What's in this guide
- Executive Summary
- Quick Facts
- Community Overview & History
- Neighborhoods & Areas
- Real Estate Market
- Who Lives Here
- Schools
- Amenities & Lifestyle
- HOA, CDD & Costs
- Commute Analysis
- Shopping & Dining
- Pros & Cons
- Neighborhood Comparisons
- Hidden Things to Know
- Momentum Expert Insight
- Live Listings & Recent Sales
- Flood Zones & Insurance
- Internet & Connectivity
- The Tax Reality
- What Your Budget Buys
- The Future of the Area
- Resale Liquidity
- The Buyer Playbook
- Questions to Ask
- Mistakes to Avoid
- Price History Since 2012
- Frequently Asked Questions
Executive Summary
Springtree Village is an established Westside subdivision off Wilson Boulevard between Lane Avenue and Fouraker Road, built primarily from about 1977 into the 1990s with later infill, with 3 to 4 bedroom homes running roughly 1,264 to 2,486 square feet.
Per the Redfin neighborhood page fetched June 4, 2026, active listings ran 185,100 to 344,660 dollars and the trailing-year median sale was around 224,000 dollars, which puts this squarely in starter-home and first-investment territory.
No HOA was verified and there is no CDD, and no community-owned amenities were found; the honest pitch is the price point, the lot, and the freedom, not a lifestyle package.
Quick Facts
| Category | Detail |
|---|---|
| Location | Off Wilson Boulevard between Lane Avenue and Fouraker Road, Westside, ZIP 32210 |
| County | Duval County |
| ZIP code | 32210 |
| Homes | Established single-family, 3 to 4 bedrooms |
| Built | Original development roughly 1977 into the 1990s, with later infill |
| Home sizes | About 1,264 to 2,486 square feet |
| Amenities | No community-owned amenities found; the value is the price point |
| Schools | Duval County Public Schools (confirm zoning by address) |
| Gate / HOA | No HOA verified and no CDD; confirm any deed restrictions in title work |
Community Overview & History
The starter-home engine of 32210
Neighborhoods like Springtree Village are where Jacksonville first-time buyers actually land: postwar-adjacent housing stock, full-size lots, no mandatory fees, and prices under the metro median. The trade is age, because most of this housing stock is 30 to 45 years old, so roofs, panels, plumbing, and HVAC systems drive the real cost of every deal here.
How it feels on the ground today
Springtree Village reads as a working neighborhood in constant turnover: owner-occupants, long-term rentals, flips in progress, and fresh infill on the gaps. Condition varies house to house more than street to street, which is why this market rewards buyers who tour everything and judge each roof, panel, and HVAC on its own.
How the Neighborhood Breaks Down
Springtree Village is one subdivision, but the buying decisions split by housing era and condition rather than by section.
The original 1977 to 1980s core
The heart of the neighborhood on Springtree Road and the surrounding streets; ranch-style plans, mature trees, and the most renovation variance from house to house.
The 1990s and infill homes
Later construction and scattered infill bring newer systems and sometimes modern plans; they price at the top of the neighborhood band, toward the 344,660 dollar high end of the June 2026 active listings per Redfin.
The renovation spectrum
At any given time this neighborhood carries original-condition estates, mid-renovation flips, and finished products; the spread between them is where both the deals and the overpays live.
The rental layer
Investor ownership is a real presence at this price point; it supports demand and liquidity, but check the street mix if owner-occupied character matters to you.
Real Estate Market
Per the Redfin neighborhood page fetched June 4, 2026, active listings in Springtree Village ran 185,100 to 344,660 dollars with a trailing-year median sale around 224,000 dollars; the wide band reflects condition more than location inside the neighborhood.
This is a high-turnover starter market: first-time buyers using FHA and VA financing, investors running rental and flip math, and NAS Jacksonville personnel who want a short commute compete for the same inventory.
Pricing here is condition-driven, so a renovated house and an original-condition house two doors apart can trade 100,000 dollars apart; comp by condition tier, not just by street.
Who Lives Here
Springtree Village draws first-time buyers who need a real house under 250,000 dollars, NAS Jacksonville commuters, and investors who like the rent-to-price math on the Westside.
Schools
Springtree Village is served by Duval County Public Schools, with attendance zones by home address, plus private and charter options nearby. Confirm the exact zoning for a Springtree Village address before you buy. Zoned schools for this neighborhood were not verified by third-party sources at publish time, so run the exact address through the district locator before you write an offer.
Amenities & Lifestyle
There are no community-owned amenities in Springtree Village, and pretending otherwise would be dishonest; here is what the location actually gives you.
Full-size lots
Room for fences, sheds, boats, and work trucks that HOA communities prohibit.
No mandatory fees
No HOA verified and no CDD, so the payment is principal, interest, taxes, and insurance, full stop.
Westside park access
The city park system, including Ringhaver Park on the Ortega River, covers the recreation case a short drive away.
Corridor convenience
Wilson Boulevard, Lane Avenue, and 103rd Street put groceries, big-box, and I-295 minutes away.
HOA, CDD & Costs
No HOA was verified for Springtree Village at publish time, and we found no mandatory association fees; have your title company confirm any recorded deed restrictions during closing, because old plats sometimes carry covenants without an active association.
There is no CDD, which is standard for a neighborhood of this era.
The no-fee structure is a genuine monthly advantage, but it also means no architectural control, so the street-to-street look varies and you should buy the block as much as the house.
Commute Analysis
| Destination | Typical drive |
|---|---|
| I-295 west loop | About 8 minutes |
| NAS Jacksonville | About 15 minutes |
| Oakleaf Town Center | About 15 minutes |
| Downtown Jacksonville | About 18 minutes |
| Jacksonville International Airport | About 30 minutes |
Springtree Village works off Wilson Boulevard to Lane Avenue, 103rd Street, and I-295: NAS Jacksonville is about fifteen minutes, which makes this a long-running favorite for sailors and civilian base workers, and downtown is under twenty.
Shopping & Dining
The Wilson Boulevard and Lane Avenue corridors handle daily errands, 103rd Street and Normandy Boulevard carry the grocery and big-box load, and Oakleaf Town Center is about fifteen minutes when you want the full retail run.
Pros and Cons
Pros
- Median sale around 224,000 dollars per Redfin fetched June 4, 2026, well under the metro median
- No HOA verified and no CDD
- Full-size lots with room for fences, boats, and trucks
- About 15 minutes to NAS Jacksonville
- High turnover means steady inventory and honest comps
Cons
- Aging housing stock: roofs, panels, plumbing, and HVAC drive every deal
- No community amenities at all
- Condition varies dramatically house to house
- Investor and rental presence on some streets
- Insurance on older roofs and systems can surprise; quote it before contract
Springtree Village vs. Comparable Communities
| Community | How it compares to Springtree Village |
|---|---|
| Kings Landing | The new-construction alternative nearby in 32254 if you would rather pay more for new systems. |
| Argyle Forest | The bigger, more amenitized established Westside comparison a step up the price ladder. |
| Kasen Oaks | The new Dream Finders townhome option near I-10 and I-295 at overlapping prices. |
Hidden Things Buyers Should Know
The condition spread is the market
Two similar houses here can trade 100,000 dollars apart on condition alone; buyers who comp by address instead of by condition tier either overpay for original condition or miss the value in a finished one.
The insurance homework
On 30 to 45 year old housing stock, the roof age and the electrical panel decide your insurance quote; a four-point inspection before you fall in love saves deals from dying in underwriting.
The NAS Jax quiet demand
The fifteen-minute base commute keeps a steady stream of military buyers and renters flowing through this neighborhood, which props up both resale liquidity and rental demand more than the price point suggests.
Momentum Expert Insight
Springtree Village is honest housing: no fees, no amenities, no pretense, just a real house on a real lot under the metro median, fifteen minutes from the base. The whole game here is condition, because the address tells you almost nothing about what the house needs.
My advice is to budget the four-point inspection items before you offer, quote insurance early, comp by condition tier, and if you are a first-time buyer, look hard at the renovated inventory, because the flip premium is often cheaper than financing the work yourself.
Selling a Home in Springtree Village
In a condition-driven market, presentation and the big-ticket systems story sell the house: a documented roof, panel, and HVAC history is worth real money here.
We price from the freshest condition-matched comparables, prep the four-point items before listing, and position your home honestly in the renovation spectrum.
Get a no-obligation home value for your Springtree Village home, based on real comparable sales in the community rather than an automated guess. Tell us about your home and we will personally prepare your numbers and a pricing strategy. No obligation, no spam.
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Flood Zones & Insurance
Jacksonville sees coastal, river, and creek flooding, and pockets near the St. Johns River tributaries can sit in higher-risk zones. Jacksonville participates in the FEMA Community Rating System at a class 6, which earns flood-insurance discounts of about 10 percent for homes outside a special flood hazard area and about 20 percent for homes inside one.
The reliable move is to pull the FEMA flood designation for the exact Springtree Village address before you write an offer, since two homes in the same area can fall in different zones. A home in Zone X can cost far less to insure than one near water in Zone AE. Get a bindable flood and homeowners quote during your inspection period, so the cost is in your monthly math before you commit, not after.
Internet & Connectivity
The Jacksonville metro is served by Xfinity (Comcast) cable across nearly all addresses and by AT&T with DSL almost everywhere plus fiber to a growing share of homes. If working from home matters, confirm the options, and fiber in particular, at the specific Springtree Village address rather than assuming.
The Tax Reality
Duval County total millage runs roughly 17.9 to 18.5 mills depending on the taxing district. The Florida homestead exemption for 2026 is 51,411 dollars for those who qualify, and the deadline to file a new homestead exemption is March 1.
The trap to plan for is the post-sale reset: when you buy, the Save Our Homes cap from the previous owner ends and the assessed value resets to the new just value, so your second-year tax bill is often higher than the seller current one. Budget the true number, and confirm whether the specific home carries a CDD or other assessment that is billed separately from the millage and is not reduced by the homestead exemption.
What Your Budget Buys Here
The same budget buys very different homes across Springtree Village and the surrounding area, depending on age, size, lot, and condition. Rather than anchor on the asking price or the neighborhood average, price any specific home off the most recent comparable sales, and weigh what your money would buy in the nearby alternatives before you commit.The Future of the Area
Duval County continues to grow, with new rooftops, retail, and road work reshaping parts of the area. That growth supports long-run demand, but it can also add competing inventory and construction traffic in the near term, so factor both the upside and the disruption into your timing and your pricing.Resale Liquidity
How quickly a Springtree Village home resells comes down to presentation, condition, and pricing against the latest comparable sales rather than the neighborhood average. Homes that are priced correctly and shown well tend to move, while overpriced or dated homes sit. We track the active and sold comparable set so a Springtree Village home is priced to the real market.The Springtree Village Playbook
If you are buying in Springtree Village, here is how we would approach it: pull the flood zone and a real insurance quote for the specific address, confirm the HOA dues and whether a CDD applies, compare what your budget would buy nearby, and price the home off the closest comparable sales rather than the asking price. If you are buying any new-construction home, bring your own agent before you register, since the on-site representative works for the builder, not for you.
Questions We Would Ask Before Buying Here
Ask the seller
- What flood zone is this exact address in?
- What are the HOA dues, and is there a CDD or special assessment?
- What did the last few comparable homes actually sell for?
- How old are the roof, HVAC, and water heater?
- What is the true second-year tax estimate after reassessment?
Ask yourself
- Does the commute to work, schools, and daily life actually work?
- Do I need fiber internet, and is it at this address?
- Am I pricing against the right comparable sales, not the average?
- Does the lot and the condition fit my budget and my resale plan?
Mistakes to Avoid
The common ones around Springtree Village: trusting the seller current tax bill instead of the post-sale reset; skipping the address-specific flood check; assuming fiber is at every home; and pricing off the neighborhood average rather than the closest comparable sales. Each is avoidable with the right diligence, which is exactly where having your own agent pays off.
Price History: What Homes Here Have Actually Sold For
Median sale prices in Springtree Village Jacksonville year by year since 2012, from closed MLS sales. Long-run history beats any single estimate: it shows what this community has actually done through rate cycles, not what a model guesses.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where is Springtree Village?
When were the homes built?
What do homes cost?
How big are the homes?
Is there an HOA?
Is there a CDD?
What amenities are included?
What schools serve it?
How far is NAS Jacksonville?
How far is downtown Jacksonville?
Is Springtree Village good for first-time buyers?
Is it a good rental investment?
What should I inspect on homes this age?
Why is the price range so wide?
Who should I call about Springtree Village?
Do I need my own agent to buy a resale here?
Related Reading
If you are weighing Springtree Village against the rest of the Westside value map, these guides are a good next step.
