St. Johns County · ZIP 32082 · The Complete Guide

The Complete Ponte Vedra Beach Guide. (2026)

Everything a buyer, seller, retiree, or relocating family needs to know about Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida. Prices, schools, amenities, commute times, and the honest pros and cons of one of Northeast Florida's most established coastal markets.

Executive Summary

Ponte Vedra Beach is a 35-square-mile coastal community in St. Johns County, Florida, anchored by Highway A1A and bordered to the east by the Atlantic Ocean and to the west by the Intracoastal Waterway. It's known nationally as the home of the PGA Tour, TPC Sawgrass, and The Players Championship. Locally, it's known as the address that signals two things: A-rated St. Johns County schools and oceanfront or near-ocean living.

People move to Ponte Vedra Beach for a specific combination that's harder to find than buyers realize. The schools are genuinely top-tier. Ponte Vedra High School ranks #32 in Florida. The middle and elementary feeders score A grades year after year. The beach access is unobstructed: there's no oceanfront commercial development between A1A and the Atlantic for most of the corridor. The buyer profile is stable: median age 52, median household income $124,558, with a heavy concentration of executives, golf-industry professionals, and retirees. Inventory turns slower than the broader Jacksonville market, which protects values during downturns.

Median home prices sit between $805,000 (Zillow's broad ZHVI) and $1,089,000 (St. Johns County MLS single-family median for January 2026). Prices have softened roughly 6% year-over-year as mortgage rates pressured affordability at the higher end, but inventory remains tight, days-on-market are running 35-82 days depending on segment, and well-prepared homes still close near list price. The median price-per-square-foot is approximately $441.

Ponte Vedra Beach works best for: families prioritizing public school quality, executives commuting to Mayo Clinic or Town Center, retirees wanting beach plus healthcare access, golf enthusiasts, and second-home buyers wanting an East Coast oceanfront alternative to South Florida. It works less well for: first-time buyers (entry-level pricing starts around $600K), W-2 earners under $200K household income, families wanting walkable urban density, and anyone who needs to commute daily to downtown Jacksonville without traffic tolerance.

Information Disclaimer

This guide is for informational and educational purposes only. Real estate market data, school rankings, HOA and CDD fees, tax rates, insurance estimates, and community details about Ponte Vedra Beach change frequently and may already be outdated by the time you read this. Do not rely on the information on this page when making a purchase, sale, financial, legal, or investment decision. Always verify property-specific facts (school zoning, flood zone status, HOA and CDD assessments, taxes, insurance costs, deed restrictions) directly with the relevant authority, school district, HOA management company, and licensed professionals (real estate attorney, insurance agent, lender, tax advisor) before acting. See full disclosures ↓

Quick Facts

CategoryDetail
LocationNortheast Florida coast, ~22 miles southeast of downtown Jacksonville
CountySt. Johns County
ZIP Codes32082 (Ponte Vedra Beach proper); 32081 (Ponte Vedra / Nocatee inland)
Population (32082)~31,861 (US Census 2020-2024 ACS)
Median Household Income$124,558
Median Age52
Median Home List Price (April 2026)$998,000 – $1,010,000
Median Sale Price (single-family, Jan 2026)$1,089,000
Median Price per Sq Ft~$441
Days on Market35–82 days (varies by segment)
HOA Fees$0 (older A1A homes) to $10,000+/yr (full-club gated communities)
CDD FeesGenerally none in Ponte Vedra Beach 32082; common in adjacent Nocatee 32081
School DistrictSt. Johns County School District (A-rated)
Established1920s as a resort community; rapid expansion 1970s–2000s
Distance to Atlantic Beach5 minutes / 3 miles
Distance to Mayo Clinic Jacksonville20–25 minutes / 15 miles
Distance to Town Center / St. Johns Town Center15–20 minutes / 12 miles
Distance to Downtown Jacksonville25–35 minutes / 22 miles
Distance to Jacksonville International Airport (JAX)40–55 minutes / 35 miles
Distance to St. Augustine Historic District30–35 minutes / 25 miles
What actually matters from this table: the St. Johns County designation. That single line item is the reason median prices in Ponte Vedra Beach are 2-3x higher than in Atlantic Beach just to the north, despite Atlantic Beach offering similar ocean access. The St. Johns County school district premium is the most overlooked variable in Northeast Florida real estate.

Community Overview & History

Ponte Vedra Beach started as a resort. In 1928, the National Lead Company developed the area as the Ponte Vedra Inn & Club, originally a seaside retreat for mining executives. The neighborhood grew slowly through the 1940s and 1950s, retaining its low-density coastal character. The defining transformation came in 1980, when the PGA Tour relocated its headquarters from Atlanta to Ponte Vedra Beach and built TPC Sawgrass, designed by Pete Dye, as the permanent home of The Players Championship. That move anchored the area as a golf-industry capital and accelerated development through the 1980s and 1990s.

By the 2000s, the build-out pattern was clear. The oldest housing stock sits east of A1A in the original Old Ponte Vedra and Ponte Vedra Boulevard corridors, with custom oceanfront and near-ocean homes ranging from 1950s ranch styles to recent rebuilds. The gated golf communities, Marsh Landing, The Plantation at Ponte Vedra, Sawgrass Country Club, and Sawgrass Players Club, filled in west of A1A during the 1980s through early 2000s. New construction in Ponte Vedra Beach proper (32082) has been limited since 2010 because most developable land was either built out or reserved by the larger institutional landowners. The build-out activity migrated west into 32081 (Nocatee), which is technically a different ZIP code and a separately master-planned community but shares the St. Johns County school designation.

The result of this history matters for buyers: Ponte Vedra Beach is a mostly built-out market. Inventory is driven by resale, not new construction. Builders are not flooding the market with new product. This keeps prices steady but also keeps choices limited. When a well-priced home in a desired community hits the MLS, it usually moves within 30-45 days.

Real Estate Market

Ponte Vedra Beach is a luxury market with a coastal premium and a school premium stacked on top of each other. To understand pricing here, you need to separate the segments. Lumping the area into one "median home price" hides what's actually happening.

Current Pricing by Segment (April 2026)

SegmentTypical Price RangeNotes
Condos & Townhomes$400K – $750KSawgrass Country Club villas, Players Club condos, Sea Hammock
Established Single-Family (non-gated)$700K – $1.5MOriginal Ponte Vedra Boulevard, off-A1A residential, west of Sawgrass
Gated Country Club Single-Family$1.0M – $3.5MMarsh Landing, The Plantation, Sawgrass CC interior lots
Near-Ocean (within 1/4 mile)$1.5M – $4MSan Juan Drive, Le Master Drive, the east-of-A1A corridor
Oceanfront$3M – $15M+Ponte Vedra Boulevard oceanfront, Ocean's Edge, Old Ponte Vedra
Sawgrass Players Club (estate homes)$2M – $8MFull-club residential, TPC course-frontage premium

Historical Pricing Trend

Ponte Vedra Beach prices roughly doubled between 2015 and 2022, then plateaued. The 2022 peak followed the Florida migration boom: out-of-state buyers from New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, and Illinois drove the upper end of the market. As mortgage rates rose in 2023-2024, the luxury segment slowed faster than the mid-tier because high-end buyers are more price-sensitive on monthly carrying costs than on absolute price. The April 2026 data shows median list prices down about 6% year-over-year, but median sale prices for single-family homes held above $1M, indicating well-priced homes are still moving.

The ZIP 32082 median home value tracked by the Census ACS rose from approximately $470,000 in 2011 to $792,600 in 2024, a 68.4% gain over 13 years, well above the national rate of appreciation over the same period.

Inventory and Days on Market

As of April 2026, there are approximately 625 active residential listings across the broader Ponte Vedra Beach area on third-party sites. Tight inventory remains the defining feature of the market. Most buyers underestimate how few homes meet a typical luxury buyer's actual criteria: 3,500+ sqft, post-2010 construction, golf or water view, in a specific school zone. After filters, the available inventory often shrinks to under 30 homes.

Days on market are bifurcated. Updated, well-staged, priced-correctly homes go pending in 30-45 days. Tired listings, over-priced listings, or homes with deferred maintenance can sit 90-180+ days. The list-to-sale price ratio is approximately 95%, indicating a 5% negotiation window on average. This is tighter than buyers from outside Florida typically expect.

New Construction Activity

New construction inside ZIP 32082 is limited. The remaining infill opportunities are mostly custom-built homes on existing lots, with builders like Glenn Layton Homes, Riverside Homes (custom division), and Charlemagne Custom Homes active in the area. Production builders such as Toll Brothers, Pulte, Dream Finders, and ICI are concentrated in adjacent Nocatee (32081), Twenty Mile, and Crosswater communities. Buyers wanting new construction with St. Johns County schools have a clear path: cross the bridge into 32081 and accept the trade-offs (less established trees, no beach walk, longer commute to A1A).

Buyer and Seller Demand

Buyer demand in Ponte Vedra Beach is dominated by three groups: (1) relocating executives from the Northeast and Midwest, (2) retirees from out of state who are pre-existing Florida vacationers, and (3) move-up buyers from elsewhere in Jacksonville (often Mandarin, San Marco, or Riverside) who are scaling into a coastal home as kids enter school age.

Seller demand is constrained by mortgage rate lock-in. Most existing Ponte Vedra Beach owners hold mortgages at sub-4% rates from the 2020-2022 refinancing window. Selling means giving up that rate. This is the single biggest reason inventory remains tight: it's not a demand problem, it's a supply problem. Sellers who do come to market tend to be downsizers (kids grown), out-of-state retirement returnees, or estate sales.

Honest read on the market: Ponte Vedra Beach is not in a price bubble, but it's also not a "buy the dip" opportunity at scale. Prices are stable to slightly soft. Inventory is constrained. The best deals come from off-market connections and from buyers who can move fast on the right property when it lists, not from waiting for a broader correction that probably isn't coming here.

Who Lives Here

Ponte Vedra Beach has one of the most distinctive demographic profiles in Northeast Florida. The numbers from the US Census 2020-2024 ACS for ZIP 32082:

MetricPonte Vedra BeachFor Context
Population31,861Jacksonville MSA: ~1.7M
Median Household Income$124,558Jacksonville MSA: $66,000
Median Age52Jacksonville MSA: 38
Population 65+~29%FL state: 21%
Bachelor's degree or higher~57%FL state: 32%
Owner-occupied housing~82%FL state: 67%
Median home value$792,600National median: $332,700

Family Profile

Despite the older median age, Ponte Vedra Beach has a significant family population. The St. Johns County school district is the primary draw. School-age children are concentrated in the master-planned and gated communities (Marsh Landing, The Plantation, Old Ponte Vedra residential streets, and the western corridors that feed into Ocean Palms Elementary and Ponte Vedra High School).

Age Distribution

Roughly 29% of residents are 65 or older, reflecting the retiree concentration. The 45-64 bracket is another 30%, capturing pre-retirement executives and empty-nesters. Adults 25-44 (the typical "young family" bracket) are underrepresented at about 17%, mostly because pricing prevents younger buyers from entering. This creates a real social dynamic: family-aged kids are present but spread out. Walkable peer-group density is lower than what families from urban Northeast suburbs are accustomed to.

Who Actually Lives Here

In rough breakdown, the resident base is approximately:

  • Retirees and pre-retirees (40-45%): Mostly out-of-state transplants. Heavy concentration from the Northeast, Midwest, and Mid-Atlantic.
  • Established professionals and executives (25-30%): Mayo Clinic physicians, CSX executives, Florida Blue leadership, Fidelity Investments, Stein Mart legacy families, PGA Tour staff.
  • Families with school-age kids (15-20%): Concentrated in Marsh Landing, The Plantation, and the residential streets feeding Ponte Vedra Beach Public Schools.
  • Remote workers and self-employed (8-10%): Growing segment post-2020. Heavy concentration of tech executives, sales leaders, and finance professionals working remote.
  • Second-home and seasonal owners (5-8%): Northern owners who use Ponte Vedra Beach as a winter or vacation property.

Schools

School quality is the single biggest reason families move to Ponte Vedra Beach. The St. Johns County School District is consistently ranked the #1 or #2 public school district in Florida. Average ranking across all St. Johns County public high schools is 10/10 on standardized scales. The county graduation rate is 94%. Reading proficiency averages 72% versus the Florida state average of 51%. Math proficiency averages 59% versus the state average of 41%.

Elementary Schools

Ocean Palms Elementary is the primary feeder for most of Ponte Vedra Beach. A-rated. Strong PTO. Located on Landrum Lane, walkable from many gated communities. Class sizes typically run 18-22 students.

Ponte Vedra-Palm Valley Rawlings Elementary serves the south end of Ponte Vedra Beach and parts of Palm Valley. A-rated. Often ranked among the top elementary schools in the state.

Valley Ridge Academy is a K-8 school serving primarily Nocatee (32081) but is sometimes accessible to Ponte Vedra Beach residents based on specific street addresses. Newer facility, opened 2014.

Middle Schools

Alice B. Landrum Middle School is the primary middle-school feeder. Grades 6-8. A-rated. Strong arts and athletics programs. Located adjacent to Ocean Palms Elementary.

Valley Ridge Academy (K-8 portion) serves the western/southern boundary of the Ponte Vedra Beach feeder pattern.

High Schools

Ponte Vedra High School (the Sharks) is the flagship. Opened in 2008 to relieve overcrowding at Nease. Ranked #32-35 in Florida and #485 nationally by US News. A+ Niche grade. 81% English proficiency, 84% math proficiency, 94% graduation rate. Average SAT score 1290. 78% AP participation rate. Strong athletics, particularly in golf, swimming, and cross-country. Enrollment about 1,928 students.

Beachside High School (the Barracudas) opened in 2022 in the southern part of St. Johns County to relieve overcrowding at PVHS and Nease. Some southern Ponte Vedra Beach addresses now feed into Beachside instead of PVHS. Confirm school zoning at the specific property address before assuming PVHS attendance.

Allen D. Nease Senior High School (the Panthers) serves some inland Ponte Vedra addresses. Ranked #42 in Florida. 98% graduation rate, the highest in St. Johns County. A common alternative for buyers who can't get into the PVHS attendance zone.

Private and Charter Schools

Episcopal School of Jacksonville (PK-12, technically in Jacksonville but a 25-minute drive). The pre-eminent private option for high-end families.

Bolles School (PK-12, also in Jacksonville). Highly regarded private school with multiple campuses. Many Ponte Vedra Beach families use the San Jose campus.

The Bolles School at San Jose and several smaller faith-based and Montessori options exist within Ponte Vedra Beach itself, including Mission of Nombre de Dios facilities and several K-8 private schools serving 200-450 students each.

Critical school zoning note: Inside Ponte Vedra Beach, the specific home address matters more than the ZIP code. Boundaries between PVHS, Beachside, and Nease have shifted multiple times since 2022 as the district manages growth. Always verify zoning for the specific property at stjohns.k12.fl.us before assuming a school assignment from a listing.

Amenities

Ponte Vedra Beach's amenity story has three layers: ocean access, golf, and resort-style country clubs. Buyers typically prioritize one of these and treat the others as secondary.

Ocean Access

The beach itself runs approximately 8 miles from the north end (Mickler's Landing) south to Ponte Vedra Beach proper near Sawgrass. There are five primary public beach access points:

  • Mickler's Landing: Northern access, dog-friendly, large parking lot, family-friendly.
  • South Ponte Vedra Beach Park: Less crowded, parking limited.
  • Guana Tolomato Matanzas (GTM) Research Reserve beach access: Wild beach, fewer crowds, longer walk in.
  • Ponte Vedra Inn & Club beach: Private for members and hotel guests.
  • Numerous neighborhood walk-overs: Most gated communities and many residential streets east of A1A have private or community beach access points.

Golf

Ponte Vedra Beach has more championship-grade golf courses per square mile than almost any other community in the United States. The list includes:

  • TPC Sawgrass (Stadium Course and Dye's Valley): Home of The Players Championship. Public access with member preference. Famed island green 17th hole.
  • Ponte Vedra Inn & Club (Ocean Course and Lagoon Course): Private resort club with two oceanside layouts.
  • Sawgrass Country Club: Private member club with three nine-hole courses (East, West, South).
  • The Plantation at Ponte Vedra: Private gated community with Arnold Palmer-designed course.
  • Marsh Landing Country Club: Private gated community with Ed Seay-designed course.
  • Palm Valley Golf Club: Semi-private, more accessible to non-residents.

Tennis, Pickleball & Fitness

Ponte Vedra Beach has a strong tennis culture, with multiple USTA-rated facilities. Sawgrass Country Club, The Plantation, and Marsh Landing all maintain full tennis programs. Pickleball has grown rapidly since 2022, with most country clubs and several public facilities (including Solomon Calhoun Community Center) adding dedicated courts. The Player's Community Center and Ponte Vedra Beach YMCA offer fitness facilities accessible without country club membership.

Parks and Trails

The Guana Tolomato Matanzas National Estuarine Research Reserve sits at the southern end of Ponte Vedra Beach and offers over 9 miles of trails, kayak launches, bird-watching, and undeveloped beach. The Davis Park area near PVHS provides athletic fields, playgrounds, and walking paths.

HOA & CDD Information

HOA and CDD costs in Ponte Vedra Beach vary more than in almost any other Jacksonville-area submarket. The structure depends entirely on whether you're buying inside a master-planned gated community or in an older non-gated neighborhood.

Older Non-Gated Neighborhoods

Homes along the original Ponte Vedra Boulevard, San Juan Drive, and other historic streets often have minimal or no HOA fees. Some have voluntary neighborhood associations charging $100-$500/year. Others have no formal HOA at all. There are also no CDD fees in Ponte Vedra Beach proper because the area pre-dates Florida's CDD financing model (Community Development Districts, used to finance new infrastructure in master-planned communities, weren't common in Florida until the 1980s and weren't applied to the older parts of Ponte Vedra Beach).

Gated Country Club Communities

Inside Marsh Landing, The Plantation, Sawgrass Country Club, and Sawgrass Players Club, expect annual HOA fees of $3,000-$8,000+ plus optional country club initiation fees and monthly dues. Sawgrass Players Club initiation fees can exceed $100,000 with monthly dues of $1,000-$1,500. The Plantation initiation is in a similar range. Marsh Landing operates on a more modest initiation model.

What HOA Fees Typically Cover

  • Gated entry security and 24/7 staffing
  • Private road maintenance, lighting, and landscaping
  • Community amenities (pools, tennis, fitness centers)
  • Architectural review and exterior standards enforcement
  • Reserve funding for major repairs (gates, signage, common areas)

Restrictions and Architectural Guidelines

Gated communities in Ponte Vedra Beach maintain strict architectural review standards. Exterior paint color, roofing material, landscaping, mailboxes, fencing, holiday decorations, and even vehicles parked overnight are commonly regulated. Rental policies vary: Sawgrass Players Club restricts short-term rentals heavily, The Plantation allows limited rentals with HOA approval, and many private street homes east of A1A allow weekly or monthly rentals.

Commute Analysis

Ponte Vedra Beach has one of the more challenging commute profiles in the Jacksonville MSA because the geography forces nearly all traffic through one of three corridors: JTB (J. Turner Butler Boulevard / SR-202), Highway A1A through the beaches, or Highway 9B through inland St. Johns.

DestinationDistanceOff-PeakRush Hour
Downtown Jacksonville22 miles30 min45-55 min
Mayo Clinic Jacksonville15 miles20 min30-35 min
St. Johns Town Center12 miles18 min30-35 min
Atlantic Beach3-5 miles10 min15 min
Jacksonville Beach5-8 miles10-15 min20 min
JAX International Airport35 miles40 min50-65 min
Nocatee Town Center5-8 miles12-15 min20 min
St. Augustine Historic Downtown25 miles30 min40 min

JTB is the primary east-west corridor, connecting Ponte Vedra Beach to the southside Jacksonville employment centers (Mayo, Deerwood, Town Center, Southside). Most professional commuters use it daily. Morning peak (7-9 AM westbound) and evening peak (4-6 PM eastbound) add 15-25 minutes to off-peak times.

Highway A1A connects Ponte Vedra Beach to Atlantic Beach, Jacksonville Beach, and Mayport to the north, or south to St. Augustine. It's the slower scenic route. Most beach-corridor traffic uses A1A.

9B and I-95 are the inland alternatives, used by buyers commuting south to St. Johns County employment centers or north to downtown Jacksonville via I-295.

Shopping and Dining

Grocery

Publix Sawgrass Village, Publix Ponte Vedra Beach, Whole Foods at St. Johns Town Center (12 miles), Trader Joe's at St. Johns Town Center, Fresh Market at Sawgrass Village, and multiple smaller specialty grocers. Costco and Sam's Club are 15-20 minutes inland via JTB.

Restaurants

Ponte Vedra Beach restaurants concentrate in three areas: Sawgrass Village (the original commercial corridor with Casa Maria, Caps on the Water, Restaurant Medure, BB's), the A1A corridor (Pusser's Bar, Bistro Aix, Mojo No. 4, Cantina Louie), and the Sawgrass Marriott complex near TPC Sawgrass. Major destination restaurants include 95 Cordova at Casa Monica (in St. Augustine), Ovinté at Marsh Landing, and the various Sawgrass Marriott venues. Casual options include First Watch, Metro Diner, Beachside Seafood, and the Sawgrass Country Club Grille.

Coffee Shops

Local coffee culture is strong. Maple Street Biscuit Company, Southern Grounds (Sawgrass Village location), Bold Bean Coffee, Foundation Coffee, and several Starbucks locations. Mid-morning meetings frequently happen at Southern Grounds or Starbucks Sawgrass Village.

Healthcare

Mayo Clinic Jacksonville (15 miles, 20-25 min) is the regional anchor and one of the top hospital systems in the United States. Baptist South and Baptist Beaches both serve the area for non-Mayo care. Specialty practices line A1A and the JTB corridor. Ponte Vedra Beach has direct local access to dermatology, dentistry, orthopedics, and primary care without needing to drive to Jacksonville.

Entertainment

St. Johns Town Center (12 miles) is the regional shopping destination with Apple Store, Nordstrom, Louis Vuitton, multiple high-end retailers, and the AMC Town Center 14 theater. The Ponte Vedra Concert Hall hosts touring acts. The annual Players Championship at TPC Sawgrass draws international visitors each March.

Pros and Cons

Advantages

  • Top-tier St. Johns County public schools, consistently ranked among Florida's best
  • No state income tax, lower property tax burden than coastal markets in NJ, CT, NY, MA
  • Mayo Clinic Jacksonville: world-class healthcare within 20-25 minutes
  • Direct beach access without high-rise commercial development
  • Stable real estate values protected by inventory constraint and school quality
  • Walkable beach paths in most neighborhoods east of A1A
  • Concentration of championship golf, tennis, and country club amenities
  • Strong nonprofit and arts community (Cultural Center at Ponte Vedra Beach)
  • Established neighborhoods with mature tree canopy and curated streetscapes
  • Low crime rate compared to Jacksonville MSA averages

Potential Drawbacks

  • High entry price: $700K+ for any single-family home, $1M+ for established neighborhoods
  • Limited inventory across most price points; choices are narrow
  • Insurance costs are high: flood, hurricane, and homeowners insurance combined can exceed $8K/yr on coastal homes
  • Hurricane exposure: evacuation zones cover most of east-of-A1A
  • Commute pinch points on JTB and A1A during rush hour and major events
  • Limited public transit; functionally car-dependent
  • Older homes (pre-2000) may have outdated layouts, septic systems, or hurricane preparation issues
  • Smaller stock of new construction inside 32082
  • Country club initiation fees and waitlists at top private clubs
  • Young-family peer density is lower than in master-planned communities like Nocatee or Tamaya

Ponte Vedra Beach vs. Comparable Communities

Buyers comparing Ponte Vedra Beach typically also look at 3-4 alternatives. Here's how the math actually pencils:

CommunityMedian PriceSchoolsBeach AccessLifestyle Fit
Ponte Vedra Beach (32082)$998K – $1.09MSt. Johns County A-ratedDirect oceanEstablished luxury coastal
Nocatee (32081)$565K – $850KSt. Johns County A-ratedBeach via splash park; ocean drive 15 minNew construction master-planned, family-heavy
Atlantic Beach$700K – $1.5MDuval County (varies, generally B/C)Direct oceanWalkable beach town, restaurant scene
Jacksonville Beach$575K – $1.2MDuval County (varies)Direct oceanYounger, more density, party-friendly
Sawgrass Country Club (within 32082)$650K – $3M+St. Johns A-ratedShared with PVBPrivate gated club, golf-centric

Ponte Vedra Beach vs. Nocatee

Nocatee is Ponte Vedra Beach's biggest geographic and demographic competitor. Same county, same school district, fundamentally different lifestyle. Nocatee is newer (built since 2007), more family-dense (younger median age, more kids per household), heavier on master-planned amenities (splash water park, town center, walking trails), and significantly less expensive per square foot. Nocatee buyers want resort-style amenities and a built-in community. Ponte Vedra Beach buyers want privacy, established trees, beach proximity, and a more curated luxury feel.

Ponte Vedra Beach vs. Atlantic Beach

Atlantic Beach is just north across the St. Johns County line into Duval County. Lower prices, more walkable downtown energy (especially around the Atlantic Beach Country Club and the downtown core near Atlantic Boulevard), but Duval County schools are not at the St. Johns level. Atlantic Beach often appeals to younger professionals and people who prioritize beach culture over school quality.

Ponte Vedra Beach vs. Sawgrass Country Club

Sawgrass Country Club is a community inside Ponte Vedra Beach. The comparison is really: do I want a non-gated established home with a coastal walk-over, or do I want full-club gated living with a championship golf course and tennis program? Sawgrass CC dues add $1,000+/month to ownership cost but offer access to the country club amenities. This is a lifestyle choice, not a price decision.

Hidden Things Buyers Should Know

Most relocating buyers do not learn these things until after closing. They are not deal-breakers, but they shape the decision.

Traffic During The Players Championship Week

Every March, TPC Sawgrass hosts The Players. Traffic on JTB and A1A approaches gridlock from Tuesday to Sunday of tournament week. Local schools usually adjust schedules. Some neighborhoods restrict access. Plan around it. Many residents either travel during this week or rent out homes for premium short-term rates.

Future Development Plans

Most of Ponte Vedra Beach proper (32082) is built out and zoned to remain low-density. The major development activity is happening in adjacent areas: Nocatee Town Center expansion in 32081, the build-out of TwentyMile village, and continued infill in the corridor south of CR-210. Buyers concerned about future density should know that 32082 itself is mostly protected by existing zoning and the JTB/A1A geographic constraints.

School Zoning Boundary Changes

St. Johns County has rezoned high school attendance boundaries multiple times since 2022 to accommodate growth. The opening of Beachside High School in 2022 pulled several Ponte Vedra Beach addresses out of the PVHS zone. The district has signaled additional changes may be needed by 2027-2028. If school attendance is the primary purchase driver, verify zoning at the specific address and assume some future risk of reassignment.

Insurance Considerations

Insurance costs are higher in Ponte Vedra Beach than buyers from outside Florida expect. Wind/hurricane insurance is essentially mandatory and not always bundled with standard homeowners. Flood insurance is required for federally-backed mortgages on properties in AE flood zones. The Florida property insurance market has tightened significantly since 2022, with many national carriers reducing coastal exposure. Get an insurance quote during your due diligence period, not after closing. Average all-in insurance costs for a $1M Ponte Vedra Beach home typically run $6,000-$12,000/year depending on construction year, flood zone, distance to coast, and roof age.

Resale Considerations

Resale demand is strong but selective. The best resale homes are: post-2010 construction, hurricane-impact windows, no flood-zone designation, golf-course or water view, 3,500+ sqft, and located in the established gated communities or on premier non-gated streets. Older homes (pre-2000) with original kitchens, original windows, or septic systems can sit on market longer and trade at noticeable discounts. If you're buying with a 3-5 year horizon, prioritize the resale-friendly characteristics over a "great deal" on an older home that will need major updates before resale.

Lot Premiums

Premium lots in Ponte Vedra Beach carry significant pricing impact: oceanfront commands a 2-3x premium versus inland comparable. Direct golf-course frontage in Marsh Landing or The Plantation adds 15-30%. Wide-water (Intracoastal Waterway) frontage adds 20-40%. A buyer focused only on the house may overpay for the lot premium without understanding the resale dynamics of premium-lot vs interior-lot.

Builder Quality Observations

For homes built in the 1980s and 1990s, the major Ponte Vedra Beach builders included Arvida, Levitt, and various local custom builders. Quality varies. Original-construction homes in Marsh Landing and Sawgrass CC tend to hold up well; The Plantation original homes are well-regarded. Some 1980s subdivisions used materials and methods that have aged poorly (cast-iron drain lines, original electrical panels, original roof underlayment). Get a thorough inspection with a Florida-specialized inspector who understands hurricane wind, sinkhole risk, and termite history.

Momentum Expert Insight

Jon Brooks · Co-Founder, Momentum Realty

Who should actually buy in Ponte Vedra Beach

I've been brokering Northeast Florida real estate for over a decade. I've watched buyers spend $1.5M on a Ponte Vedra Beach home that ended up wrong for their family, and I've watched buyers find a $750K home in Sawgrass Village that became the best decision they ever made. The price is the same data point; the fit is different. Here's how I sort buyers when they call me about Ponte Vedra Beach:

Buy here if: Your top three priorities are public school quality, beach access, and long-term value preservation. You have a household income of $250K+ or significant savings. You're comfortable with a luxury market that doesn't have a deep discount waiting around the corner. You want established neighborhoods with mature trees and you're not chasing master-planned amenity volume.

Look elsewhere if: You want master-planned amenities and a built-in social network of young families (look at Nocatee). You want walkable beach-town energy with restaurants and bars at your doorstep (look at Atlantic Beach or Jacksonville Beach). You're buying as a first home and your budget is under $700K (look at Mandarin or San Marco). You want new construction without driving 20 minutes to the beach (look at Tamaya, Beachwalk, or eTown).

Long-term outlook: Ponte Vedra Beach is one of the most defensible real estate positions in Florida. The combination of geographic constraint (you can't make more A1A oceanfront), school district premium, and demographic stability protects pricing through cycles. The 10-year forward outlook is for steady appreciation in the 3-5% annual range, modest by Florida boom-period standards, but with low downside risk. The actual risk is not price decline. It's insurance cost increases, which are eroding effective housing affordability across coastal Florida and may continue to do so.

Value proposition: The St. Johns County school premium alone is worth $200K-$400K of home equity over a 10-year ownership window for families with school-age kids. Add coastal access and Mayo Clinic proximity and the long-term value proposition holds even at the elevated entry pricing. The mistake I see relocating buyers make is treating Ponte Vedra Beach like a vacation purchase decision (chasing the prettiest oceanfront listing) instead of a relocation purchase decision (matching the home to the family's actual daily life over the next 5-10 years).

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the median home price in Ponte Vedra Beach?
As of April 2026, the median list price is approximately $998,000-$1,010,000 for all home types in ZIP 32082, with single-family closed sales running around $1,089,000 (St. Johns County MLS, January 2026). The Zillow Home Value Index for the area is $805,402. Prices have softened roughly 6% year-over-year as interest rates pressured demand, but well-prepared homes still sell near list. Price per square foot averages $441.
Is Ponte Vedra Beach in St. Johns County or Duval County?
St. Johns County. This is the single most important fact about Ponte Vedra Beach for any family with kids. It separates Ponte Vedra Beach from neighboring Atlantic Beach and Jacksonville Beach (both Duval County) and is the basis for the school district premium that drives much of the pricing.
What ZIP code is Ponte Vedra Beach?
Ponte Vedra Beach uses ZIP code 32082. The neighboring ZIP code 32081 covers Nocatee and the inland Ponte Vedra area, which is often confused with Ponte Vedra Beach. Both share St. Johns County school district benefits but have different geographies, age of housing stock, and price profiles.
What's the difference between Ponte Vedra and Ponte Vedra Beach?
Ponte Vedra Beach (32082) is the established coastal community along Highway A1A, founded in 1928 and home to TPC Sawgrass and the PGA Tour headquarters. Ponte Vedra (32081, without "Beach") is the inland area west of the Intracoastal Waterway, dominated by the master-planned Nocatee community developed since 2007. Same county, same schools, very different products.
How are the schools in Ponte Vedra Beach?
Among the highest-rated in Florida. Ponte Vedra High School ranks #32-35 in Florida (US News). St. Johns County overall is consistently ranked the #1 or #2 public school district in Florida. Reading proficiency averages 72%, math proficiency 59%, and the county graduation rate is 94%, well above state averages.
Is Ponte Vedra Beach a good place to retire?
Yes. The median age in 32082 is 52 with 29% of residents over 65. The combination of no state income tax, world-class Mayo Clinic healthcare 20-25 minutes north, walkable beach access, and golf-centric amenities make it one of the top retirement destinations in Florida. The trade-off is high home prices ($1M+ for single-family) and limited inventory of right-sized retirement homes.
What HOA fees should I expect?
It varies dramatically. Older non-gated neighborhoods have $0-$500/year HOA fees or none at all. Gated communities like Marsh Landing, The Plantation, and Sawgrass Country Club typically run $3,000-$8,000+ annually. Sawgrass Players Club with full club membership exceeds $10,000/year. Always confirm HOA structure for the specific community before making an offer.
Are there CDD fees in Ponte Vedra Beach?
Generally no. CDDs (Community Development Districts, used to finance master-planned community infrastructure through a special tax assessment) weren't applied to the older parts of Ponte Vedra Beach proper because the area was developed before the CDD financing model became common. CDD fees are very common in the adjacent Nocatee (32081), where they typically run $1,500-$3,500/year on top of property taxes.
Is Ponte Vedra Beach in a flood zone?
Portions are. Oceanfront and near-ocean properties along A1A and Ponte Vedra Boulevard are typically in FEMA AE flood zones. Homes near tidal marshes or the Intracoastal can also be in flood zones. Homes built west of A1A on higher elevation generally fall in lower-risk X zones. Always pull the property-specific FEMA flood map before closing. Flood insurance for AE-zone homes typically runs $2,500-$8,000+/year.
Is Ponte Vedra Beach safe?
Ponte Vedra Beach has one of the lowest crime rates in the Jacksonville MSA. Violent crime is rare. The most common reported crimes are property-related (vehicle break-ins in beach access parking, residential burglaries in non-gated communities). Gated communities report very low crime rates due to access control.
How far is Ponte Vedra Beach from the beach?
Ponte Vedra Beach is on the beach. Homes east of A1A typically have walking access (5-15 minute walk). Homes west of A1A in Sawgrass Country Club, Marsh Landing, and The Plantation are 5-10 minute drives to the nearest beach access. Nocatee residents (32081) are 15-20 minutes from the nearest beach.
How far is Ponte Vedra Beach from Jacksonville Airport?
Approximately 35 miles, 40-55 minutes depending on traffic. Most Ponte Vedra Beach residents going to JAX use I-95 north via JTB or Highway A1A through the beaches. Mayo Clinic Jacksonville is much closer, at 20-25 minutes north.
What's the commute to downtown Jacksonville?
Approximately 22 miles, 30 minutes off-peak, 45-55 minutes during rush hour. JTB (J. Turner Butler Boulevard) is the main commute corridor and gets congested during 7-9 AM westbound and 4-6 PM eastbound. Most working professionals in Ponte Vedra Beach commute to the Southside/Town Center/Mayo Clinic employment cluster (15-25 minutes) rather than downtown proper.
Is Ponte Vedra Beach gated?
The community as a whole is not gated, but it contains multiple gated sub-communities: Marsh Landing Country Club, The Plantation at Ponte Vedra, Sawgrass Country Club, Sawgrass Players Club, Old Ponte Vedra, and Ocean's Edge. Buyers seeking gated security focus on these communities. The broader Ponte Vedra Beach area along A1A is open access.
Is Ponte Vedra Beach good for families?
Yes, but with caveats. The schools are exceptional and the beach lifestyle is family-friendly. The caveat: family-aged peer density is lower than in master-planned communities like Nocatee. Families wanting their kids surrounded by lots of similar-aged kids on neighborhood streets often choose Nocatee over Ponte Vedra Beach proper.
Is Ponte Vedra Beach a Florida resident or non-resident community?
Predominantly Florida resident. About 82% of housing units are owner-occupied. The second-home and seasonal owner segment is meaningful (~5-8%) but smaller than in markets like Naples or Vero Beach. Most Ponte Vedra Beach owners use the home as a primary or near-primary residence.
Can you rent in Ponte Vedra Beach?
Yes, though rental inventory is limited. Long-term single-family rentals (12-month leases) typically run $4,000-$10,000+/month depending on size and proximity to ocean. Short-term and vacation rentals are restricted in most gated communities but allowed in many non-gated A1A corridor properties. The Plantation and Sawgrass Players Club have strict short-term rental policies.
What's the property tax rate?
St. Johns County's effective property tax rate is approximately 0.85-0.95% of assessed value, which is lower than the Florida state average (1.02%) and dramatically lower than coastal markets in CT, NJ, NY, MA. On a $1M Ponte Vedra Beach home, expect property taxes in the $8,500-$9,500/year range, plus any non-ad-valorem assessments.
Are there 55+ communities in Ponte Vedra Beach?
Not strictly within Ponte Vedra Beach proper (32082). The closest age-restricted community is Del Webb Nocatee, which is in 32081. Many Ponte Vedra Beach retirees choose Sawgrass Country Club villas or condos at Sawgrass Village instead of 55+ communities because they value mixed-age living.
What is the hurricane risk?
Ponte Vedra Beach is in a hurricane evacuation zone. Most east-of-A1A homes are in Zone A (mandatory evacuation in major storm scenarios). The area has weathered multiple major storms historically (Matthew 2016, Irma 2017, Dorian 2019, Ian 2022 indirectly). Building code requirements since 2002 have been strict on wind and impact ratings. Homes built post-2002 generally perform very well in hurricanes.
What's the best part of Ponte Vedra Beach?
It depends on priority. For schools and family living: Marsh Landing or the residential corridors feeding Ocean Palms Elementary. For oceanfront luxury: Ponte Vedra Boulevard and San Juan Drive. For golf-centric living: Sawgrass Country Club or Sawgrass Players Club. For lower-density established luxury: The Plantation. For value: the non-gated streets west of A1A near Sawgrass Village.
Is Ponte Vedra Beach walkable?
Some parts. Sawgrass Village has walkable restaurants, shopping, and grocery. Residential streets east of A1A often have walkable beach access. Most of Ponte Vedra Beach is functionally car-dependent for daily errands. Walk Scores for the area typically run 20-40 (car-dependent), with sub-areas like Sawgrass Village scoring higher.
What's the diversity profile?
Ponte Vedra Beach is predominantly White (~85-87%) with growing Hispanic (~6%), Asian (~3%), and Black (~2%) populations. Diversity is less than Jacksonville MSA averages. The high schools rate B/B+ on diversity from third-party reviewers like Niche, with growing efforts on inclusion and equity programming.
Are there country clubs and how do I join?
Yes, multiple. Ponte Vedra Inn & Club, Sawgrass Country Club, Sawgrass Players Club, The Plantation, and Marsh Landing all have private membership. Each has its own initiation fee structure (typically $40,000-$150,000+) and monthly dues ($800-$1,500+). Membership often requires sponsorship by existing members. Real estate brokers familiar with the community can sometimes facilitate introductions, but membership is not automatic with home purchase except in Sawgrass Players Club (mandatory).
What are the major employers in the area?
Mayo Clinic Jacksonville (largest local employer at 25,000+ employees), PGA Tour (1,000+ employees at Ponte Vedra Beach HQ), Sawgrass Marriott, Florida Blue, Fidelity Investments (regional offices), CSX, multiple smaller financial services firms, and a growing concentration of remote-work professionals. Most Ponte Vedra Beach commuters work in the Southside/Town Center cluster (15-25 minute commute) rather than downtown Jacksonville.
How does Ponte Vedra Beach compare to Nocatee?
Same county, same schools, very different community. Ponte Vedra Beach (32082) is older, established, with direct beach access, higher prices ($1M+ single-family), and a coastal luxury feel. Nocatee (32081) is newer (since 2007), master-planned, more family-dense, with resort-style amenities like the Splash Water Park, and lower prices ($565K-$850K). Both share St. Johns County A-rated schools. Choose Ponte Vedra Beach for established prestige and beach proximity. Choose Nocatee for newer construction and built-in community amenities.
What's the best time of year to buy?
Inventory peaks in March-May (typical Florida seller season). Demand peaks in October-March (snowbird season). The strongest negotiating leverage for buyers is typically September-November when sellers have been on market for the summer slow period. The weakest negotiating leverage is January-March when out-of-state buyers come to look.
Should I buy oceanfront in Ponte Vedra Beach?
Maybe. Oceanfront pricing has held strong but carries the highest insurance costs, the highest property tax burden, and the most exposure to hurricane and erosion risk. Get a long-horizon view of your ownership plans. If you'll own 15+ years and can absorb cyclical insurance and storm-related repair costs, oceanfront tends to be a strong wealth preserver. If you'll own 3-5 years, the carrying costs may erode the appreciation upside.

If you're researching Ponte Vedra Beach, you're probably also looking at these adjacent topics. We've written extensively on each.

Important Information & Disclosures

No Reliance

The information presented in this Ponte Vedra Beach guide is for general informational and educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional advice and should not be relied upon as the sole basis for any buying, selling, financial, legal, tax, or investment decision. Market conditions, prices, fees, school assignments, zoning, flood designations, and community characteristics change frequently. Information that is accurate as of the publication date may be outdated by the time you read this guide.

Independent Verification Required

Buyers, sellers, and other readers must independently verify all property-specific information before acting. This includes (but is not limited to): the specific school attendance zone for any address (verify with the school district), FEMA flood zone designation (verify with FEMA or a flood insurance specialist), HOA dues and CDD assessments (verify with the HOA management company and the county tax assessor), property taxes (verify with the county tax assessor), insurance costs (obtain a quote from a licensed insurance agent), deed restrictions and easements (verify through a title search), and any other community fact relevant to your decision.

Data Sources & Limitations

Statistics and market data in this guide are sourced from publicly available reports including the Northeast Florida Association of Realtors (NEFAR), US Census Bureau American Community Survey, Florida Department of Education, Niche, US News & World Report, GreatSchools, FEMA, Realtor.com, Zillow, Redfin, and other third-party aggregators. Some historical figures are approximations derived from monthly market reports rather than primary-source archive pulls. Momentum Realty makes reasonable efforts to verify data but does not warrant its accuracy, completeness, or timeliness. See our data methodology page for chart-specific source notes.

Personal Commentary, Not Professional Advice

Sections of this guide that include personal opinion or market commentary by Jon Brooks (including the "Momentum Expert Insight" section and similar narrative content) reflect personal observations based on local real estate experience. They are not investment, legal, tax, financial, or insurance advice. For guidance specific to your situation, consult a licensed real estate attorney, certified public accountant, licensed financial advisor, licensed insurance agent, or licensed real estate professional.

Licensing & Fair Housing

Momentum Realty is a real estate brokerage licensed in the states of Florida and Georgia. All real estate services described herein are provided through licensed real estate professionals. Momentum Realty is an Equal Housing Opportunity broker and does not discriminate based on race, color, religion, sex (including gender identity and sexual orientation), handicap, familial status, national origin, or any other class protected by federal, state, or local fair housing law.

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Additional Disclosures

For full disclosures regarding MLS performance statistics, brokerage rankings, awards sourcing, production claims, and other statistical references used across movewithmomentum.com, see our Disclosures & Statistical Sources page. Questions, corrections, or concerns may be directed to jon@movewithmomentum.com.

Last updated: May 2026. Information accurate to the best of our knowledge as of publication. Market data and community details subject to change without notice.