The 60-Second Overview
Ridge at Heath Brook is D.R. Horton's answer to the most common request in southwest Ocala: new construction near the Market Street retail orbit, where the established Heath Brook master plan sells only resales. The product is all-concrete-block, open-concept single-family across two series - Express at the value tier, Tradition at the move-up tier - advertised between $310K and $435K.
The cost structure is the quiet differentiator: a roughly $112 monthly HOA with no CDD reported. Against the corridor's new master plans, whose amenity packages ride on CDD assessments, Ridge trades the resort pool for a permanently lighter tax bill - a trade that compounds over a decade of ownership.
Ridge sells the two things the corridor cannot give you together anywhere else: a builder warranty and the Heath Brook address.
The buying calendar matters more here than the price sheet. D.R. Horton's incentives - rate buydowns, closing credits, inventory discounts - reset monthly and cluster at phase ends and quarter closes. Disciplined buyers who price both series against near-new resales the same week routinely save five figures over walk-in buyers who price neither.
The Fee Math: Light Stack, Verify Anyway
Three lines, all friendly:
1) The HOA: about $112 per month reported. It maintains the community's commons and standards - there is no amenity campus to fund, which is why the figure stays light. Verify the current amount and scope; young communities re-budget as they transition from builder control.
2) No CDD reported. Confirm on the parcel tax bill, but the reported structure is clean - and it is the headline in any comparison against Marion Ranch or the other CDD plans. Equal sticker prices are not equal monthly costs.
3) Builder economics. The month's incentive sheet is the real price list. Rate buydowns in particular change the monthly payment more than a $10K price cut does - run the math both ways before negotiating either.
The Series: Express vs Tradition, Decoded
D.R. Horton runs two product tiers here. Express is the value engine: standardized finishes, efficient open plans, minimal option decisions, priced to put new block construction under most of the corridor's resale market. Tradition steps up in size and standard features for move-up buyers comparing against Heath Brook and Fore Ranch resales.
The practical guidance: do not pay Tradition money for Express expectations or vice versa. The tiers exist because two different buyers shop this community, and the model row is staged to blur the line. We walk both tiers with every client and price each against its real alternative - Express against entry resales, Tradition against the established master plans next door.
The Homes: All Block, Production Discipline
Everything here is concrete-block construction to current wind code with D.R. Horton's standard smart-home and stainless packages - the insurance and maintenance math of new builds, which quotes meaningfully below the corridor's 2000s resale stock. Warranties run from day one, and near-new resales (when they appear) can carry transferable structural coverage worth documenting.
Production building's trade is standardization: option depth is limited, finishes repeat, and your home's distinction comes from lot position and the package you select. Spend accordingly - the lot premium holds value at resale; the upgraded backsplash does not.
Schools: The West Port Corridor
Ridge sits in the same West Port-pattern geography that powers Heath Brook and Fore Ranch family demand - generally Saddlewood Elementary, Liberty Middle and West Port High. New streets deserve fresh verification rather than inherited assumptions: confirm the current assignment for the specific lot with Marion County Public Schools, and ask about planned capacity, because this quadrant keeps growing.
What Living Here Is Actually Like
New-community energy in a mature corridor: the streets are young but the infrastructure around them is not. The questions buyers actually ask us:
Are there community amenities?
No amenity campus - the light HOA reflects it. The community's amenity is the corridor: Market Street's dining, the hospital corridor and I-75 are all minutes out. Buyers wanting pools-in-the-fee should price the CDD plans honestly and choose with numbers.
How long will construction continue?
Until the phases sell out - confirm current status at the sales office and map any target lot against what remains. Finished streets settle quickly; lots beside active phases hear it longest.
Is the VA clinic proximity meaningful?
For veterans and clinic staff, very - it is minutes away, and it is a durable demand driver for resale later.
Express or Tradition - which holds value better?
Historically the location floors both, and lot position differentiates more than series. Buy the better lot in the tier your budget actually fits.
Five Costly Mistakes Ridge Buyers Make
New-construction mistakes, corridor edition:
Walking in unrepresented
The site agents work for D.R. Horton. Buyer representation typically costs you nothing and changes the incentive conversation - register your agent on the first visit, because first-contact rules are enforced.
Ignoring the incentive calendar
Rate buydowns and inventory discounts cluster at phase ends and quarter closes. Buying the week before a reset is donating money to the next buyer.
Skipping the resale comparison
Heath Brook and Fore Ranch resales next door price the same dollar differently. The same-week comparison is the discipline - sometimes new wins, sometimes it does not.
Spending the budget on finishes instead of the lot
Buffer and pond lots hold premiums at resale; upgraded interiors depreciate like the cars they rode in on. Lot first, options second.
Skipping inspections because it is new
Pre-drywall and final third-party inspections plus the 11-month warranty walk - new means fast-built, not flawless, and the warranty only fixes what you document.
Lots & Phases: Where the Value Hides
The Pre-Contract Checklist
- Register buyer representation on the first visit - first-contact rules are enforced.
- Get this month's incentive sheet - and the inventory-home list with it.
- Verify the current HOA figure and scope; confirm no CDD on the tax bill.
- Price the same-week resale alternative in Heath Brook and Fore Ranch.
- Choose series honestly - Express value or Tradition space, not a blur of both.
- Map the lot against the phase plan - know what builds beside you and when.
- Order pre-drywall and final inspections - third party, documented.
- Verify school assignments fresh with the district for the specific lot.
Ridge at Heath Brook is where we send buyers who toured Heath Brook, loved the location and asked for a warranty. It is the only meaningful new supply in that orbit, and the light fee stack makes its monthly math hard to beat among new communities.
The money here is made on the calendar and the lot - incentive windows and exposure premiums. Both are visible to anyone watching weekly, and invisible to anyone walking in cold. We watch.
Ridge at Heath Brook vs. the Alternatives
The honest grid for SW Ocala new-or-newer shoppers:
| Community | Era | Cost structure | The honest trade |
|---|---|---|---|
| Heath Brook | 2000s resale | $50-$340/mo by subdivision | The established neighbor - settled streets, walkable retail, no warranty |
| Marion Ranch | New | HOA + CDD | Dual-builder competition and three pools - with a CDD attached |
| Calesa Township | New | ~$100/mo HOA | Charter school and aquatics in the fee - single builder, deeper amenity bet |
| Fore Ranch | 2000s resale | Master + section | Amenity-core family resales in the same school pattern |
| Pioneer Ranch | New | HOA + CDD | The sibling new plan - compare current incentives directly |
The verdict: Ridge wins for warranty-plus-location with the lightest new-build fee stack in the quadrant. Amenity-first families should price the CDD plans honestly; settled-street buyers should tour Heath Brook proper.
The Unvarnished Pros & Cons
Pros
- New block construction in the Heath Brook orbit
- ~$112 HOA with no CDD reported - lightest new-build stack around
- Two series covering value and move-up budgets
- Market Street, I-75 and the VA clinic minutes away
- Monthly incentive windows reward disciplined timing
- Builder warranties from day one
Cons
- No amenity campus - the corridor is the amenity
- Construction neighbors until sell-out
- Production standardization limits distinctiveness
- Young community - thin resale history
- Sapling landscaping for years yet
- Corridor traffic grows with the corridor
The Momentum Buyer Playbook
How we run a Ridge purchase, in order:
- Representation first. Registered before the model visit.
- Incentives and resales, same week. The comparison is the negotiation.
- Series honesty. Express value or Tradition space - pick the real budget.
- Lot before options. Exposure premiums persist; finishes do not.
- Inspect like it is used. Pre-drywall, final, 11-month walk.
Questions We Ask Before You Contract
Our standard Ridge diligence calls - answers in writing, every time:
- What incentives and buydowns apply this month, and on which inventory homes?
- What is the current HOA figure and scope, and has the association transitioned?
- What does the parcel tax bill show - any district lines?
- What is the phase plan around this lot, and the build-out timeline?
- What did comparable near-new resales close at in the orbit?
- What is the current school assignment for this exact lot?
Is Ridge at Heath Brook Not for You?
The fit check, honestly:
Consider elsewhere if you want
- Pools and clubs inside your fee
- A gated address
- Settled streets and mature trees today
- Custom-depth options
- Acreage or privacy
- A 55+ structure
Ridge fits if you want
- A warranty in the Heath Brook orbit
- The lightest new-build fee stack in the quadrant
- Block construction and new-build insurance math
- Market Street and I-75 minutes out
- Incentive windows you can actually play
- West Port corridor schools
