The 60-Second Overview
Most buyers shopping Marsh Landing Country Club have never heard of Swift Creek, and that is part of the point. It is one of the community's small named neighborhoods, described in local press alongside Found Forest as the newer additions to the 1,700-acre gated community, set along the tidal creek that gives it its name in the northern interior near the Intracoastal marsh corridor.
What makes the name matter is one sentence in the master association's published FAQ: boat docks are owned by and are for the exclusive use of owners in Harbour Island, Swift Creek, and Found Forest. Out of more than 1,100 homes in Marsh Landing, only those three enclaves hold that key. Harbour Island gets the magazine spreads; Found Forest gets the acreage headlines; Swift Creek gets almost no marketing at all, which is exactly how its owners seem to like it.
The product is custom homes on generous wooded and creek-corridor lots; a past listing marketed a custom pool home on 1.3 private acres here, and the same waters hold Swift Creek Island, an 8.2-acre private island compound that is unique in the community. Public inventory is scarce, comps are thin, and a real share of the trading happens quietly.
Swift Creek is the least-marketed name in Marsh Landing's most exclusive sentence: three enclaves, one set of dock keys.
The Fee Layers: Master Plus Sub, No CDD
Every Marsh Landing property carries the master association, which runs the 24-hour staffed gates, patrols, parks, and community-wide grounds, plus one of ten sub-homeowners associations. Both are billed separately, and the combined number varies by neighborhood. As one dated data point, a Marsh Landing listing in May 2026 showed master dues of $1,337 per quarter plus a $3,960 one-time fee for that property; treat that as context, not your number.
One wrinkle specific to Swift Creek: the master association's published which-is-my-HOA street lists are organized by numbered sub-associations and a few named ones, and Swift Creek is not listed as its own named sub-HOA. In practice that means a Swift Creek address falls under one of the numbered associations, and identifying the right one, with its current dues, reserves, and minutes, is document work we do before any client offer.
Two things simplify the stack. There is no CDD: Marsh Landing predates the CDD financing era in this corridor, so no district assessment rides the tax bill. And Marsh Landing Country Club membership, the Ed Seay golf course, ten Har-Tru courts, fitness, and dining, is optional and priced separately across multiple categories, a choice rather than an obligation.
Dock Rights: The Three-Enclave Club
Here is the line, straight from the Marsh Landing master association's published FAQ: boat docks are owned by and are for the exclusive use of owners in Harbour Island, Swift Creek, and Found Forest. Not the whole community. Three enclaves. For a Swift Creek owner, that means community dock access with the Intracoastal Waterway minutes away by water, an asset most of Marsh Landing's 1,100-plus homes do not carry.
Be precise about what this is and is not. Harbour Island is the private-dockage product: estates with backyard docks and a yacht basin of owner slips. Swift Creek's water access is the shared community docks: real, exclusive, and valuable, but governed by association rules on slips, usage, and any fees. Read those documents before you size a boat, or a purchase, to the privilege.
The water itself rewards the access. A past listing on these waters described the brackish creek as productive for reds, trout, and flounder, with the Intracoastal about 7 minutes by boat. Tidal creeks move, though: confirm depths and dock logistics against what your boat actually draws.
The Creek: The Amenity With a Tide Chart
Swift Creek, the waterway, is a tidal, brackish artery threading the northern Marsh Landing interior toward the Intracoastal, and the neighborhood is built around its corridor of marsh views, mature canopy, and generous lots. This is the quiet alternative to golf-lot living: instead of fairway sightlines, you get water that changes twice a day and the wildlife that comes with it, from wading birds to the osprey and eagles a past island listing cataloged in these waters.
The corridor also holds the community's strangest property: Swift Creek Island, 8.2 acres of gated, private-access island marketed as the only property in Marsh Landing with its own private island, with a guest house, dock, and an approved second building lot at the time it sold. It is a one-of-one and prices that way; nothing else in the enclave comps against it, and no honest agent pretends otherwise.
For everyone else, the creek diligence list is the usual tidal-water set: FEMA zone and elevation for the parcel, any wetlands lines on larger lots, and an insurance quote in the inspection window rather than after closing.
The Gates and the Club: What Marsh Landing Provides
Daily life in Swift Creek runs on Marsh Landing's infrastructure: 24-hour staffed gates with roving patrols, two community parks with playgrounds and courts, sidewalks doubling as bike paths, and a location wedged between JTB and A1A that puts the beach about ten minutes east and Mayo Clinic roughly 8 miles north per past area listings.
The country club at the community's center is optional. The Ed Seay-designed par-72 course, ten lighted Har-Tru courts, the fitness center, pool, and dining operate on a membership structure with multiple categories, from full golf to sports and social tiers, under Concert Golf Partners ownership since 2022 per local reporting. Buy the house for the enclave; add the club if the lifestyle fits, and confirm current pricing directly because categories and fees change.
Schools: The 32082 Anchor
Swift Creek sits in the Ponte Vedra feeder pattern of the St. Johns County district, typically PVPV-Rawlings Elementary, Alice B. Landrum Middle, and Ponte Vedra High, the zoning that underwrites demand across 32082; a 2026 Marsh Landing listing reported GreatSchools marks of 10, 10, and 8 for that trio. Boundaries shift, so verify the current assignment for the specific address; at this price point many families also weigh Bolles, Episcopal, and the other private campuses an easy run up JTB.
What Living Here Is Actually Like
Daily life is Marsh Landing life with the volume turned down: the gate, the parkway, then a turn into a corridor of canopy and tidal water where the loudest thing most mornings is the creek itself.
The privacy pattern
Swift Creek is small, unmarketed, and tucked into the community's northern interior near Found Forest. Neighbors know each other; the rest of Ponte Vedra Beach mostly does not know the enclave exists. People who buy here tend to consider that a feature worth paying for.
The boat pattern
The community docks, exclusive to Swift Creek, Harbour Island, and Found Forest owners, put the Intracoastal minutes away by water. Confirm slip rules and availability with the association, then enjoy access that the other thousand-plus Marsh Landing homes do not have.
The commute reality
This is the connected end of Ponte Vedra Beach: Mayo Clinic roughly 15 minutes, St. Johns Town Center under 20, downtown about 25 via JTB, and the beach roughly 10 minutes through the gates. A tidal-creek setting this convenient is the whole trick.
Club life, optional
Marsh Landing Country Club, the Ed Seay course, ten Har-Tru courts, fitness, pool, and dining, is there by membership when you want it and absent from your bill when you do not. Confirm current categories and pricing if the club is part of the plan.
Five Costly Mistakes Swift Creek Buyers Make
Thin markets multiply mistakes. The five we see on enclave purchases like these:
Pricing off Marsh Landing averages
A community-wide average ask near $3.23M (April 2026, third-party) tells you almost nothing about one creek-corridor home on 1.3 acres. Demand a fresh, lot-adjusted and creek-adjusted comp set, including quiet trades.
Assuming the dock rights
The three-enclave exclusivity is real, but slips, usage, and fees live in association documents. Read them before you buy a boat, or a house, around them.
Guessing the sub-association
Swift Creek is not listed as its own named sub-HOA on the master association's street lists; the property falls under one of the numbered associations. Identify the right one and pull its dues, reserves, and minutes before you offer.
Skipping tidal-water diligence
FEMA zone, elevation, any wetlands lines on the bigger lots, and a real insurance quote belong inside the inspection window, not after closing. Tidal creeks are an amenity with paperwork.
Shopping only the MLS
A small enclave produces long silences punctuated by quiet conversations. Buyers who only watch the portals miss the trades that never reach them.
Lots, Water, and Where Value Hides
The hierarchy of the corridor
Swift Creek value climbs a simple ladder: interior wooded lots, marsh-view lots, creek-corridor lots with the best water exposure, and the acreage outliers. Each rung re-prices the same house. The inefficiency worth hunting: a well-built home whose water exposure and privacy outrank its listing photos, those age best in an enclave nobody markets.
The reverse trap is paying water-premium money for a lot whose view is mostly marsh grass at low tide. Walk it at both tides; the creek keeps two sets of books.
The Swift Creek Buyer Checklist
- Read the boat-dock rules: the three-enclave exclusivity is real, but slips, usage, and fees live in the documents.
- Identify the correct sub-association: Swift Creek addresses fall under one of Marsh Landing's numbered sub-HOAs; pull its dues, reserves, and minutes.
- Pull the master association documents: current dues, any one-time fees, and the access-control rules.
- Walk the lot at high and low tide: the creek presents differently twice a day; price the view you will actually own.
- Pull the FEMA zone and elevation read for the exact parcel, and get a real insurance quote in the inspection window.
- Verify recorded acreage and any wetlands lines on the larger lots before paying an acreage premium.
- Build a fresh, lot-adjusted comp set: Marsh Landing averages are not Swift Creek prices.
- Ask about off-market activity: in an enclave this small, the visible inventory is rarely the whole inventory.
Some of the best addresses we work are the ones with no marketing budget. Swift Creek has one sentence going for it, the master association's dock-rights line, and everything else is documents, tide charts, and quiet conversations. The buyer who wins here is the one who read the rules, identified the right sub-association, and registered their criteria before a listing ever existed.
That is the buyer we prepare you to be. The creek is not getting any longer, and the list of three enclaves is not getting any longer either.
Swift Creek vs. the Alternatives
For a buyer who wants gates, water access, and a Ponte Vedra Beach address, the honest shortlist:
| Community | Water story | The honest one-liner |
|---|---|---|
| Marsh Landing (broader) | Golf, marsh, and lagoon lots | The same gates and club without the dock rights, across 1,100+ homes. |
| Harbour Island | Private docks, yacht basin | The boat-first sibling; private dockage at a showcase price. |
| Found Forest | Same shared docks, 3-10 acre lots | The land-first sibling; same dock key, much bigger parcels. |
| The Plantation | Club lakes, near the ocean | Equity club and beach proximity; no Intracoastal dock access. |
| River Marsh | Intracoastal-marsh lots | The marsh-view alternative nearby without the gates-plus-docks combination. |
The pattern is simple: in 32082, exactly three enclaves combine the Marsh Landing gates with exclusive community dock access, and Swift Creek is the quietest and least-marketed of the three. If discretion plus a dock key is the brief, the comparison ends fast.
The Honest Pros and Cons
Pros
- Exclusive community boat-dock rights, shared with only two other enclaves
- Tidal-creek setting behind 24-hour staffed gates
- Ponte Vedra school zone with no CDD
- Generous lots in a community that stopped platting decades ago
- Optional, not mandatory, club membership
- Near-zero marketing means near-zero tourist traffic through the enclave
Cons
- Seven-figure entry with thin, often-quiet comps
- Dock access is shared community docks, not private dockage
- Years can pass between public listings; patience is part of the price
- Tidal-water diligence (FEMA, elevation, insurance) on every deal
- Beach is a drive, not a walk
- The sub-association puzzle adds a document step most agents skip
Our Swift Creek Buyer Playbook
How we run a Swift Creek purchase, in order:
- Define the brief first: boat, creek view, lot size, or pure privacy; the enclave rewards a precise spec.
- Register the search quietly: in an enclave this small, off-market conversations are the market.
- Pull documents before touring: master association, the correct sub-association, and the dock rules.
- Walk the water at both tides and get the FEMA, elevation, and insurance reads early.
- Offer off a fresh lot-adjusted analysis with dues, insurance, and any club plans already in the math.
Questions We Ask Before You Sign
Six answers we get in writing on every Swift Creek contract:
- What exactly do the dock rules grant a Swift Creek owner: slips, usage, fees, transfer?
- Which sub-association governs this address, and what do its dues, reserves, and minutes say?
- What does the master association charge today, including any one-time fees at purchase?
- What does insurance actually quote for this parcel, elevation, and flood zone?
- What is the recorded acreage, and do any wetlands lines cut into the usable lot?
- What were the true comparable trades, including any that never hit the MLS?
Is Swift Creek Not For You?
The honest cut, both directions:
Consider elsewhere if you want
- A sub-seven-figure budget
- A private dock behind your own house
- Walk-to-beach living
- Inventory to choose from this quarter
- A low-diligence purchase with no tidal paperwork
- A neighborhood with a name people recognize at parties
Swift Creek fits if you want
- Dock access without paying Harbour Island prices for private dockage
- A tidal-creek setting behind staffed gates
- The Ponte Vedra school zone with no CDD
- Generous lots and genuine quiet
- An enclave that trades on documents, not marketing
- Membership in a three-enclave club that cannot expand
