Osceola Park in Delray Beach

Osceola Park

Historic neighborhood · Downtown-adjacent Delray · ZIP 33483

Delray's rising historic neighborhood, steps south of Atlantic Avenue, no HOA.

No HOASouth of downtownHistoric to new
Live Market Pulse
44/100
Momentum
Buyer-Leaning Market
A platted historic neighborhood seeing steady teardown and luxury rebuilds, so the spread between an original cottage and a new build is wide; condition and the block set the number.
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Unlock Off-Market Osceola Park

Listings before the portals, true comps, and the renovation and carrying-cost math, before you tour.

Built fromLive BeachesMLS data14 years of closingsLocal renovation analysisUpdated twice daily
LiveMarket PulseBeachesMLS
$760K
Median Price
33.6mo
Supply
137days
Avg DOM
Soft
Seller Leverage
$609/sf
Median $/Sqft
-6%
1-Yr Price Change
0now
Distress
Jon Brooks, founder of Momentum Realty
Jon's Current Read

"Osceola Park is one of the most-watched pockets in Delray because of where it sits, just south of the Atlantic Avenue core, with no HOA and a housing stock that runs from 1930s bungalows to brand-new builds. The read is the block and the condition: the location is the durable value, and the money turns on an honest renovation budget and a real comparable-sales read on a specific home."

Jon Brooks, founder, Momentum Realty · Updated June 2026

The 60-Second Overview

Osceola Park market snapshot (as of June 13, 2026): the median sale price is about $760K ($609 per sq ft), with homes averaging 137 days on market and 33.6 months of supply, a buyer-leaning market. Based on 5 recent closings in live BeachesMLS data.

Osceola Park is a historic single-family neighborhood in Delray Beach, ZIP 33483, just south of the downtown Atlantic Avenue business district. The area was platted more than a century ago and the neighborhood took shape in the 1930s with bungalows and small single-family homes.

Today the stock ranges from restored 1930s and 1950s homes to a wave of new construction, with developers replacing older structures with contemporary homes that often run 3,000 square feet and up. No two homes look alike, and there is no homeowners association, a point buyers here value.

The walkable position next to downtown Delray is the durable value, and it is priced into the land. The deal is made on an honest read of a specific home's condition and the cost to modernize it, not a neighborhood average.

Best for

  • Buyers who want to be steps from downtown Delray without HOA rules
  • Renovators and builders who want a historic-area lot to update
  • Buyers who value walkability to Atlantic Avenue and the beach
  • Anyone prioritizing location and land over a master-planned product

Probably not for

  • Buyers who want gated, amenity-rich HOA living
  • Those who want only turnkey new construction with a warranty
  • Buyers unwilling to budget renovation on an older home
  • Anyone who needs on-site resort amenities

How Osceola Park is performing right now

44/100
momentum
Buyer-Leaning Market
Seller's marketBalancedBuyer's market
33.6Months of supplytight
105Median days on marketdays
6 : 14Under contract vs for salestrong demand
5Sold in last 12 monthsliquidity
+127%Median price since 2012appreciation
+49%Asking vs recent sold $/sqftroom to negotiate

Tight supply and strong demand favor sellers here. Homes still take about two months to sell, though, and with asking prices running above recent sales per square foot, a prepared buyer has room on anything overpriced. Reading each home against the real comps, not the headline trend, is where the edge is.

Live from BeachesMLS, as of June 13, 2026. Refreshed twice daily. Months of supply, days on market, and the contract-to-listing ratio are computed from current Osceola Park listings and the trailing twelve months of closed sales.

8.6A- score
Momentum intelligence
Momentum buy score

Our proprietary read on how a home in Osceola Park buys, holds, and resells. See the five factors.

Homes For Sale Right Now in Osceola Park

Live MLS inventory for Osceola Park. Every active listing, what is under contract right now, and the last 12 months of closed sales, refreshed twice a day. Closed comps beat an algorithm's guess every time.

Active and pending Osceola Park listings as of 2026-06-13, priced high to low. All listings featuring the BMLS logo are provided by BeachesMLS, Inc. This information is not verified for authenticity or accuracy and is not guaranteed. Copyright © 2026 BeachesMLS, Inc.. Tap any home to ask about it.

Listing locations from BeachesMLS; lot type inferred from listing descriptions. Destination pins are approximate. Map data © OpenStreetMap, tiles © CARTO. Flood, school, and commute overlays are on the roadmap.

The takeaway

Being steps south of Atlantic Avenue, with the beach a short drive east, is the whole point.

Atlantic Avenue (Downtown Delray)~3 min · ~0.5 mile
Delray Public Beach~8 min · ~2 miles
Interstate 95~6 min · ~2 miles
Boca Raton~18 min · ~8 miles
Palm Beach International Airport (PBI)~32 min · ~23 miles

Drive times are approximate and vary with traffic and your exact departure point.

Nearby Communities

Explore more neighborhoods near Osceola Park with Momentum Realty’s local guides.

SouthridgeSouthridgeDelray Beach, FL · 0.9 miDel-Ida ParkDel-Ida ParkDelray Beach, FL · 1.3 miDell ParkDell ParkDelray Beach, FL · 1.4 miSeacrest ParkSeacrest ParkDelray Beach, FL · 1.5 miThe Pinesof DelrayThe Pinesof DelrayDelray Beach, FL · 1.5 miRainberry BayRainberry BayDelray Beach, FL · 1.9 miPine Ridge atDelray BeachPine Ridge atDelray BeachDelray Beach, FL · 2.5 miHammock ReserveHammock ReserveDelray Beach, FL · 2.5 miPeninsulaVillage GreensPeninsulaVillage GreensBoca Raton, FL · 2.8 mi

Browse all Florida neighborhood guides →

Carrying cost · the no-CDD edge

No CDD bond means thousands less per year than newer master plans.

Typical CDD community~$2,500/yr
Osceola Park (no CDD)$0/yr

Roughly $25,000 saved over 10 years in carrying cost, before resale.

Illustrative. NE Florida CDD assessments commonly run $1,500-$3,500+/yr and vary by community; verify per property.

Schools

15-Second Take
  • Palm Beach County Public Schools
  • Verify the zoned schools by address
  • Magnet and choice options may be available
  • Confirm current ratings before relying on them
  • Private and parochial options nearby

Osceola Park is served by Palm Beach County Public Schools. Assignment is by address and can change, so confirm the exact zoned elementary, middle, and high schools for any specific home, plus any magnet or choice options. Treat published ratings as a starting point, not the full story.

Buying with schools in mind? We can confirm the exact zoned schools for any Osceola Park address.

The takeaway

What actually shapes value in Osceola Park: the no-HOA structure, the downtown-adjacent location, and an active teardown-to-luxury-rebuild trend. Each item below is sourced or clearly hedged.

Recent Developments in Osceola Park

Our read on what is being built around Osceola Park, scored for direction, significance, and how close the effect lands. The full sourced timeline follows below.

Net OutlookBullishThe downtown-adjacent location and reinvestment point up. The watch item is condition, insurance, and historic rules on the older homes.

Steps from downtown Atlantic Avenue

Ongoing
BullishMajor impact
SignificanceRadius: 0.5 mile

One of the most walkable positions to Delray's dining and shops, a durable location premium baked into the land.

Non-HOA neighborhood

Ongoing
BullishNotable impact
SignificanceRadius: Community

No mandatory dues and wide renovation latitude draw buyers who want flexibility.

Teardown and luxury rebuild trend

Ongoing
BullishNotable impact
SignificanceRadius: Community

Ongoing replacement of older homes with larger new builds raises the ceiling on the street.

City streetscape and infrastructure focus

Ongoing
BullishNotable impact
SignificanceRadius: Community

City attention to streets and infrastructure supports the neighborhood's continued appreciation; confirm specifics with the city.

Historic-era housing stock

Ongoing
NeutralNotable impact
SignificanceRadius: Community

Older homes carry older systems, insurance, and possible historic considerations; budget modernization before judging a list price.

Wide condition spread

Ongoing
NeutralNotable impact
SignificanceRadius: Community

Original cottages and new builds trade very differently; a specific-home comp read matters more than any average.

Direction, significance, and effect-radius ratings are Momentum's proprietary, qualitative read of the sourced items below, not investment advice or a prediction for any specific home.

Development, infrastructure, retail, and school activity affecting Osceola Park, tracked by our team and summarized from public reporting and official sources, with links to the original coverage. Last updated June 2026.

Showing the latest, scroll for all updates ↓

  1. June 2026
    Market

    Rising historic neighborhood south of Atlantic Avenue

    Osceola Park remains a non-HOA historic neighborhood platted over a century ago, now seeing steady luxury rebuilds just south of downtown Delray. Why it matters: Location is the durable value; condition and the block set a specific home's number. Source

Summaries reflect public reporting and official sources linked above as of the dates shown. Project details, timelines, and approvals can change. Commentary on potential market effects is general observation, not investment advice or a prediction for any specific property. For the freshest items across the whole region, see This Week in Northeast Florida.

If we were buying in Osceola Park, this is the order of operations we would run, and the one we run for our clients.

1

Read condition and comps first. In Osceola Park, the home's condition and exact location set the number, so price the work honestly before you judge any list price.

2

Confirm the carrying costs. Osceola Park has no HOA, so the carrying cost is mainly taxes, insurance, and upkeep. Verify what is owed and what it covers for a specific home.

3

Match the home to recent comparable sales, not a portal estimate, then structure the offer around its true condition.

4

Verify the schools by address with the school district, since assignment is by address and can change.

5

Use your own representation. The listing agent works for the seller; on a purchase here, having someone in your corner is the highest-leverage decision you make.

Best Buy
An updated home on a quiet block within walking reach of Atlantic Avenue
Biggest Risk
Underbudgeting renovation, insurance, or historic considerations on an older home
Best Lot
Block and downtown proximity over square footage alone
Smart Timing
Confirm insurance and renovation costs before you offer
The takeaway

On mobile, tap any heading below to open it. This is the home by home, lot by lot, club and renovation detail, organized so you can jump straight to what matters to you.

Community Details at a Glance

Osceola Park is a non-HOA, downtown-adjacent neighborhood that the City of Delray Beach has targeted for ongoing infrastructure and streetscape improvements. There is no gate or clubhouse; the value is the location and the unrestricted ownership. Confirm any city overlay, historic, or redevelopment-district considerations for a specific block with the city.

The takeaway

Three honest price bands. Condition and lot, not the square footage alone, decide where a home lands.

The Original
$650K to $760K

An unrenovated historic-era home, the renovation route in. Price the work and any historic considerations first.

Lowest entry
The Updated Core
$760K to $838K

A restored or updated home on a desirable block, the heart of today's resale market.

Most inventory
The New Build
$838K to $1.10M

A new or fully reimagined home, the top of the neighborhood, where finish and location carry the value.

Strongest resale

Approximate 2026 resale bands from third-party listing data and public records, not NEFAR statistics. Confirm pricing for a specific home.

$650K to $760K
The Original
An unrenovated historic-era home, the renovation route in. Price the work and any historic considerations first.
$760K to $838K
The Updated Core
A restored or updated home on a desirable block, the heart of today's resale market.
$838K to $1.10M
The New Build
A new or fully reimagined home, the top of the neighborhood, where finish and location carry the value.

Approximate 2026 resale bands from third-party listing data and public records, not NEFAR statistics. Confirm pricing for a specific home.

15-Second Take
  • Renovation math decides the deal
  • Better lots and views resell strongest
  • Roof and HVAC age drive the insurance quote
  • Interior lots are where buyers overpay
Jon Brooks, Momentum Realty
Operator Note

Most buyers overpay on interior lots in the back half of the community. A sharp renovation can distract you, but the weaker resale position follows the lot, not the finishes. We read the homesite before the kitchen.

Steps to downtown DelrayStrong
No HOA, renovation freedomStrong
Active luxury rebuild trendStrong
Short drive to the beachPositive
Older systems and historic rulesManage it

Momentum analysis based on the community's structure, location, lot scarcity, and housing stock. Not a guarantee of future value.

Jon Brooks, Momentum Realty
Operator Note

The strongest value pocket is usually a renovated home on a good lot priced just under the next tier up. Buyers chasing the single biggest house often pay top prices for what is really a renovation project.

5 Mistakes Buyers Make in Osceola Park

15-Second Take
  • Calling the listing agent (who works for the seller)
  • Misjudging the renovation budget
  • Overpaying for an interior lot
  • Underbudgeting the carrying costs
  • Skipping the roof, HVAC, and systems check

The same five mistakes cost buyers the most in any market. Every one is avoidable with the right preparation before you tour.

The walk to downtown is the value. The deal is won or lost on condition, the block, and the renovation math.

Jon Brooks · Founder, Momentum Realty
8.3B+ · Buy Score
Resale Strength8.6/10
Renovation Risk6.0/10
Location Efficiency9.2/10
Long-Term Defensibility8.1/10
Carrying Cost Advantage8.3/10

Momentum Intelligence Scores are our proprietary, qualitative assessment based on the analysis on this page, on a 0 to 10 scale. They are a framework for comparing communities, not a guarantee of future value or advice on a specific home.

Why our read on Osceola Park is different.

Most pages on this community are an automated estimate wrapped in stock copy. This one is built from the live BeachesMLS feed, fourteen years of closed sales, and a renovation-by-renovation read of what actually moves value here, lot by lot. No Zestimate, no guesswork.

Live BeachesMLS feed14 years of closed salesRenovation-premium analysisLot-by-lot, no automated estimates
Jon Brooks, founder of Momentum Realty. A housing economist with a background in real estate investment banking at Deutsche Bank and consulting at Ernst & Young, who has built and analyzed Northeast Florida real estate from the ground up.

Which Lots & Views Hold Value Best

Where the value actually sits. Each home is shaded by its price per square foot (a value read, not just a price) and ringed by lot type, so you can see at a glance which pockets carry a real, durable premium and where a renovation play makes sense.

Value ($/sqft)
$261 value$401 premium
Lake / waterPreserveInterior

Fill = price per square foot; ring = lot type, inferred from listing descriptions. Sold homes are shown by realized $/sqft (lot type not always recorded). Asking and recent-sold figures from BeachesMLS; for orientation, not an appraisal.

15-Second Take
  • Block and downtown proximity drive value
  • No-HOA flexibility is part of the appeal
  • Historic homes sit next to new builds
  • Condition is the biggest swing here
  • Confirm historic rules before a renovation

This close to downtown Delray, the land and the block are the durable asset. The house can be renovated or rebuilt; the steps-to-Atlantic-Avenue location cannot be reproduced. Read the block, the condition, and any historic considerations first, then price the work against it.

Osceola Park in 15 seconds.

Best forBuyers who want a steps-to-downtown Delray position without HOA rules.
Biggest advantageNo HOA and one of the most walkable positions to Atlantic Avenue.
Biggest riskRenovation and historic considerations on older homes.
Sweet spotAn updated home on a quiet block matched honestly to comps.
Avoid ifYou want gated amenities or only turnkey new construction.

HOA, CDD & Fees

15-Second Take
  • No HOA, a flexibility edge
  • Steps south of Atlantic Avenue
  • Historic stock next to new builds
  • Budget renovation on older homes
  • Confirm city overlay or district rules

None. Osceola Park is a non-HOA neighborhood with no mandatory community dues (confirm there is no separate sub-association for a specific parcel).

Not applicable; owners handle landscaping, exterior, and any rental decisions.

The takeaway

Selling here is won on condition and view, not the Zestimate. The right number comes from closed comps matched to your renovation level and lot.

Momentum listings (YTD)
97.98%
Sold-to-list ratio across our market 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 our market average, year to date. Your home's result depends on pricing, condition, lot, view, and preparation.

In Osceola Park, condition and view decide your number

Because buyers here are weighing your home against renovated comps and cross-shopping Dell Park, a home priced to the community average instead of its true condition and view either leaves money on the table or sits. A renovated kitchen, newer roof and HVAC, and a golf or lake view all deserve to show up in your price, and a buyer pool reading renovation math needs to be shown why your home is worth it. We build that case with real comps and a pricing strategy for the current market.

What is your Osceola Park home worth?

Get a no-obligation home value based on real comparable sales in Osceola Park 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.

See the full Osceola Park home value & selling guide, recent comps, fees, and 2026 timing →

Real comps, not a Zestimate.

Price History: What Homes Here Have Actually Sold For

Median sale prices in Osceola Park year by year since 2012, from closed MLS sales. A long track record beats a single estimate, showing what this community has really done through rate cycles rather than what a model predicts.

Osceola Park Market Scorecard

Strong seller's market

Osceola Park is currently a strong seller's market. About 2.2 months of supply, a median asking price of $1,099,999, and homes go under contract in about 68 days.

2.2
Months supply
$1,099,999
Median list
$847,500
Median sold
$321
Per sqft
68
Days on mkt
7/6/39
Active/Pend/Sold

Typical home value in the 32224 ZIP is $456,759, about 13.7% above the Florida norm (Zillow Home Value Index).

Zoom out for the wider market: ZIP market scorecard · county scorecard.

Live data: BeachesMLS, refreshed twice daily. Typical value: Zillow Research. Market metrics only; these describe homes for sale and recent sales, not residents.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Osceola Park have an HOA?
No. Osceola Park is a non-HOA neighborhood, which buyers value for renovation and rental freedom. Confirm there is no separate sub-association tied to a specific parcel.
Where is Osceola Park?
It is a historic neighborhood in Delray Beach, ZIP 33483, just south of the downtown Atlantic Avenue business district.
When was Osceola Park established?
The area was platted more than a century ago and the neighborhood took shape in the 1930s with bungalows and small single-family homes.
What kind of homes are in Osceola Park?
A mix from restored 1930s and 1950s homes to new construction that often runs 3,000 square feet and up, so condition and finish vary widely.
Is Osceola Park walkable to downtown Delray?
Yes. Its position just south of Atlantic Avenue is one of the most walkable in Delray, a major part of the appeal.
How close is the beach?
The Delray public beach is a short drive east, roughly two miles, with downtown Atlantic Avenue just to the north.
Is there new construction in Osceola Park?
Yes. Developers have been replacing older homes with contemporary new builds, so original and new homes sit side by side.
What schools serve Osceola Park?
It is served by the School District of Palm Beach County. Assignment is by address and can change, so confirm the current zoning for a specific home with the district.
What is the price range in Osceola Park?
The range is wide because condition spans original to new build. The right read is a comparable-sales analysis on a specific home rather than an area average.
Is Osceola Park a historic district?
It is a recognized historic-era neighborhood; some blocks may carry overlay or historic considerations. Confirm the rules for a specific block with the city before renovating.
Can I rent out a home in Osceola Park?
With no HOA, rental rules are set by the city rather than an association. Confirm current City of Delray Beach rental and licensing rules before counting on rental use.
Should I use the listing agent to buy in Osceola Park?
No. The listing agent works for the seller. In a condition-driven, no-HOA market, your own representation to read the renovation math and comps is the highest-leverage decision you make.
Buyers who want to be steps from downtown Delray without HOA rulesExcellent fit
Renovators and builders who want a historic-area lotExcellent fit
Buyers who value walkability to Atlantic Avenue and the beachExcellent fit
Anyone prioritizing location and land over a master-planned productExcellent fit
Buyers who will read condition and historic rules honestlyExcellent fit
Buyers who want gated, amenity-rich HOA livingProbably not
Those who want only turnkey new construction with a warrantyProbably not
Buyers unwilling to budget renovation on an older homeProbably not
Anyone who needs on-site resort amenitiesProbably not
Buyers who want a predictable, uniform settingProbably not

Get the inside read on Osceola Park

Whether you are buying a renovation project, comparing the lots and views, weighing the carrying costs, or selling your Osceola Park home, tell us what you need. Every inquiry comes straight to us. We represent you, not the seller, and what your agent is paid is negotiable and set in a written buyer agreement up front. No obligation, no spam, no high-pressure follow-up.

We respond personally, usually the same day.

You are all set.

A Momentum Realty Osceola Park specialist will reach out personally, usually the same day.

Osceola Park median home price history from 2012 to 2026, chart by Momentum Realty
Median sale price in Osceola Park, Florida by year (2012 to 2026). Source: Momentum Realty.
BeachesMLS logo
Photography on this page is sourced from active and recently sold MLS listings in this community and remains the property of the listing brokerage and/or photographer. Source: Listing photos provided by BeachesMLS, Inc. Information deemed reliable but not guaranteed.

Zoom out before you decide: see the Palm Beach County market guide or every community in the Neighborhood Finder.

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