique
~$400K-$650K
Capriana luxury 3BR
~$700K-$850K+
Directional tiers from third-party listing and sale data; individual units vary by floor, condition, and building fee trajectory.

Sources: third-party listing aggregates, recorded sales data through early 2026, building-specific data from local real estate specialists, Volusia County Beach Safety, Florida DBPR condominium inspection requirements. Confirm all figures with current association documents.

Want the real Ormond Beach & Ormond-by-the-Sea Oceanfront Condos comps and a full carrying-cost read, not a Zestimate?
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The 60-Second Overview

The Ormond Beach and Ormond-by-the-Sea oceanfront condo corridor is the quietest, most residential stretch of A1A in Volusia County. From the south end at 89 South Atlantic Avenue north through Ormond-by-the-Sea all the way to North Peninsula State Park, the corridor is two lanes of Ocean Shore Boulevard, no hotels, no commercial strip, no drive-on beach, and a roster of 12-plus distinct condo buildings ranging from 1974-vintage towers to a 2006 boutique luxury building. That combination -- no-drive beach, residential-only character, and genuine building variety -- is why buyers come here specifically when they have looked at Daytona Beach Shores and decided they want something quieter.

The corridor splits geographically and in character. The Ormond Beach section south of approximately 2000 Ocean Shore Boulevard sits closer to the Granada Boulevard commercial spine and the city's daily infrastructure. The Ormond-by-the-Sea section north of that point gets progressively more isolated, with fewer buildings, a thinner commercial presence across A1A, and a genuine buffer from the crowds that define beachside real estate further south. Both sections share the no-drive beach and the residential zoning. They differ in convenience and price.

The central financial story on this corridor in 2024-2026 is not the purchase price -- it is the fee stack and the reserve math. Florida's post-Surfside condominium inspection laws imposed milestone inspection requirements at 25 years for coastal buildings and mandatory Structural Integrity Reserve Studies (SIRS) for buildings three or more stories high. Every building on this corridor built before 2001 is already past that 25-year coastal trigger. For some buildings, the reserve catch-up math is manageable; for others, buyers have walked into six-figure special assessments. You need the association financials for the specific building before you offer, not after.

The no-drive beach is not an amenity upgrade -- it is a fundamental change to what oceanfront living actually feels like. You earn it by choosing this corridor over the drive-on beaches to the south.

Fees and reserves: the conversation that defines this corridor

There is no CDD on this corridor. Every dollar of association cost runs through the individual condo association -- no community development district, no bond debt, no additional line on the property tax bill beyond the association assessment itself. That simplicity is genuine, and it is one of the corridor's real structural advantages over newer master-planned communities. But it does not mean the fee picture is simple.

Monthly HOA fees across the corridor run roughly $600 to over $1,000 per month based on third-party listing data and building-specific sources through 2025-2026. What they cover varies: most include building insurance, water and sewer, cable or internet, exterior maintenance, and pool and common-area upkeep. Some include assigned or underground parking. None of those figures is a fixed number -- association boards set them annually, and the post-Surfside SIRS requirements have been pushing older buildings to catch up reserve balances they underfunded for years.

The SIRS reality check: Florida law now requires condo buildings of three or more stories within three miles of the coast to complete a milestone structural inspection once they reach 25 years old, and a Structural Integrity Reserve Study (SIRS) at least every 10 years. Every building on this corridor built before 2001 already qualifies. If the SIRS reveals a reserve shortfall -- which is common in buildings that historically waived full reserve funding -- the association must close the gap through increased monthly dues, special assessments, or both. Buyers in Volusia County have received special assessment notices exceeding $100,000 per unit at some older buildings. Verify the current reserve study, the funded percentage, and whether any special assessments are pending or planned for the exact building before you write an offer.

A useful mental model: younger buildings pay more on purchase price and less on ongoing fee risk. Older buildings cost less to buy and carry more fee uncertainty until you have seen their reserve documents. Capriana (2006) sits at one end of that spectrum; 89 Oceanfront (1974/1979) and Tidesfall (1982) sit at the other. Neither end is wrong -- the risk is not knowing which end you are buying.

Want the actual reserve study status, SIRS completion, and special assessment history for the specific building you are considering?
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The building roster: four tiers of character

Knowing which building you are in matters more on this corridor than on almost any other market we cover. The buildings differ in year, density, privacy architecture, rental rules, and reserve health. Here is an honest building-by-building orientation.

Boutique and privacy-first: Aliki Atrium (901 South Atlantic Ave, built 1981, 27 units) is the corridor's most distinctive building -- a 7-story structure with only 27 residences arranged in a townhome-style, multi-level configuration with glass elevators overlooking a tropical courtyard fountain. Units run approximately 2,767 square feet across multiple levels, each with a 25-foot balcony. It is an architectural outlier on the corridor. Gemini (1239 Ocean Shore Blvd, built 1983, 67 units) takes a different approach to privacy: 12 stories with semi-private elevator lobbies serving only two units per floor. Two-bedroom units top 1,700 square feet; three-bedroom units top 1,850 square feet. Underground parking for two cars per unit. The Tiffany (1295 Ocean Shore Blvd, built 1991, 28 units) achieves exclusivity by sheer smallness -- 7 stories, only four units per floor, 28 total, all on the no-drive beach.

Newer and larger: Capriana (1425 Ocean Shore Blvd, built 2006) is the newest and most standardized building on the corridor. All units are 3BR/3BA at 2,515 square feet on 9 floors. There is no entry-level product here -- recent comparable sales include a Unit 603 closing at $850,000 in early 2026. The building's 2006 vintage means its reserve math starts in a better position than most of the corridor's stock, but confirm current figures. Tidesfall (2100 Ocean Shore Blvd, built 1982, 55 units) is a 7-story building with a cascading waterfall pool, rooftop terrace, and courtyard spa -- distinctive amenities for a 1982 building, and 55 units is small enough to maintain community feel.

Value and volume: 89 Oceanfront (89 South Atlantic Ave, built 1974-1979, approximately 94 units) is the corridor's original high-rise, 17 stories with six units per floor, designed by architect Julian Lopez, ranging from compact studios near 420 square feet to 2BR units near 1,356 square feet. It is the lowest entry point on the corridor and the building whose reserve and SIRS documentation deserves the most thorough review.

Ormond-by-the-Sea section: Ocean Watch (2700 Ocean Shore Blvd, built 1986, 90 units across two buildings, 5 stories) is the main mid-corridor anchor in the OBTS section. Monthly HOA fees have been reported in the $600-$900 range; rental minimums are monthly, and the building is known for vacation-rental usage. Seawinds (built 1984) is a mid-rise complex with 90-day minimum rental terms and a quieter owner-occupant character. The Ormondy (1513 Ocean Shore Blvd, built 1985, approximately 12 stories) offers oceanfront and river views and is one of the larger OBTS buildings. All three are 1984-1986 vintage and therefore squarely in the milestone inspection zone.

Comparing two or three buildings? We will pull the reserve documents, fee history, and true comparable solds side by side so you are choosing on real data.
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The no-drive beach: what it actually means

Volusia County is famous for its drive-on beaches, and that reputation is earned -- vehicle access on the sand is legal and widely used through much of Daytona Beach and south. But the section north of Granada Boulevard is categorically different. Every stretch of beach on this corridor, from the Granada Boulevard city line northward through all of Ormond-by-the-Sea to Flagler County and beyond, is permanently closed to vehicle traffic. No seasonal hours, no exceptions. Just sand, walkers, and the Atlantic Ocean.

For buyers, the practical difference is larger than it sounds on paper. On the drive-on stretches to the south, cars and ATVs share the hard-packed sand with beachgoers; the noise and proximity are real. On this corridor, the beach access points -- Volusia County maintains multiple dune walkovers and ADA-accessible paths along Ocean Shore Boulevard -- lead to sand where the loudest thing is typically the surf. That is the corridor signature, and it is the primary reason buyers who have looked at competing Volusia County oceanfront addresses keep landing here.

North Peninsula State Park extends over two miles of preserved Atlantic beachfront at the northern end of the corridor, with no construction allowed and a permanent natural buffer that ensures the corridor's northern terminus stays quiet indefinitely. The combination of the park boundary, no commercial zoning, two-lane A1A, and no-drive beach enforcement creates what amounts to the most protected residential oceanfront corridor in Volusia County.

Ormond-by-the-Sea: the quieter northern trade-off

Ormond-by-the-Sea is an unincorporated community rather than its own city -- Volusia County governs it, and its mailing address is Ormond Beach. But buyers who have toured both sections of the corridor know the difference immediately. OBTS sits north of roughly the 2000 Ocean Shore Boulevard mark, and as you drive north, the buildings thin, the retail thins, and the A1A corridor gets noticeably quieter. That is the appeal -- and it is also the honest trade-off.

The trade-off is convenience. The Ormond Beach section has quick access south to Granada Boulevard's commercial corridor -- groceries, restaurants, pharmacies, urgent care -- inside five minutes. Ormond-by-the-Sea's primary grocery anchor is a Publix that sits across A1A roughly near the Argosy Beach Park area, which is genuinely convenient for buildings in the 1200-1500 block of Ocean Shore Boulevard but requires a purposeful errand run for everything else. There is no dine-in restaurant row, no coffee shop cluster, no walkable anything outside the sand. Most OBTS buyers self-select for exactly that reason -- they want the North Peninsula scarcity as a feature. If you need daily walkable convenience, shop the southern section.

OBTS buildings in the residential regime -- Seawinds, The Ormondy, and the owner-occupant portions of Ocean Watch -- deliver one of the lowest-noise, lowest-density beachfront living options in the entire region. The flip side is that buildings like Ocean Watch allow monthly-minimum vacation rentals, which creates a mixed owner-occupant and vacation-rental culture that varies floor to floor. Ask which floors and which buildings have the highest investment-unit ratios if a residential community feel is your priority.

Not sure whether OBTS or the Ormond Beach section fits your priorities? We will walk both sections with you and give you the honest trade-off for your specific situation.
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Schools: context for the corridor

The overwhelming majority of buyers on this corridor are adults without school-age children -- retirees, second-home buyers, and working adults who chose the corridor for its beach character, not its school zoning. The school picture matters to a minority of buyers here, but it is not irrelevant, and we treat it the same as every other market: honestly, without inventing a connection that does not exist.

The corridor falls within Volusia County Schools, and the likely feeder pattern includes schools serving the Ormond Beach and Daytona Beach area. The specific school assignment depends on the exact address and can change with redistricting. Verify current zoning directly with Volusia County Schools for the specific unit before you rely on it in your decision.

Relocating with school-age kids? We will confirm current zoning and give you the honest local read on every option.
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What living here is actually like

Day to day, the corridor lives at a pace that takes some buyers by surprise coming from anywhere south of Granada Boulevard. In the morning: coffee on an oceanfront balcony, a walk on a beach with no cars in sight, and then a drive for anything practical. In the evening: sunsets over the Halifax River from the river-side units, or ocean surf from the ocean-facing ones. What it is not: walkable to dinner, within two minutes of a hospital, or convenient for anyone who needs the Daytona Beach energy on demand.

Who actually buys here?
Primarily retirees and near-retirees who want a permanent or seasonal oceanfront home without the density of Daytona Beach Shores, second-home buyers who want a no-drive beach as their baseline, and a smaller cohort of investors who target the buildings with monthly-minimum rental allowances. First-time buyers are rare at current price levels.
What is the hurricane and flood risk reality?
Oceanfront means direct Atlantic exposure. All buildings on this corridor sit within close range of the coast and carry meaningful wind and flood risk that varies by floor, building construction, and specific FEMA flood zone designation. Insurance costs for oceanfront units have risen materially in recent years. Pull a real insurance quote on the specific unit -- not an estimate, a quote -- before you go under contract. And check the FEMA flood zone map for the exact parcel.
How is the rental situation building by building?
It varies significantly. Seawinds has been reported with a 90-day minimum rental term, which skews owner-occupant. Ocean Watch allows monthly minimums and has a known vacation-rental component. Other buildings have their own rules, and rules can change by association vote. If a tight owner-occupant community matters to you, ask for the specific rental policy in writing and ask what percentage of units are currently rented versus owner-occupied.
What is the parking situation?
Better than most oceanfront markets. Gemini includes two underground spaces per unit. Aliki Atrium has secured underground parking. The Tiffany, Tidesfall, and others include assigned parking. 89 Oceanfront parking should be verified for the specific unit. This is worth confirming during due diligence because some older buildings converted from apartments have uneven parking allocations.

Five costly mistakes corridor buyers make

We have watched buyers make every one of these. They are all avoidable.

1

Skipping the reserve study and SIRS documentation

This is the single costliest mistake on this corridor. Older buildings with underfunded reserves face mandatory catch-up under Florida law. A $650 monthly HOA can become $1,100 plus a special assessment if the building has not been maintaining reserves. Get the current SIRS, the funded percentage, and any pending assessments in writing before you offer.

2

Comparing units across buildings without adjusting for building age

A 2BR unit at 89 Oceanfront and a 2BR unit at Gemini are not the same product even if they have similar list prices. Vintage, unit size, semi-private versus shared elevator, reserve health, and rental ratio are all different. Comps only work within the same building or very similar buildings.

3

Assuming the HOA fee is stable

The fee you see in the listing is what the board set last year. After a SIRS-driven reserve increase or a building repair special assessment, it can change materially. Ask for the past three years of board meeting minutes and budgets, not just the current fee.

4

Not getting an insurance quote before making an offer

Oceanfront condo insurance in Florida has repriced significantly in recent years. The master building policy covers the structure; your unit requires its own HO6 or equivalent. Get an actual quote on the specific unit before you commit -- and ask the association what the master building premium is per unit annually.

5

Buying Ormond-by-the-Sea expecting Ormond Beach convenience

The OBTS section is quieter by design. It is not a discount version of the southern section -- it is a different lifestyle trade-off. Buyers who do not understand the grocery and errand reality end up resenting what should have been a feature. Tour OBTS on a weekday afternoon before you commit.

We catch all five of these before they cost you -- reserve docs, insurance pre-checks, building-accurate comps.
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Building class and product mix

The corridor's value driver is building character, not just floor or view

On most condo markets, you pay for floor and view. On this corridor, you also pay for privacy architecture (semi-private elevators, townhome layouts), building vintage, unit size, and the specific community culture of each building. The four tiers below reflect that reality.

Value and volume (89 Oceanfront, Tidesfall, Ormond-by-the-Sea mid-rise)
Mid-tier renovated (Ocean Watch, Seawinds, updated Ormondy units)
Boutique privacy (Gemini semi-private elevator, The Tiffany, Aliki Atrium townhome)
Newer luxury (Capriana 2006, all 3BR/3BA)

Widths represent relative value tier positioning, not unit counts. Building mix and character shift significantly between the Ormond Beach and Ormond-by-the-Sea sections of the corridor.

Want a building-by-building comparison that maps your priorities to the right tier and section of the corridor?
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The corridor buyer checklist

  • Reserve study and SIRS status. Funded percentage, date of last study, and whether any catch-up assessment is pending -- in writing, for the specific building.
  • Pending or planned special assessments. Ask the board and the management company directly; listing agents are not always informed.
  • Insurance quotes before you offer. Both the master building premium (ask for the per-unit share) and your own HO6 on the specific unit and floor.
  • Rental policy in writing. Current minimum term, owner-to-renter ratio, and whether the policy has been amended in the past two years.
  • Milestone inspection status. Has the Phase 1 been completed? Is Phase 2 required? What were the findings?
  • Flood zone and FEMA designation. Pull the map for the exact parcel address; oceanfront zones vary within buildings and can affect financing options.
  • Parking allocation. Confirm what parking is deeded or assigned to the specific unit, not just the building in general.
  • Board meeting minutes. Last 2-3 years of minutes show disputes, planned repairs, and budget debates that listings will not.
Jon Brooks · Co-Founder, Momentum Realty

This corridor is genuinely special -- two lanes of A1A, no commercial intrusion, no cars on the beach, and buildings ranging from 1974 studios to 2006 full-floor luxury. The no-drive beach is not marketing language; it is a physical reality that makes the daily experience of oceanfront living different from anywhere south of Granada Boulevard.

The unglamorous part of our job here is the reserve and fee work. The post-Surfside legislation changed the math for 1970s-80s buildings in ways that are still working through the market. We pull the reserve study, the SIRS status, the milestone inspection findings, the past three years of board minutes, and the actual insurance picture for every building we represent a buyer in on this corridor. That is what representing you, not the seller, looks like in a market where the biggest risk is invisible in the listing description.

Ormond Beach oceanfront vs. the alternatives

Most corridor shoppers are cross-comparing with Daytona Beach Shores and Ponce Inlet. Here is the honest breakdown:

Community / CorridorCharacterKey trade
The Oceans, Daytona Beach ShoresHigh-density, full-serviceMore amenities and commercial access; drive-on beach south of Dunlawton; more congested
The Peninsula, Daytona Beach ShoresLuxury towersNewer high-rise luxury with gated access; drive-on beach boundary nearby; premium pricing
Towers at Ponce InletBoutique deep-southThe quietest southernmost Volusia option; lighthouse-adjacent; thin nearby services
Marina Grande on the Halifax, Holly HillIntracoastal luxuryHalifax River waterfront, not oceanfront; gated luxury towers; different buyer profile
Ormond Heritage, Ormond BeachInland active adultICI-built inland community; no oceanfront but newer construction and HOA simplicity
Ormond Beach & OBTS OceanfrontResidential no-drive corridorThe only Volusia corridor with no drive-on beach, no commercial strip, and a full building roster from value to boutique luxury

The corridor's irreplaceable advantage is the combination: no-drive beach, no hotel or commercial intrusion, residential-only zoning, and a building range wide enough to accommodate entry buyers through full-floor luxury. Nothing else in Volusia County offers all four.

Cross-shopping these? We will run the true monthly-cost comparison -- HOA, insurance, fee trajectory -- side by side.
Compare the Real Numbers →

Pros & cons, no varnish

Pros

  • Only no-drive-beach residential corridor in Volusia County
  • No commercial strip, no hotels -- purely residential A1A
  • Building range from entry studios to 2,515 sf 3BR luxury
  • No CDD; fee stack is association-only
  • North Peninsula State Park as permanent northern buffer
  • Ormond Beach city services and lower crowd density than Daytona

Cons

  • 1970s-80s building stock carries SIRS and milestone inspection fee risk
  • Monthly HOA fees $600-$1,000+, rising with reserve catch-up
  • Ormond-by-the-Sea section: thin retail, long errand drives
  • Oceanfront wind and flood insurance costs are real and rising
  • No walkable commercial of any kind on the corridor itself
  • Vacation-rental units in some buildings dilute residential community feel

The offer playbook

How we run an oceanfront corridor purchase, in order:

  • Define the building tier first. Value, boutique, OBTS, or Capriana-luxury -- the strategy and the due diligence differ completely.
  • Pull building-accurate solds. Comps only work within the same building and the same unit-type tier; ocean-facing versus pool-facing within the building matters too.
  • Front-load the fee and reserve work. SIRS, funded percentage, milestone inspection status, and special assessment history -- before the offer, not after.
  • Get insurance quotes in hand before you offer. Oceanfront HO6 plus the master building premium share; surprises here kill deals and waste inspection money.
  • Review board minutes for the past 2-3 years. The reserve conversation, any deferred maintenance, and ownership disputes surface in minutes that listing descriptions omit.

Questions we ask before you offer

The six questions that surface what listings will not tell you:

  • What does the current SIRS show for funded reserves and projected assessments?
  • Has the Phase 1 milestone inspection been completed, and was Phase 2 triggered?
  • What is the master building insurance premium per unit annually, and what has it done in the past three years?
  • What is the current ratio of owner-occupied to rental units in this building?
  • Are any special assessments pending, voted, or under discussion by the board?
  • What are the current rental rules, and when were they last amended?

Is this corridor for you?

No corridor fits everyone, and we would rather lose you to the right address than sell you the wrong one.

Consider elsewhere if you want

  • Walkable restaurants and shops at your door
  • New construction with clean reserve history
  • Drive-on beach access for your truck or ATV
  • Full-service building amenities and concierge
  • Minimal ongoing fee homework
  • High commercial activity and nightlife nearby

This corridor fits if you want

  • A no-drive beach as your daily reality
  • Residential-only A1A with no hotels or commercial neighbors
  • Building choice from value vintage to boutique luxury
  • Ormond Beach city services with less crowd than Daytona
  • North Peninsula scarcity -- very limited new supply possible
  • Quiet that you cannot find anywhere south of Granada Boulevard

Get the inside read on Ormond Beach & Ormond-by-the-Sea Oceanfront Condos

We represent you, not the seller. Tell us which building or tier you are weighing on this corridor -- the fee stack, the reserve picture, and the actual solds are different building by building -- and we will pull everything you need before you make an offer.

We respond personally, usually the same day. Your information is never sold.

You are all set.

A Momentum Realty Ormond Beach & Ormond-by-the-Sea Oceanfront Condos specialist will reach out personally, usually the same day.

Momentum listings (YTD)
97.98%
Sold-to-list ratio across our markets for our agents, sellers keeping more of their price.
Market average (YTD)
96.73%
The broader metro average sold-to-list ratio over the same period.
Momentum days on market
64 days
Median days on market for our listings, faster sales mean less carrying cost and stronger leverage.
Market days on market
72 days
The broader metro median over the same period.

Sold-to-list and days-on-market figures reflect Momentum Realty listings versus the metro average, year to date. Your home's result depends on pricing, condition, lot, view, and preparation.

The no-drive beach is your lead marketing asset

Most beachside listings bury the no-drive beach in the amenities list. On this corridor it belongs in the first sentence, because it is the reason buyers choose the north Ormond corridor over every competing Volusia County oceanfront address. We lead with it, price you against building-accurate comps, and market to the buyer profile your specific building actually attracts.

What is your Ormond Beach & Ormond-by-the-Sea Oceanfront Condos home worth?

Get a no-obligation home value based on real comparable sales in Ormond Beach & Ormond-by-the-Sea Oceanfront Condos matched to your condition, lot, and view, not an automated guess. Tell us about your home and we will personally prepare your numbers and a pricing strategy. No obligation, no spam.

Real comps, not a Zestimate. Prepared personally, never sold.

Thank you.

We will prepare your Ormond Beach & Ormond-by-the-Sea Oceanfront Condos home value from real comparable sales and reach out personally.

Frequently Asked Questions

What makes the Ormond Beach and Ormond-by-the-Sea oceanfront corridor different from Daytona Beach Shores?
The defining difference is the no-drive beach. All of the corridor north of Granada Boulevard is permanently closed to vehicle traffic on the sand -- no cars, no ATVs. The corridor is also purely residential with no hotels, no strip commercial on A1A itself, and a two-lane road that stays quiet in a way that the higher-density Daytona Beach Shores corridor does not. The trade-off is less walkable commercial access.
Where exactly does the no-drive beach begin?
North of Granada Boulevard (SR-40) the beach is car-free. This covers the entire Ormond-by-the-Sea section and extends north through North Peninsula State Park to Flagler County. The buildings south of Granada -- including 89 Oceanfront and Aliki Atrium -- sit at or near the boundary; confirm the exact beach-access rules for any specific building.
What are typical HOA fees on this corridor?
Based on third-party listing data and building-specific sources through 2025-2026, monthly HOA fees run roughly $600 to over $1,000 per month depending on the building, unit size, and what is included. Older buildings facing post-Surfside reserve catch-up requirements may see fees increase. Confirm the current assessment, what it covers, and any pending increases with the specific association before you rely on any listed figure.
What is the SIRS and milestone inspection risk for older buildings?
Florida law requires condo buildings within three miles of the coast to complete a milestone structural inspection at 25 years of age, and a Structural Integrity Reserve Study (SIRS) at least every 10 years for buildings of three or more stories. Every building on this corridor built before 2001 already meets the 25-year coastal trigger. If the SIRS identifies a reserve shortfall -- common in buildings that historically waived full reserve funding -- the association must close the gap through increased dues, special assessments, or both. Buyers in Volusia County have received special assessment notices exceeding $100,000 per unit at some older buildings.
Which building is the newest on the corridor?
Capriana (1425 Ocean Shore Blvd) was built in 2006 and is the most recently constructed building on the corridor. All units are 3BR/3BA at 2,515 square feet. Its newer vintage means it starts with a better reserve-funding baseline than 1970s-80s buildings, though current figures should still be verified with the association.
What is the price range on this corridor?
Entry-level older 1-2BR units start near $275K; mid-tier renovated and boutique-building units run $400K-$650K; Capriana 3BR units have sold in the $700K-$850K+ range. A comparable sale at Capriana Unit 603 closed at $850,000 in early 2026. Individual prices vary by floor, condition, view, and the specific building's fee trajectory.
Is Ormond-by-the-Sea really that isolated?
It is quieter than buyers from more urban markets expect. The OBTS section has a Publix-anchored shopping plaza across A1A and a thin local commercial presence, but no walkable restaurant row and limited services within the corridor itself. Most daily errands require driving. Buyers who want that quiet choose OBTS specifically; buyers who need daily convenience proximity should shop the southern Ormond Beach section near Granada Boulevard.
What rental rules apply to buildings on this corridor?
It varies building to building and can change by vote. Seawinds has been reported with a 90-day minimum rental term. Ocean Watch allows monthly minimums and has a significant vacation-rental presence. Other buildings have their own policies. Get the current rental policy in writing from the specific association, and ask what percentage of units are currently rented, before you close.
What is the Aliki Atrium and why is it unique?
Aliki Atrium (901 South Atlantic Ave, built 1981) is a 7-story building with only 27 residences arranged in a multi-level townhome configuration -- not standard flat-plan condos. Glass elevators overlook a tropical courtyard fountain; each unit has a 25-foot balcony and runs approximately 2,767 square feet across multiple levels. It is architecturally unlike anything else on the corridor and priced accordingly.
What makes Gemini's semi-private elevators valuable?
Gemini (1239 Ocean Shore Blvd, 1983, 67 units) uses six elevators, each serving only two units per floor, so your elevator lobby is shared with one neighbor rather than a full floor of residents. For buyers who want privacy and quiet between the front door and the beach, this is a meaningful amenity in a building with 67 units. Two underground parking spaces per unit adds to the premium.
Is there a CDD on this corridor?
No. There is no community development district on this corridor. All fee obligations run through the individual condo associations only. There is no separate district bond assessment on the property tax bill.
What are the flood and wind risks for oceanfront units here?
Direct oceanfront exposure means real hurricane wind risk and coastal flood risk that varies by floor, building construction type, and FEMA flood zone designation. Insurance for oceanfront condos in Florida has repriced significantly since 2021. Pull a real quote -- not an estimate -- on the specific unit before you commit, and check the FEMA flood map for the exact parcel address.
What schools serve this corridor?
The corridor falls within Volusia County Schools. The typical feeder pattern for this area includes schools serving the Ormond Beach district, but specific assignment depends on the exact unit address and is subject to redistricting. Verify current zoning with Volusia County Schools for any specific unit. The large majority of buyers on this corridor do not have school-age children.
How does this corridor compare to Towers at Ponce Inlet?
Ponce Inlet is further south and even more isolated -- lighthouse-adjacent, no commercial nearby, very quiet. The Ormond corridor has more building variety, a wider price range, and easier access to Ormond Beach's commercial spine. Ponce Inlet typically commands higher per-square-foot prices for comparable views. Both are no-drive beach corridors; the Ormond corridor has more entry-level options.
Is there any new construction planned on this corridor?
The North Peninsula's limited developable land and residential zoning create genuine supply scarcity. North Peninsula State Park at the northern terminus ensures that the corridor cannot expand northward. While the corridor is not fully built out in the sense that every parcel is improved, the pipeline of new residential condo construction is thin. Confirm any specific development activity with Volusia County planning for current projects.
Do I need my own agent to buy on this corridor?
Yes. The listing agent works for the seller. Your agent verifies the reserve study, SIRS status, milestone inspection findings, special assessment history, insurance pre-check, and building-accurate comps -- none of which appear in a listing description. On a corridor where the biggest risk is invisible in the listing, having representation that does that work before you offer is the difference between a good deal and a costly surprise. Call Momentum Realty at (904) 351-6461 or use the form on this page.

Weighing this corridor against other Volusia and Flagler County oceanfront and waterfront options? Start with these guides.

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