The 60-Second Overview
Sawgrass Players Club is the gated Ponte Vedra Beach community west of A1A that holds TPC Sawgrass, the PGA Tour headquarters, and THE PLAYERS Championship: nearly 1,900 homes across 16 independent neighborhoods. Salt Creek is the big-lot neighborhood of its northeast corner, off Solana Road: a community of 175 single-family homes per the Sawgrass Players Club association, one of the larger subdivisions inside the gates and the newest, entered down a lush oak-lined thoroughfare and over a bridge across a lake, per Frankel Realty Group.
The product is the lots as much as the houses: homes of roughly 1,934 to 5,325 square feet per Frankel Realty Group, built 1988 to 2007, on large, lushly treed lots, some approaching an acre. Most homes overlook waterways, the golf course, or both, per the association, and the community is designed so no home backs directly to another. Frankel calls it one of the upper-end Players Club communities: every home has a private view.
The documented trades show how wide the market runs. 1242 Salt Creek Island Drive, about 4,361 square feet on a lakefront cul-de-sac lot, closed at $2,200,000 in May 2024 per public records, was fully renovated, and was asking $3,250,000 and under contract in spring 2026. 1135 Salt Creek Drive, about 2,510 square feet on a pond, traded at $850,000 in December 2024 and again at $1,600,000 in April 2025 after renovation, per public records. The trades: aging construction with seven-figure renovation spread, a two-layer fee stack to verify, and a naming twin next door, Salt Creek Pointe, that corrupts lazy comps.
A bridge over a lake, oak canopies, lots that run toward an acre, and no house behind yours. Salt Creek is what the Players Club looks like when the land itself is the luxury.
Fees and the HOA Stack: Salt Creek Plus the Master, No CDD
The fee stack here has two layers and no CDD. Layer one is the Salt Creek sub-association: the neighborhood records its own covenants, bylaws, ARB guidelines, and rental guidelines, published through the Sawgrass Players Club association site, with its own board of directors and management by MAY Management. A spring 2026 MLS record listed the Salt Creek assessment at $263 quarterly. Layer two is the Sawgrass Players Club master assessment, billed semi-annually; the same record listed $978 per half-year. The master funds the staffed gates, common-area landscaping, lakes and waterways, recreational amenities, and reserves; the Salt Creek layer funds the neighborhood's own obligations, including its entrance, bridge area, and common landscaping. Both amounts change, so confirm the current figures in writing.
The structural point most buyers miss: Sawgrass Players Club runs as one master association over 16 independent neighborhood sub-associations, and each sub-association keeps its own board, its own budget, its own covenants, and its own rules. A healthy master file tells you nothing about Salt Creek's reserves or restrictions. When you buy here, your diligence reads two files: the master's and Salt Creek's. Salt Creek's file has real content, too: the neighborhood publishes rental guidelines and recorded a short-term rental amendment to its covenants in 2021, so any rental plan starts with the documents, not assumptions.
What is not in the stack matters too. There is no CDD anywhere in this established community, per Frankel Realty Group, and no mandatory club membership: golf and racquet amenities at TPC Sawgrass, The Yards, and Sawgrass Country Club are all separate, optional decisions. For a seven-figure big-lot home behind these gates, the required carry is modest, provided both HOA layers check out.
The Lots and the Views: Why the Land Is the Premium
Salt Creek's defining feature is space. The lots are large and lushly treed, some approaching an acre, per the Sawgrass Players Club association, in a community where most neighborhoods sit on compact 1980s parcels. The design rule does the rest: no home backs directly to another, so the rear exposure is water, woods, golf, or some combination, never a neighbor's lanai. Frankel Realty Group catalogs the menu: lake views, lake-to-woodland views, water-to-golf views, and golf views.
That variety is exactly why portal pricing fails here. A near-acre lakefront cul-de-sac lot and a standard interior lot with a pond glimpse are different assets sharing one subdivision name, and the documented trades prove it: $2,200,000 for about 4,361 square feet on prime lakefront in May 2024, against $850,000 for a dated 2,510-square-foot pond-front home that December, per public records. We comp lot against lot and view against view: size, orientation, privacy across the water, and how the parcel actually lives.
The geometry is sealed without being isolated. The neighborhood is entered over a bridge dividing a lake, down an oak-lined thoroughfare, per Frankel Realty Group, and sidewalks connect through this corner of the community, including from the neighboring Cypress Bridge enclave toward Salt Creek per local community sources. Players Park and the aquatic and tennis campus sit close by, so the big-lot quiet comes with the community's recreational core around the corner.
The Homes: 1988-2007 Plans With Seven-Figure Renovation Spread
The housing stock runs wider than most Players Club neighborhoods: roughly 1,934 to 5,325 square feet per Frankel Realty Group, built 1988 to 2007, with most homes from the late 1980s and 1990s and a handful of later builds. That range spans comfortable single-story family plans to 4,000-plus-square-foot two-story homes on the best water, which is why Salt Creek shows up on shortlists from move-up families to buyers cross-shopping the estate sections.
The vintage is the homework. A 2026 buyer here is shopping renovation history as much as floor plan: roofs, windows, HVAC, plumbing, electrical, and additions vary house to house, and the spread between an original interior and a current one is not cosmetic money. One address tells the story: 1135 Salt Creek Drive traded at $850,000 in December 2024 and resold at $1,600,000 in April 2025 after renovation, per public records. Florida insurers underwrite roof age directly, so the roof conversation belongs in the offer, not the closing week. Ask for permit history; three decades of owners means three decades of projects, documented and otherwise.
One naming trap to retire immediately: Salt Creek is not Salt Creek Pointe. MLS records carry them as separate subdivisions inside the same gates, and a March 2024 closing at $1,300,000 on Salt Creek Pointe Way belongs to the Pointe, not to Salt Creek. Confirm the legal subdivision on any listing before you comp it, because mixing the two corrupts the math.
Inside the Players Club: The Gates, the Golf, the Optional Memberships
Salt Creek inherits everything that makes Sawgrass Players Club singular. The community holds TPC Sawgrass with the Stadium Course and its island-green 17th, the Dye's Valley course, the PGA Tour headquarters, and THE PLAYERS Championship each spring, all behind staffed gates west of A1A. Residency buys the address, the access control, and the grounds; it does not buy golf.
The club menu is unusually deep for one address: TPC Sawgrass inside the same community, The Yards behind the same gates, and Sawgrass Country Club across A1A, each with its own membership categories, initiation, and dues that change; confirm current pricing directly with the club you actually want. The recreational layer is broader than golf: Players Park with playground, ballfields, volleyball and basketball is around the corner from Salt Creek, with the aquatic and tennis campus close by, per Frankel Realty Group and the association, and the master association maintains the lakes, paths, and common grounds.
The northeast-corner position is Salt Creek's practical edge inside all of this: off Solana Road, near the north gate, with grocery-anchored shopping outside either exit per Frankel Realty Group. Our complete Sawgrass Players Club guide maps all 16 neighborhoods if you want the full picture.
Schools: The Zone Behind the Price
Salt Creek is zoned to the Ponte Vedra feeder pattern of the St. Johns County district, one of the top-rated districts in Florida, per Frankel Realty Group and recent MLS records: Ponte Vedra Palm Valley/Rawlings Elementary, currently rated 10/10 on GreatSchools, then Alice B. Landrum Middle and Ponte Vedra High. For a family-scale product on big lots with a park around the corner, the school zone is structural to the value, because it keeps families in the buyer pool alongside golfers and downsizers. Verify current assignments by address before relying on them.
What Living Here Is Actually Like
Space in a way most gated golf communities cannot offer: oak canopies, near-acre lots on the best streets, water or golf behind the house, and a staffed gate between you and A1A, with the grocery run still measured in minutes.
The ownership profile
Salt Creek draws move-up families chasing the school zone and the yard, golfers who want the TPC address with real land under the house, and renovators buying dated plans on great lots. The covenants, the rental guidelines, and the recorded short-term rental amendment keep the character owner-occupied; read the rules before underwriting any rental plan.
Tournament week
THE PLAYERS arrives each spring with crowds and A1A traffic. Salt Creek's northeast-corner position keeps daily logistics manageable through the north gate, but tournament week is still tournament week. Most residents call it a fair trade; know which camp you are in.
Maintenance and the land
Houses from 1988 to 2007 in coastal air need stewardship, and a big treed lot adds its own list: mature-tree care, drainage, irrigation, and bank condition where the lot meets water. Budget real maintenance money, and put the lot itself on the inspection scope, not just the house.
The weekly rhythm
Out to Solana Road and A1A in minutes, Publix and Sawgrass Village just beyond the gates, Players Park and the aquatic and tennis campus around the corner, the beach minutes across A1A, and Mayo Clinic in fifteen to twenty.
Five Costly Mistakes Salt Creek Buyers Make
A big-lot neighborhood with seven-figure renovation spread concentrates very specific errors:
Comping Salt Creek Pointe, the ZIP code, or the community average
Salt Creek and Salt Creek Pointe are recorded as separate subdivisions, and a 32082 average describes no house here. Only condition-adjusted, lot-adjusted Salt Creek comps mean anything. Verify the legal subdivision before you trust a single number.
Reading only the master file, not Salt Creek's
The Players Club runs 16 independent sub-associations, each with its own board, budget, covenants, and rules. Salt Creek's file includes rental guidelines and a recorded short-term rental amendment. Read both files before you offer.
Treating all lots and views as equal
Near-acre lakefront cul-de-sac parcels and standard interior lots share one subdivision name and trade like different products: $2,200,000 against $850,000 in the same twelve months, per public records. The lot is the premium; price it explicitly.
Underestimating the 1988-2007 inspection
Roof age drives insurance quotes, original plumbing and panels drive surprises, and undocumented renovations drive appraisal problems. The $850,000-to-$1,600,000 resale of one address shows what renovation depth is worth, and what it costs to add.
Assuming the address includes the golf
Living behind the TPC gates is not membership at TPC Sawgrass, The Yards, or Sawgrass Country Club. Each is separate, with its own initiation and dues. Settle which club, if any, fits your budget before you buy, not after.
Position, Land, and Value
The lot, the renovation, and the view are the premium here
In Salt Creek, three variables stack: the size and exposure of the specific lot, renovation depth across three decades of ownership, and the view class, water, woods, golf, or combination. The value play, when it appears, is the structurally sound house with dated finishes on a great lot: the land and the address at a discount, with the remodel on your terms. The December 2024 buyer of 1135 Salt Creek Drive ran exactly that play, per public records.
With roughly 175 homes, turnover is steadier than the tiny enclaves nearby, but the best lots still surface rarely; the right answer is usually the best land and condition available in your window.
The Salt Creek Buyer Checklist
- Verify the legal subdivision: Salt Creek, not Salt Creek Pointe; the names are close and the markets are not interchangeable.
- Pull both association files: the Players Club master and the Salt Creek sub-association budget, reserves, covenants, and minutes.
- Confirm both fee layers in writing: the Salt Creek quarterly assessment and the master semi-annual assessment, with inclusions.
- Walk the lot: size, view class, orientation, privacy, mature-tree condition, and the bank where the parcel meets water.
- Inspect like a 1988-2007 house: roof, windows, HVAC, plumbing, electrical panel, and additions, with permit history.
- Get a real insurance quote inside the window: roof age drives the premium, and pull the FEMA flood designation for the exact lot.
- Comp condition and lot explicitly: the documented spread runs $850,000 to $2.2M-plus inside one subdivision.
- Read the rental rules: Salt Creek publishes rental guidelines and recorded a short-term rental amendment; know them before you plan around them.
Salt Creek is the neighborhood we point to when someone wants the TPC Sawgrass gates and an actual yard: oak canopies, lots that run toward an acre, and nothing behind the house but water, woods, or golf. The catch is that the subdivision name covers everything from dated $850K pond-front plans to renovated seven-figure lakefront, so the comp work has to be honest or the price will not be.
Our job is simple: verify everything the listing does not say, price the lot and the renovation explicitly against true Salt Creek comparables, and make sure the house you fall for is also the contract you should sign.
Salt Creek vs. the Players Club Set
The realistic cross-shop for a Salt Creek buyer:
| Community | Format | The honest one-liner |
|---|---|---|
| Cypress Bridge | 53 homes, every home backing water, next door | The adjacent water enclave; Salt Creek trades guaranteed water behind the house for bigger lots, newer vintage, and more inventory. |
| Oakbridge | 353 homes, 1976-1986, behind the same gates | The bigger, older, more attainable section; Salt Creek trades entry price for land, views, and newer plans. |
| Seven Mile Drive | Upper-end enclave inside the same gates | A peer at the top of the community; different geometry, same two-layer fee logic. |
| Cypress Creek | A separate Players Club section | Another sibling behind the same gates with its own association file; comp it separately. |
| Sawgrass Players Club | The umbrella community | The full menu behind one gate, nearly 1,900 homes across 16 neighborhoods from condos to Stadium-Course estates. |
Salt Creek's lane: the biggest lots and the broadest view menu in the newer half of the community, family-scale to estate-scale plans, top schools, no CDD, and no mandatory club bill. If you need new construction, one simple fee, or guaranteed water behind every house, look elsewhere; if you want real land behind the TPC gates, this is where it lives.
The Honest Pros and Cons
Pros
- Large treed lots, some approaching an acre
- No home backs directly to another: private views by design
- Lake, woods, and golf exposure across most of the neighborhood
- No CDD; golf and club memberships optional
- Top-rated St. Johns schools, including a 10/10 elementary
- Players Park and the aquatic and tennis campus around the corner
Cons
- 1988-2007 construction: real inspection and insurance diligence
- Two HOA layers to verify, Salt Creek plus the master
- Seven-figure renovation spread makes lazy comps expensive
- The best near-acre lots surface rarely
- Club amenities cost extra, on top of two fee layers
- Tournament-week crowds and A1A traffic each spring
Our Salt Creek Buyer Playbook
How we run a Salt Creek purchase, in order:
- Decide the lot priority first: land size versus view class versus condition versus plan size, ranked before a listing forces the choice.
- Start the watch early: the best near-acre water lots trade rarely; the buyers who win are already in position.
- Pull both association files on day one: master and Salt Creek budgets, reserves, covenants, rental rules, and minutes.
- Underwrite insurance and the inspection before offering, with roof age, permit history, and the flood designation priced into the number.
- Negotiate on condition and lot, precisely: the renovation delta and the land premium are the leverage in this market.
Questions We Ask Before You Sign
Six answers we get in writing on every Salt Creek contract:
- What are the current Salt Creek and master assessments, and exactly what does each cover?
- What do the sub-association financials and reserves show, and what shared projects, including the entrance and bridge areas, are next?
- What assessments are pending or discussed in the minutes?
- What is the roof age and the full permit history, and what does the insurance quote actually come back at?
- What do the covenants, ARB guidelines, and rental rules allow for the changes and uses you plan?
- What did the last true comparables trade for, condition- and lot-adjusted, inside Salt Creek specifically, not Salt Creek Pointe?
Is Salt Creek Not For You?
The honest cut, both directions:
Consider elsewhere if you want
- New construction or modern systems out of the box
- One simple fee with everything bundled
- Guaranteed water behind every house
- A compact low-maintenance lot
- Club amenities included in the dues
- A market where every comp prices itself
Salt Creek fits if you want
- Real land behind the TPC gates: big treed lots, some near an acre
- A private view by design: no home backing yours
- Family-scale to estate-scale plans in one neighborhood
- Parks and the recreation campus around the corner
- Top St. Johns schools behind a staffed gate
- Renovation upside on great lots, priced honestly
