Reed Island. Know what matters before you buy.

Island-style river pocket · Off Fort Caroline Road, on the St. Johns · Arlington/Fort Caroline corridor

An island-style pocket of homes on the St. Johns River off Fort Caroline Road, where a literal handful of riverfront addresses carry private docks and big-water views, entry runs roughly $500K and up, and the same open water commands $1M+ along the Mandarin and Ortega banks.

LocationOff Fort Caroline Road, on the St. Johns
HighlightsA handfulOf river-pocket addresses
NotesBig waterOpen St. Johns views
WaterPrivate docksOn the riverfront tier
Waterfront$500K+Verified entry context (riverfront higher)
CDDNo CDD
SchoolsSt. Johns County SchoolsConfirm zoning by address
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A pocket this small almost never makes the portals in time. Tell us your budget and your boat; we watch the handful of addresses that matter and price the dock, the flood zone, and the thin comps before you offer.

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A Momentum Realty Reed Island specialist will reach out personally, usually the same day. Check your inbox for a confirmation.

The Homes

Product

Single-family homes in a small island-style river pocket: a limited riverfront tier with private docks and big-water views, plus river-access homes on the surrounding streets

Vintage

Public records on Reed Island Drive show much of the street built in the early 2000s, with some later builds; ages vary home to home, so verify each parcel

Range

Verified context puts the pocket at roughly $500K and up, with interior-street sales in the $400s in recent records and the riverfront-and-dock tier trading well above, into seven figures on recent listings

Waterfront

The headline tier is open St. Johns frontage with private docks; bulkhead, permit, and depth diligence drive value as much as square footage

Costs & Governance

HOA

Listing records are thin and inconsistent on association dues here, with some showing none at all; confirm whether an HOA exists, what it charges, and what it covers directly from the title work before you offer

CDD

No CDD has surfaced in listing data for this established pocket; verify the actual parcel tax bill to be certain

Flood & dock costs

Riverfront Duval lots carry meaningful flood and wind exposure that varies parcel by parcel; budget a bindable flood quote and, on dock homes, a marine-grade inspection before the water prices itself into your offer

Amenities & Lifestyle

The river

The amenity is the St. Johns itself: open, navigable big water off the back of the riverfront tier

The docks

Private docks on the riverfront homes put the boat at the house, not at a marina

The run

Quick water access toward the Intracoastal and downriver to Mayport and the jetties for offshore days

The preserve

Fort Caroline National Memorial and the Timucuan Preserve sit minutes away as the permanent backdrop

Location & Nearby

Setting

An island-style pocket off Fort Caroline Road in the Arlington/Fort Caroline corridor of Jacksonville, on the St. Johns River near its run to the sea

Access

Close to I-295 for the airport and the beaches; downtown Jacksonville and St. Johns Town Center are each roughly 15-20 minutes by car

Schools

Duval County Public Schools, with attendance zones set by address; confirm the current zoning for any specific home

Public schools & ratings

Reed Island is zoned to Duval County Public Schools, and the Arlington corridor's school perceptions are part of why riverfront here trades at a discount to the famous banks: assignments rate modestly, and many families plan around Duval's magnet programs, charters, or private options in Arlington and toward the Beaches. Confirm the current assignment for any specific address.

SchoolGreatSchoolsLinks
Zoned Duval elementary (by address)See profileGreatSchools
Zoned Duval middle (by address)See profileGreatSchools
Zoned Duval high (by address)See profileGreatSchools

Attendance zones in this corridor have shifted over the years and ratings vary by source; treat them as a starting point and confirm zoning with Duval County Public Schools for the specific address before you offer.

Reed Island is one of the smallest riverfront stories in Jacksonville: an island-style pocket of homes off Fort Caroline Road where a literal handful of addresses sit on open St. Johns water with private docks, near the river's run to the sea. Entry runs roughly $500K and up while the same big water starts at $1M+ on the Mandarin and Ortega banks. The catch is scarcity itself: data is thin, turnover is rare, and comp discipline is everything. This guide covers all of it honestly.

The short version

Reed Island is scarcity in its purest Jacksonville form: a handful of river addresses, big water, and almost no turnover. The short version:

  • A small island-style pocket of single-family homes on the St. Johns River off Fort Caroline Road, in the Arlington/Fort Caroline corridor of Jacksonville
  • The headline tier is open riverfront with private docks and big-water views, close to the river's run toward the Intracoastal, Mayport, and the jetties
  • Verified context puts the pocket at roughly $500K and up; interior-street records show sales in the $400s in recent years, and the riverfront tier has listed into seven figures
  • Public records on these streets show much of the housing built in the early 2000s, with later builds mixed in; verify each parcel individually
  • Association data is thin and inconsistent, with some records showing no HOA at all; confirm dues, coverage, and any access rules from the title work, not portals
  • The comparison that matters: the same wide, navigable St. Johns commands $1M+ along Mandarin and Ortega, which makes this corridor the value riverfront play
  • This is a thin market by design: a handful of addresses, rare listings, and a comp set small enough that one careless comparison can swing a price six figures
Quick verdict: is Reed Island right for you?

Great if you want

  • Open St. Johns River frontage with private docks near the river's run to the sea
  • A literal handful of addresses: scarcity the market cannot manufacture more of
  • Roughly half the riverfront entry of the Mandarin, Ortega, and San Marco banks
  • A light carrying picture: no CDD surfacing in records, thin or no HOA per listing data
  • I-295, downtown, Town Center, and the beaches all within an easy radius

Look elsewhere if you want

  • Inventory you can shop this weekend (turnover here is rare by design)
  • Polished corridor retail and dining (Arlington services are functional, not fashionable)
  • Top-rated zoned schools without planning magnets, charters, or private
  • A gate, clubhouse, or resort amenity campus (the river is the amenity)
  • Deep, reliable comp data (a thin market demands patience and discipline)
River-access interior homes
$400s-$500s (recent records)

Single-family homes on the streets around the riverfront tier, much of the stock early-2000s vintage. Condition and big-system age move price inside this band more than square footage does.

Early-2000s vintage · corridor value
River-view & premium interior
Upper band, by parcel

Homes that capture water views or superior lots without true frontage. Thin data makes this tier parcel-specific; price it off what the view and the lot verifiably add, never off riverfront comps.

View premium · verify by parcel
Riverfront with private dock
Seven-figure listings have appeared

The handful of open-water addresses with docks. These trade rarely, list rarely, and carry premiums only tier-matched riverfront comps can price; recent listing activity has reached well into seven figures.

Open St. Johns · a literal handful

Bands reflect public sale records and listing context in a very small pocket with rare turnover; prices move and data is thin. Price any specific home off tier-matched, date-adjusted comparable sales, never the corridor average.

Recently sold in Reed Island

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.

River-access interior · early-2000s
4 bed · corridor value tier
Sold price $4XX,000
🔒 Unlock the real number
Premium interior · updated
Upper interior band
Sold price $5XX,000
🔒 Unlock the real number
Riverfront · private dock
Open water · rare listing
Sold price $1,XXX,000
🔒 Unlock the real number
Want the verified closed prices for the exact homes you care about in Reed Island?
See What Buyers Actually Paid →
DestinationApprox. distanceApprox. drive
Downtown Jacksonville~10 mi~15-20 min
St. Johns Town Center~9 mi~15 min
Jacksonville beaches~13 mi~20 min
Fort Caroline National Memorial / Timucuan Preserve~2-4 mi~5-10 min
I-295 East BeltwayMinutesQuick access
Intracoastal Waterway (by water)MinutesVia the river
Mayport & the jetties (by water)DownriverA short run

Distances are approximate and Fort Caroline Road and Monument Road traffic varies at peak hours; drive your real commute at your real times.

The water commute is the point on the riverfront tier: this stretch of the St. Johns sits near the river's run to the sea, so the Intracoastal is minutes away and Mayport and the jetties are a short run downriver. River conditions and wind vary; learn the water before you rely on it.

$500K+
Verified entry context for the pocket
$400s
Interior-street sales in recent public records
Seven figures
Where riverfront-and-dock listings have reached
A handful
Riverfront addresses in the pocket
● scarcity is the story
Price tiers
River-access interior homes
$400s-$500s
River-view & premium interior
Upper band
Riverfront with dock
Seven figures
Relative bands from public records and listing context in a pocket with rare turnover; frontage, dock condition, flood zone, and big-system age move homes between rungs more than square footage does.

In a market this thin the comp set is everything: a tier-matched, date-adjusted analysis, with the frontage, the dock, and the flood premium priced explicitly, separates a fair price from an expensive guess.

Want the real Reed Island comps and a full carrying-cost read, not a Zestimate?
Get Real Comparable Sales →

The 60-Second Overview

Every waterfront market has a community so small it barely registers on the portals, and in Jacksonville one of the purest examples is Reed Island: an island-style pocket of homes on the St. Johns River off Fort Caroline Road, in the Arlington/Fort Caroline corridor. The headline tier is a literal handful of riverfront addresses with private docks and big-water views, sitting near the river's run to the sea, which puts the Intracoastal minutes away by water and Mayport and the jetties a short run downriver.

The verified picture, stated honestly because the data here is thin: the pocket runs roughly $500K and up, public records show interior-street sales in the $400s in recent years, and the riverfront-and-dock tier has listed well into seven figures. Public records on these streets show much of the housing built in the early 2000s, with later builds mixed in. Hold all of that against the rest of the river: on the Mandarin, Ortega, and San Marco banks, comparable open-water frontage generally starts around $1M and climbs fast.

So the story has two layers. The first is the familiar Arlington riverfront discount, the same one we decode in the St. Johns Landing Estates guide next door: same river, corridor pricing. The second is what makes Reed Island its own animal: scarcity so extreme the market behaves differently here. A handful of addresses, years between riverfront trades, and a comp set thin enough that discipline, not enthusiasm, decides whether you pay a fair price. Know what matters before you buy, because in a market this small there is no crowd to correct your mistake.

Reed Island is scarcity in its purest Jacksonville form: a handful of river addresses with private docks on big water, at a corridor price the famous banks abandoned years ago.

The Fee Picture: Thin Records, Honest Method

For a riverfront pocket, the carrying structure here looks refreshingly light, and we will tell you exactly how much of that is verified. Listing records are thin and inconsistent on association dues, and some records show no HOA at all, which in an established early-2000s pocket can genuinely mean no association, a voluntary one, or simply stale portal data. We do not guess on this line: we confirm whether an association exists, what it charges, and what it covers from the title work and seller disclosures before any offer, because access rules on docks and any shared waterfront infrastructure can ride on it.

Two more lines matter and neither belongs to an HOA. First, no CDD has surfaced in listing data for this pocket, which keeps the tax bill simpler than the newer masterplans east of here, but we verify the actual parcel bill rather than assume. Second, the dominant cost variable on big-water lots is insurance: flood and wind designations vary parcel by parcel on this riverbank, and the difference between a Zone X home and a waterline Zone AE home is real monthly money. That quote belongs inside your inspection window, not after closing.

What we pull before any offer: the title work and disclosures for any association, easement, or shared-access arrangement; the actual parcel tax bill (to confirm no CDD or special assessment); the FEMA flood designation for the exact address; and a bindable flood and wind quote. On riverfront homes, add the dock and boathouse permits, the bulkhead condition, and a marine-grade inspection.
Want the association picture, tax bill, and flood quote for a specific Reed Island home, verified before you offer?
Get the Document Pull →

The Island: Access, and Scarcity You Cannot Manufacture

Start with what the name promises. Reed Island is an island-style pocket: a small cluster of streets off Fort Caroline Road shaped by the St. Johns, where the riverfront tier backs straight onto open water. How the pocket connects to the surrounding grid, and what that means day to day for access, utilities, and storm behavior, is parcel-specific diligence we run on every purchase here rather than something to assume from a name or a listing photo. On a river pocket, the access question and the flood question are cousins, and both get answered in writing during the inspection window.

Now the scarcity, because it is the economic engine of this entire guide. The riverfront tier here is a literal handful of addresses. Not a marketing handful, an actual one. That does three things to the market. First, turnover is rare: years can pass between riverfront trades, so the buyers who win here register their criteria and wait rather than refresh portals. Second, every listing is an event, which tempts buyers into paying scarcity premiums on top of scarcity premiums; the discipline is to price the frontage, the dock, and the condition honestly and let the irreplaceable lot do its own work. Third, the comp set is thin enough to be dangerous: one careless comparison, an interior sale dressed up as a riverfront comp, or a five-year-old trade taken at face value, can swing a number six figures.

The honest counterweight: scarcity cuts both ways. The same thinness that protects value on the way up means slow liquidity when you sell, and a buyer pool narrow enough that pricing mistakes sit on the market. This is a hold-it asset, not a trade-it asset. If your plan needs a quick, liquid exit, the famous banks, with their deeper buyer pools, are the safer riverfront; if your plan is to own big water for years at a corridor price, a pocket this small is exactly where that deal lives.

The River: Docks, Bulkheads, and Flood Honesty

The water here is the genuine article: wide, navigable St. Johns near the river's run to the sea. From the riverfront tier, the Intracoastal is minutes away by water and Mayport and the jetties are a short run downriver, which turns offshore fishing from a production into a morning. For cruisers and sailors, being this close to the river mouth and deep water is precisely the geography the frankly-priced banks upriver cannot offer at any price.

That same big water works the infrastructure hard, so the dock diligence here is non-negotiable. This stretch of the St. Johns is wide, tidal, and exposed to wind fetch, and docks, boathouses, and bulkheads earn their keep. Before any riverfront offer we verify three things: that the dock and any boathouse permits exist and match what was actually built; that the bulkhead or natural bank is sound, because bulkhead replacement is one of the most expensive surprises in waterfront ownership; and that the depth at the dock at low tide serves the boat you actually run, not the boat in the listing photos.

Then the flood layer, without flinching. River-adjacent Duval parcels vary widely: homes in the same pocket can sit in different FEMA zones, and the insurance spread between Zone X and a waterline Zone AE is real monthly money, compounded on an island-style pocket where elevation and storm-surge behavior are address-specific. Jacksonville participates in the FEMA Community Rating System, which earns flood-premium discounts, but the parcel-level designation drives the bill. We pull the designation for the exact address and get a bindable flood and wind quote inside the inspection window, so the true carrying cost is in your math before you commit, never after.

The Homes: A Small Stock Where Every Parcel Is Its Own Decision

The housing stock is single-family, and public records on these streets show much of it built in the early 2000s, with some later builds mixed in. In a pocket this small there is no tract-builder uniformity to lean on: floor plans, build years, finishes, and renovation histories vary house to house, which means every parcel is its own decision and condition moves price as much as square footage does.

The vintage carries a predictable to-do list. Homes built in the early 2000s are crossing the twenty-year mark on roofs, HVAC, and water heaters, and Florida insurers increasingly price roof age directly, sometimes decisively. The two-state market that creates is familiar from the rest of the corridor: updated homes command the top of their tier, original-condition homes trade toward its entry, and the spread between them is roughly a contractor's invoice plus the patience to manage it. On an irreplaceable river-pocket lot, the renovation play is one of our favorite setups: the water, the dock, and the address cannot be built again, while kitchens and roofs can.

The discipline cuts the other way too, and in a thin market it matters more. A renovated interior home is not a riverfront home, a river view is not river frontage, and a riverfront home with a tired bulkhead is not priced like one with verified permits and depth. Comp tier to tier, condition to condition, date-adjusted, and when the in-pocket comp set runs dry, as it often will here, extend it honestly to tier-matched sales in the neighboring river communities rather than stretching a bad in-pocket comp past its date. Supply is the final constraint: register your criteria, set the alert, and be ready to move with full diligence when one of the handful finally lists.

Schools: Plan Them, Honestly

Reed Island is zoned to Duval County Public Schools, with assignments set by address, and we will not dress this up: corridor assignments rate modestly, and the school question is one of the honest reasons riverfront here trades at a discount to the famous banks. The practical pattern among families in this corridor is to plan around Duval's magnet programs, charters, or the private options in Arlington and toward the Beaches, and that plan, its tuition, its logistics, its lottery odds, deserves to be made before the purchase rather than after. It is also fair to note that a meaningful share of the buyer pool for a pocket like this is boat-first and past the school years, which shapes the neighborhood you will actually live in. Assignments change over time; confirm the current zoning for the specific address with the district before you offer.

Relocating with kids and a boat? We will map schools, magnets, docks, and commute in one pass.
Get the Relocation Read →

What Living Here Is Actually Like

Daily life is quiet and water-centered: a small pocket of homes where the river does the work a clubhouse does elsewhere, the boat lives at the dock instead of a marina, and the Timucuan Preserve and Fort Caroline National Memorial sit minutes away as the permanent backdrop. Errands run along Fort Caroline Road and Monument Road; I-295 is minutes away for everything else.

The boating pattern
From the riverfront tier: open water immediately, the Intracoastal minutes away, and the run downriver to Mayport and the jetties for offshore days. Being near the river's run to the sea is the geographic prize here, deep water and the ocean close at hand. This stretch is wide and honest about weather; learn the wind and tide patterns before you rely on them.
The Arlington reality
The corridor is functional: everyday retail, chain dining, and some streets that show their age. Buyers wanting boutique restaurants and walkable polish should weigh that honestly; buyers wanting big water, space, and a fifteen-minute run to St. Johns Town Center usually call it a fair trade, and the trade is exactly what the corridor discount pays you for.
The small-pocket social reality
A handful of addresses means you will know your neighbors, for better and almost never for worse: small river pockets self-select for people who wanted exactly this. It also means no amenity calendar, no clubhouse, and no buffer of anonymity. The river is the common room.
Early-2000s maintenance honesty
Stock of this vintage is crossing the big-system threshold: roofs, HVAC, and water heaters age on their own schedule, and insurers increasingly price roof age directly. On the waterfront, add the dock and bulkhead to that list, salt, tide, and wind fetch work year-round. Get the ages and the maintenance records in writing.

Five Costly Mistakes Reed Island Buyers Make

A tiny riverfront pocket with thin data and a scarcity narrative generates its own failure modes. The five we see:

1

Paying a scarcity premium on top of a scarcity premium

Rare listings tempt buyers to abandon discipline because there may not be another. The lot is already priced for its rarity; your job is to price the frontage, dock, condition, and flood line honestly and refuse to pay twice for the same scarcity.

2

Comping riverfront against interior or view homes

The handful of true riverfront-and-dock homes trade on their own ladder, at a multiple, not a margin, over the surrounding streets. Mixing tiers in a comp set this thin produces six-figure nonsense in both directions.

3

Trusting portal data in a thin market

HOA fields, fee data, and even boundaries are inconsistent in records this sparse. Verify the association picture from title work, the tax bill from the county, and the flood zone from FEMA, never from a listing summary.

4

Buying a dock photo without dock diligence

On wide, tidal, fetch-exposed water, docks and bulkheads work for a living. Verify the permits, inspect the bulkhead, and sound the depth at low tide for your actual draft before the water access prices itself into your offer.

5

Ignoring the exit math

Thin markets are slow in both directions. Buy at a tier-honest price and plan to hold; a scarcity asset bought emotionally and sold urgently is how the discount you loved becomes the discount you give.

Want a tier-matched comp set and the full diligence pull before you offer on a pocket this thin?
See the Whole Market →

Where Value Hides on Reed Island

The frontage is the ladder, verification is the rungs

Value here climbs two variables at once: proximity to open water and how much of the listing story survives verification. River-access homes on the surrounding streets anchor the entry, view and premium-lot homes carry the middle, and the handful of riverfront-and-dock addresses own the top at a multiple. The inefficiency worth hunting is the original-condition home on a strong lot priced timidly: the water and the address are irreplaceable, while the kitchen is a contractor invoice.

The reverse trap is paying verified-riverfront money for an unverified story: a dock without matching permits, a bulkhead past its life, shallow water at low tide, or a flood line that rewrites the carrying cost. In a market with no comp depth to save you, the permits, the survey, and the quotes are the rungs; climb them before the price.

River-access interior, original condition
Updated river-access interior
River-view & premium lots
Riverfront with verified dock

Relative value pressure, not prices. Dock permits, bulkhead condition, verified depth, flood zone, and renovation history can move a home a full rung in either direction, and in a market this thin, often do.

Weighing a rare riverfront listing against the neighboring communities? We will price the frontage, the dock, and the patience on both, honestly.
Get the Tier-Adjusted Comparison →

The Reed Island Buyer Checklist

  • Confirm the association picture from title work and disclosures: whether an HOA exists, what it charges, and what access or dock rules ride on it; portal data here is thin and inconsistent.
  • Read the actual parcel tax bill to confirm no CDD or special assessment rides along.
  • Pull the FEMA flood designation for the exact address and get a bindable flood and wind quote inside the inspection window; on an island-style pocket, the parcel-level answer is the only answer.
  • On riverfront homes, verify the dock and bulkhead: permits that match what was built, a marine-grade inspection, and depth at low tide for your draft.
  • Get the big-system ages in writing: roof, HVAC, and water heater, because insurers and appraisers price them directly on this vintage.
  • Comp tier to tier and extend honestly: when the in-pocket comp set runs dry, use tier-matched sales in the neighboring river communities rather than stretching stale in-pocket trades.
  • Drive the access at your real hours and walk the bank at low tide; the pocket's geography is its character and its diligence list at once.
  • Confirm school zoning by address and make the magnet, charter, or private plan before the offer, not after.
Jon Brooks · Co-Founder, Momentum Realty

Reed Island is what I show buyers when they tell me they want real big-water St. Johns frontage and the Mandarin and Ortega numbers made them flinch. It is a literal handful of addresses near the river's run to the sea, the dock is at the house, and the corridor prices it at a discount the water itself does nothing to deserve. Pockets this small almost never make a buyer's radar in time, which is exactly why we watch them.

The discipline is the whole game here. Thin data means the portals will not protect you: verify the association from title, the flood line from FEMA, the dock from its permits, and the price from tier-matched comps extended honestly to the neighboring river communities. Buy it right, plan to hold, and let the one thing nobody can build more of, open river at a corridor price, do its quiet work.

Reed Island vs. the Alternatives

For a buyer weighing big water, the Arlington/Fort Caroline corridor, and the budget, the shortlist looks like this:

CommunityWater storyThe honest one-liner
St. Johns Landing EstatesRiverfront with private rampThe corridor's value flagship next door: a private resident ramp, a riverfront park, and big early-2000s customs, deeper inventory than this pocket can ever offer.
Harbour Island & Harbour NorthCanal access to the St. JohnsThe canal-access value cousins near the river mouth: backyard dockage at approachable prices, with canal water instead of open river.
Tala CaySmall Arlington water pocketThe closest structural cousin: another tiny corridor water pocket where scarcity and thin comps set the rules.
River EnclaveGated creekfront, NorthsideThe Northside mirror image: a gate and private deep-water docks via Dunn Creek, trading the Arlington corridor for the airport corridor.
Queens HarbourGated yacht basin, IntracoastalThe full-amenity benchmark: golf, club, and a lock-controlled basin, at a higher price tier and a far heavier fee stack than this pocket's simplicity.
Fort CarolineRiver bluffs & preserve corridorThe broader area play: more inventory and more price points along the same riverbank, without this pocket's open-frontage scarcity.

The pattern is clean: the alternatives offer the ramp, the canal dock, the gate, or the inventory depth, but only a pocket like Reed Island puts open St. Johns frontage, a private dock, and near-mouth geography on a literal handful of deeds at corridor pricing. If verified big-water frontage is non-negotiable and the budget stops short of Mandarin and Ortega, the comparison ends quickly, and the waiting begins.

Cross-shopping the water? We will run your boat and your budget against every option on this list.
Get the Boater Comparison →

The Honest Pros and Cons

Pros

  • Open St. Johns River frontage with private docks near the river's run to the sea
  • A literal handful of addresses: scarcity the market cannot reproduce
  • Roughly half the riverfront entry of the Mandarin, Ortega, and San Marco banks
  • Light carrying picture: no CDD surfacing in records, thin or no HOA per listing data
  • Intracoastal minutes away by water; Mayport and the jetties a short run downriver
  • I-295, downtown, Town Center, and the beaches all within an easy radius

Cons

  • Extremely thin inventory: years can pass between riverfront listings
  • Thin, inconsistent data that punishes lazy diligence and lazy comps
  • Functional Arlington corridor retail and dining, not boutique polish
  • Modest school assignments; plan magnets, charters, or private early
  • Flood and wind insurance vary sharply parcel to parcel on big water
  • Slow liquidity on exit: this is a hold-it asset, not a trade-it asset

Our Reed Island Buyer Playbook

How we run a Reed Island purchase, in order:

  • Register the criteria before the listing exists: in a pocket this small, the buyers who win are watching before the sign goes up, not after.
  • Underwrite the corridor honestly: drive Fort Caroline Road, map the school plan, and confirm the Arlington trade-offs are ones your daily life can absorb.
  • Pull documents before touring: title-level association picture, the parcel tax bill, the flood designation, and on riverfront homes the dock and boathouse permits.
  • Inspect in two passes: the house like any twenty-year-old build, big systems first, and the waterfront like a marine survey, with flood and wind quotes running in parallel.
  • Offer off tier-matched comps extended honestly to the neighboring river communities when the in-pocket set runs dry, with the renovation budget and the insurance line already inside the carrying number.

Questions We Ask Before You Sign

Six answers we get in writing on every Reed Island contract:

  • What does the title work actually show about an association, dues, easements, and any shared waterfront or access arrangement?
  • What does the actual parcel tax bill show, and is there any CDD or special assessment riding on it?
  • What is the FEMA designation for this exact parcel, and what does a bindable flood and wind quote actually price on big water?
  • Do the dock and boathouse permits exist and match what was built, what does a marine inspection say about the bulkhead, and what is the depth at low tide for this buyer's draft?
  • How old are the roof, HVAC, and water heater, and what do the maintenance records actually document on a home of this vintage?
  • What were the true tier-matched comps, date-adjusted, riverfront against riverfront, extended honestly to the neighboring river communities where the in-pocket set runs dry?

Is Reed Island Not For You?

The honest cut, both directions:

Consider elsewhere if you want

  • Inventory to tour this weekend (this pocket may not list for years)
  • Deep, reliable comp data and a liquid exit on your own schedule
  • Walkable boutique retail and a polished restaurant scene
  • Top-rated zoned schools without a magnet or private plan
  • A gate, a clubhouse calendar, and resort amenities
  • A boat-free life (you would be paying for water you never use)

Reed Island fits if you want

  • Open St. Johns frontage with the boat at your own dock
  • One of a literal handful of addresses the market cannot reproduce
  • Big water near the river mouth at roughly half the famous-bank entry
  • A light carrying picture: the river is the amenity, not a fee schedule
  • The patience to wait for the right listing and the discipline to price it
  • The Timucuan Preserve and Fort Caroline as your permanent backdrop

Get the inside read on Reed Island

Tell us your budget, your timeline, and your boat. We will tell you what has actually traded in and around this pocket, what the riverfront-and-dock tier really costs to own, and whether the patience a market this thin demands fits your situation, before you fall for a big-water photo.

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

You are all set.

A Momentum Realty Reed Island 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.

Sell the scarcity first, then the square footage

The right buyer pool for this pocket is boaters and big-water buyers citywide who have priced Mandarin, Ortega, and the gated marina communities and flinched. Marketing that leads with the open river, the private dock, the run to the Intracoastal and the jetties, and the fact that addresses like this almost never list reaches them; generic corridor marketing buries the only thing that makes this home irreplaceable.

What is your Reed Island home worth?

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Live Market: Homes for Sale & Recent Sales

Live MLS inventory for Reed Island. Every active listing, what is under contract right now, and the last 12 months of closed sales, refreshed twice a day. Real closed prices beat any estimate.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where is Reed Island?
Reed Island is a small island-style pocket of homes on the St. Johns River off Fort Caroline Road, in the Arlington/Fort Caroline corridor of Jacksonville, Florida, close to I-295 for the airport and the beaches and roughly 15 to 20 minutes from downtown.
What is Reed Island?
A niche pocket of riverfront and river-access single-family homes: a limited riverfront tier with private docks and big-water St. Johns views, plus homes on the surrounding streets. It is one of the smallest waterfront communities we cover, which is precisely its appeal.
What do homes on Reed Island cost?
Verified context puts the pocket at roughly $500K and up. Public records show interior-street sales in the $400s in recent years, and riverfront-and-dock listings have reached well into seven figures. Turnover is rare and data is thin, so price any specific home off tier-matched, date-adjusted comps rather than averages.
Why is riverfront here cheaper than Mandarin or Ortega?
Geography and perception, not the water. The St. Johns in front of this corridor is the same wide, navigable river that fronts the prestige banks, where frontage generally starts around $1M and climbs. The Arlington corridor trades at a discount because its retail is functional rather than fashionable, school assignments rate modestly, and the address carries dated perceptions. The river itself is the same river.
Is Reed Island actually an island?
It is an island-style river pocket off Fort Caroline Road, named for its setting on the St. Johns. How the pocket connects to the surrounding street grid, and what that means for access and flood exposure, is parcel-specific diligence we run on every purchase here rather than something to assume from the name.
Do Reed Island homes have docks?
The riverfront tier does: private docks on open St. Johns water are the headline of this pocket. On any dock home, verify the dock and any boathouse permits, the bulkhead or bank condition, and the depth at low tide for your draft before the water access prices itself into your offer.
Is Reed Island gated?
Listing records for this pocket are thin and we have not verified a gate or staffed entrance; some nearby river communities in this corridor do have gated ramps and amenities. Confirm the access arrangement for the specific street during diligence rather than assuming from marketing copy.
Is there an HOA on Reed Island?
Records are inconsistent, and some show no association dues at all, which in an established pocket can mean no HOA or a voluntary one. We confirm whether an association exists, what it charges, and what it covers from the title work and seller disclosures before any offer.
Is there a CDD?
No CDD has surfaced in listing data for this established pocket, which keeps the carrying stack simpler than the newer masterplans. Verify the actual parcel tax bill to be certain.
What kind of homes are on Reed Island?
Single-family homes, with public records on these streets showing much of the stock built in the early 2000s and some later builds mixed in. Because the pocket is small and ages vary, each home is its own decision: verify the build year, the big-system ages, and the renovation history parcel by parcel.
Is Reed Island in a flood zone?
Riverfront Duval lots carry meaningful flood and wind exposure, and designations vary parcel by parcel; two homes in the same pocket can fall in different FEMA zones. Pull the designation for the exact address and get a bindable flood and wind quote inside your inspection window, because on big water the insurance line is part of the price.
What schools serve Reed Island?
Duval County Public Schools, with attendance zones set by address. Corridor assignments rate modestly, and many families plan around Duval's magnet programs, charters, or private options in Arlington and toward the Beaches; confirm the current zoning for the specific address.
How far is downtown Jacksonville?
Roughly 15 to 20 minutes by car, about ten miles, with I-295 minutes away for the airport and the beaches. For the riverfront tier, the river itself is the most direct route of all.
How good is the boating access?
Excellent on paper and in practice: this stretch of the St. Johns sits near the river's run to the sea, so the Intracoastal is minutes away by water and Mayport and the jetties are a short run downriver, which makes offshore mornings practical. Verify the depth at the specific dock at low tide for your actual boat.
Is Reed Island a good investment?
The case is scarcity: open St. Johns frontage near the river mouth at a corridor discount, on addresses the market cannot reproduce. The risks are thin liquidity, rare comps, and corridor perception, so buy at a tier-honest price, verify the dock and the flood picture, and plan to hold. We never promise appreciation; we price what is verifiably here today.
Do I need my own agent to buy here?
Yes, and in a market this thin, more than usual. The listing agent works for the seller, and with a handful of addresses and years between trades, your own representation verifies the association picture, the flood zone, the dock permits, and a comp set careless analysis can swing six figures. Momentum Realty will connect you with an Arlington waterfront specialist; call (904) 351-6461 or use the form on this page.

Reed Island's real competition is the short list of Jacksonville addresses where the St. Johns River, the Arlington/Fort Caroline corridor, and a water-access deed all meet.

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