The 60-Second Overview
The Palazzo on St. Johns is the San Jose corridor's boutique waterfront condo: a gated, Tuscan-inspired enclave of roughly 56-58 house-sized residences on Goodbys Creek at the corner of Baymeadows Road and San Jose Boulevard, with a private marina and boardwalk, a kayak launch, a saltwater pool, and San Marco about ten minutes up the boulevard. The plans are the point: three- and four-bedroom layouts from roughly 1,972 to 3,274 square feet of interior space, each opening from a private elevator landing onto nine-foot ceilings, hardwood floors, gas fireplaces, and covered terraces that run up to about 828 square feet on the largest plan. It is single-family-house space with condo-fee maintenance, which is exactly the trade its downsizer-heavy buyer pool is making.
The history is worth sixty seconds because it still shapes the buy. The project launched before the recession as The Cove at St. Johns, planned at 86 units in four buildings, then stalled; the FDIC took over the partially built structures in 2009. In 2013, Prospect Cove Development, a venture of Tampa's Forge Capital Partners and Orlando's Prospect Real Estate Group, bought the site for about $2.5 million, renamed it The Palazzo on St. Johns, and finished the community to the original Wakefield Beasley design, delivering buildings in phases from 2014 to about 2020 and ultimately scaling the plan back to roughly 56-58 residences in three buildings. The result is a finished, healthy community, but one where building vintages differ by half a decade and where published unit counts and fee figures still disagree, so the documents matter.
House-sized rooms, a private elevator landing, and a creek out the back door, ten minutes from San Marco. The view is on the listing photos; the fee picture and the creek depth are where the homework is.
Two honest cautions frame everything else on this page. First, Goodbys Creek is shallow: this is a real private marina with slips you can buy, but it is small-craft, tide-aware water, not a deep-water yacht basin, and we will give you the actual numbers below. Second, the published fee data conflicts, with recent listings showing association fees roughly from around $900 a month on three-bedroom plans to $1,900 or more on larger units, which in a post-2024 Florida condo market means the budget, reserve study, and SIRS paperwork are not optional reading. Prices have recently run from the high $400s for three-bedroom plans to about $1.3M for penthouses, with so few annual sales that every comp deserves a plan-and-view match, not a community average.
The Fee Stack: One Condo Fee, Conflicting Published Numbers, and the Post-2024 Reality
The Palazzo's cost structure is refreshingly simple on paper: no CDD, no club initiation, no sub-HOA maze, just one condo association fee. The complication is that the published figures for that one fee genuinely disagree, and in a newer Florida condo that is a diligence flag, not a deal-breaker. Here is the honest read:
1) The condo fee. Recent listing data has shown association fees roughly from around $900 per month on three-bedroom San Jose plans to roughly $1,900 or more on larger and penthouse units, and one third-party aggregator has published an even wider range. Some of that spread is real, condo fees here are allocated by unit share, so an Epping penthouse pays meaningfully more than an entry three-bedroom, and some of it is data noise from listings quoting different years' budgets. What the fee buys is genuinely substantial by published inclusions: the master building insurance (a large and rising line item on any Florida waterfront building that you would otherwise carry solo on a house), water, sewer, trash, natural gas, gigabit AT&T internet, pest control, security, grounds, the pool and fitness center, and reserves. We confirm the current budget, the exact monthly figure, and precisely what it covers for the specific unit, in writing, before you offer, because the spread between the published numbers is too wide to guess across.
2) What the 2024-2026 condo laws mean here. The Palazzo's buildings are three-plus stories, which puts the association inside Florida's post-Surfside framework: a milestone structural inspection requirement keyed to building age, and a Structural Integrity Reserve Study (SIRS) with budgets now required to actually fund structural reserves rather than waive them. The age math is the good news: buildings delivered from 2014 to about 2020 are decades away from milestone-inspection age, a real advantage over the 1970s-1990s waterfront condos elsewhere on the St. Johns. But the SIRS and reserve-funding rules apply to every association now, lenders increasingly ask for the paperwork before approving condo loans, and a young building with an unusual construction history (partially built, weathered through the FDIC years, completed by a second developer) is precisely the kind of file worth reading rather than assuming. We request the SIRS, the reserve schedule, the budget, and any planned or pending assessments as a condition of every offer we write here.
3) The slip is its own line. Marina slips at The Palazzo are available for purchase separately, with water and power at the dock; a slip is not automatically included with a unit. The slip economics and, more importantly, the creek-depth math deserve their own section, which is next.
The Marina: Real Slips, a Kayak Launch, and the Honest Goodbys Creek Math
The marina is The Palazzo's signature amenity and the reason many buyers find this community in the first place: a private boardwalk and dock on Goodbys Creek with boat slips available for purchase, water and power at the pedestals, and a kayak/canoe launch a few steps from the buildings. Owning a slip behind your own gate, off your own boardwalk, at this price point is genuinely rare in Jacksonville. But we would be doing you a disservice, and we have watched other agents do exactly this disservice, if we sold you the marina without selling you the creek.
Here is the honest math. Goodbys Creek is shallow. NOAA's Coast Pilot has reported depths of only about 2 feet in the creek; the channel out to the St. Johns was dredged around 2007 and has shoaled since, with no dredging plans we are aware of; and local boaters on this water describe trimming up around the shallow markers and running the channel with the tide in mind. The St. Johns River itself, less than a mile out, is broad, deep sailing, and from there it is open water north to downtown and the jetties or south toward Julington Creek and Mandarin. The constraint is the first half-mile.
What that means in practice: the Palazzo marina suits skiffs, flats and bay boats, jet skis, and pontoons run on a respectful tide, plus the kayaks and paddleboards that the launch was built for, Goodbys Creek is, not coincidentally, one of the loveliest paddling creeks on the southbank. What it does not suit is a deep-draft cruiser, a sailboat, or anything you would rather not plan around a tide table. If your boating life is a 30-foot-plus boat with a 3-foot draft, the honest play is a dry-stack or deep-water marina for the big boat, or a different community entirely (Marina San Pablo's 50-foot deep-water slips on the Intracoastal exist for exactly that buyer, and we wrote the guide on it). If your boating life is sunset creek runs, fishing the river grass lines, and paddling out the back door, this marina is close to perfect, and far cheaper than the deep-water alternative.
The Buildings: Tuscan Architecture, Three Plans, and What Daily Life Looks Like
The architecture is the curb appeal: stucco, stone accents, tile roofs, and arched detailing in a Tuscan-Mediterranean style, mid-rise buildings of four to five levels set over ground-floor resident garages, so every residence floats above the flood-prone ground plane with parking underneath. The community was designed by Wakefield Beasley & Associates, and the second developer deliberately finished the later buildings to the original design and configuration, so the enclave reads as one coherent piece rather than a phased patchwork, even though deliveries span 2014 to about 2020.
Inside, the community runs on three core plans. The San Jose (3 bed/2 bath, about 1,972-1,988 square feet interior) is the entry point and the most liquid product, a true single-level home with a terrace of roughly 118-377 square feet. The San Marco (3 bed plus study/3 bath, about 2,500-2,541 square feet) is the heart of the community, adding the flexible study and terraces in the 300-430 square foot range. The Epping (4 bed/3 bath, about 3,270 square feet) is the trophy plan, with an 828-square-foot terrace that functions as a genuine outdoor room over the creek. Every plan opens from a private elevator landing, your elevator opens into your foyer, not a shared corridor, and carries nine-foot ceilings, hardwood floors, gas fireplaces, and gourmet kitchens.
Daily life here is the point of the product. Mornings are coffee on a terrace over the creek with the rowers and paddlers going by; the day's maintenance list is zero, because the fee covers the building, grounds, and even the internet and gas; afternoons are the saltwater pool, the summer kitchen and firepit, the fitness center, or the dog park; evenings are a ten-minute run up San Jose Boulevard to San Marco's restaurants or eight minutes to the Avenues corridor. The community is small enough, roughly 56-58 homes, that neighbors actually know each other, and quiet enough that the loudest thing most evenings is an osprey working the creek. It is lock-and-leave in the most literal sense: close the terrace doors, take your elevator down, and go.
The Location: The San Jose Corridor, and Why This Corner Works
The Palazzo's corner, Baymeadows Road at San Jose Boulevard, is one of the quietly best-connected addresses on Jacksonville's southbank. San Jose Boulevard is the spine: north, it runs past The Bolles School's riverfront San Jose campus (about two miles), through the grand old San Jose Estates streets, and into San Marco Square's restaurants and shops in roughly ten to twelve minutes, with Baptist Medical Center and the Southbank just beyond and downtown about fifteen to twenty minutes door to door. South, the boulevard runs into Mandarin's oak canopy and the Julington Creek dining docks. East, Baymeadows Road reaches The Avenues mall and the Baymeadows office corridor in under ten minutes, with I-95 access there for the airport and the beaches.
The immediate setting matters as much as the connections. This stretch of the San Jose / Beauclerc corridor is established, tree-canopied, and residential: estate lots in Beauclerc and Epping Forest's storied gates to the north, the city's John T. Lowe boat ramp sharing the creek, and the St. Johns River a few hundred yards beyond the marsh. The trade-off is honest: San Jose Boulevard and Baymeadows both carry real traffic at rush hour, and you will feel it turning out of the gate at 8 a.m. But you are not commuting down a sterile arterial to a fringe suburb; you are living inside one of the city's legacy corridors, with three generations of Jacksonville institutions, Bolles, Epping Forest, the San Marco grid, within a ten-minute radius.
For medical-corridor buyers, Baptist Medical Center South is about fifteen minutes down I-95, the main Baptist campus on the Southbank about fifteen as well, and Memorial Hospital sits just up University Boulevard. For families, the private-school geography, Bolles, Episcopal, Assumption, is among the best in the city from this address. For downsizers leaving a San Jose, Beauclerc, or Mandarin house, the move often shortens every drive they already make.
Schools
The Palazzo is served by Duval County Public Schools; listing data for this address cites Beauclerc Elementary, Alfred I. duPont Middle, and Atlantic Coast High, though Duval rezones periodically and assignment is by address, so confirm zoning for the specific unit with the district before relying on it. The honest read: public ratings along this corridor are mixed, which matters less to The Palazzo's downsizer-heavy buyer pool than to relocating families, and the corridor's real schools story is private. The Bolles School's San Jose campus is about two miles up the boulevard, Episcopal and Assumption are a short drive, and that private-school geography is a durable demand driver for the whole 32217 corridor, including resale demand for these units.
If public assignment matters to your plans, we pull the current zoning, the GreatSchools and state report-card data, and the practical commute for the specific schools before you offer, because the listing portals routinely get corridor addresses like this one wrong.
More on Living at The Palazzo
The depth without the wall of text. Open what matters to you.
Who actually lives here, and what the culture is like
Insurance, flood, and the waterfront read
Milestone inspections and SIRS, specifically for these buildings
Rentals, pets, and house rules
5 Mistakes Buyers Make at The Palazzo
We have watched buyers make each of these on this corridor. Every one is avoidable with the right preparation.
Trusting a published fee number
Listings and portals quote Palazzo fees anywhere from roughly $900 to over $1,900 a month, and some of that spread is stale data. Offering against the wrong number misprices your whole monthly. We verify the current budget figure for the specific unit in writing.
Buying the marina without the tide table
The slips are real, but Goodbys Creek runs only a couple of feet in places and shoals between dredgings. Buyers with deep-draft boats discover the constraint after closing. Match the slip to your actual boat before you write, not after.
Comping against the community average
A high-$400s San Jose plan and a $1.3M penthouse can list the same season here. With a handful of sales a year, averages are noise; the only honest comp is same plan, same view tier, same building vintage.
Skipping the documents because the buildings are young
Newer construction is a genuine advantage, but the SIRS, reserve schedule, budget, and insurance program still drive your fee trajectory and your loan approval, and this community's stalled-then-finished history makes the file worth actually reading.
Ignoring which building and exposure you are buying
Deliveries span 2014 to about 2020, and sight lines run from open river and creek-marina views to pool-courtyard and parking-side exposures. Same plan, different position can be a six-figure difference at resale. Buy the position, not just the floor plan.
Which Views & Positions Hold Value Best
In this community, the position is the asset you cannot renovate
Kitchens get updated; sight lines do not. The riverfront-facing exposures, the units whose terraces look past the creek to open St. Johns water, are the scarcest product here and the segment that holds when the broader condo market softens. Creek-and-marina views carry the next tier, with the boardwalk-and-boats foreground doing real work in photos and at resale.
The mistake is paying a water-view price for a pool-courtyard or parking-side exposure on the same plan. We help buyers spot which positions and floors carry real, durable premiums, so your money lands where the market will give it back.
What to Check Before You Offer
Before you write an offer on any Palazzo residence, run this list. Missing any one of them is how buyers overpay or inherit a problem.
- The condo documents: budget, reserve study, SIRS status, insurance program, and any pending or planned assessments
- The exact current fee for this specific unit, what it includes, and its trajectory over the last three budgets
- The final unit count and budget share, since published sources still disagree on the community's total
- Slip status: what is available or conveying, how slip ownership and fees are documented, and the honest draft math for your boat
- The position: river-facing, creek-marina, courtyard, or parking-side, comped against same-plan sales, not the community average
- The building vintage (2014 vs ~2020 delivery) and the condition of original finishes versus updates
- Insurance reality: the association's master coverage, the parcel's flood zone, and a real HO-6 quote
- Leasing and pet rules in the current documents, if rental flexibility or a specific pet matters to your plans
The Palazzo is one of those communities where the listing photos and the diligence file tell two different stories, and both happen to be good ones, if you read them. The photos sell the Tuscan terraces and the boats; the file tells you this is a young community with no CDD, decades of runway before milestone-inspection age, and a fee that buys more than most buyers realize. The catch is that the public data is messy: conflicting fee figures, conflicting unit counts, and a creek whose depth no portal will mention.
Our job here is simple: verify the number the seller's side hopes you will take on faith, match the slip to your actual boat instead of your imagined one, and comp the position instead of the plan. Do those three things and The Palazzo is, square foot for square foot, one of the most defensible waterfront buys on the southbank.
The Palazzo vs. Comparable Communities
The honest way to place The Palazzo is against the other addresses a Jacksonville condo buyer, especially a water-minded one, is realistically weighing. Each trades something different.
| Community | How it compares to The Palazzo |
|---|---|
| Marina San Pablo | The other private-marina condo, and the deep-water answer: a 2006 ten-story tower of 56 residences on the Intracoastal with 50-foot deep-water slips, roughly 17 miles from the jetties, near the Mayo Clinic. Real boats, real depth, and roughly double the typical carrying cost; The Palazzo trades blue-water capability for newer construction, a lower fee, and the San Jose corridor. |
| San Marco Place | High-rise condo living on the Southbank edge of San Marco, walkable to the Square's restaurants, at broadly comparable price points. An urban-lifestyle play: you trade The Palazzo's gate, marina, and creek quiet for elevators-to-dinner walkability and skyline views. |
| The Peninsula | Downtown's marquee concierge high-rise: 37 stories and 241 units on the St. Johns with valet-level services and dues that can exceed $2,000 a month. More building, more services, more skyline; no marina, no boutique scale, and a downtown address instead of the leafy San Jose corridor. |
| Beauclerc | The single-family neighbor: estate-scale lots and riverfront classics on the same corridor, often at comparable or higher all-in prices once you add house-scale maintenance and solo waterfront insurance. The trade is land and privacy versus The Palazzo's lock-and-leave and included amenities. |
| Goodbys Creek (neighborhood) | The surrounding creekside neighborhood, where condo options run from the $100s to The Palazzo's penthouses. The broader area's median is far below The Palazzo's, which is the point: this community is the corridor's luxury tier, and comps must stay inside the gate. |
| Epping Forest-area condos | The corridor's prestige addresses near the historic Epping Forest estate trade on gated grounds and legacy cachet, with older vintages and club economics in some cases. The Palazzo counters with newer 2014-2020 construction, simpler fees, and its own marina, at a friendlier price per square foot. |
The Palazzo's case against this field is the combination: boutique scale, house-sized newer-construction plans, a private (if shallow) marina, and a no-CDD fee stack on one of the city's best corridors. The case against it is concentration and data noise: one small association, conflicting published figures, and a thin resale market, which is exactly why the documents are the diligence.
The Honest Trade-offs
Pros
- Boutique gated scale: roughly 56-58 residences, not a complex of hundreds.
- House-sized plans (1,972-3,274 sq ft) with private elevator landings and terraces up to ~828 sq ft.
- Private marina, boardwalk, and kayak launch on protected, paddle-perfect Goodbys Creek.
- Newer 2014-2020 construction, decades from milestone-inspection age, with no CDD.
- All-inclusive fee by published inclusions: insurance, water, sewer, trash, gas, gigabit internet, grounds.
- San Jose corridor geography: Bolles ~2 miles, San Marco ~10 minutes, Avenues ~10 minutes.
Cons
- Goodbys Creek is shallow and tide-dependent; deep-draft boats cannot live here.
- Published fee figures conflict widely; the real number requires written verification.
- Thin market: a handful of sales a year, noisy medians, and appraisal sensitivity.
- Building vintages and finishes span 2014 to ~2020; condition varies unit to unit.
- Rush-hour traffic on San Jose Boulevard and Baymeadows is real at the gate.
- No golf, no concierge tower services, no walk-to-dinner urbanity; the lifestyle is the creek and the corridor.
The Palazzo Playbook
If we were buying at The Palazzo, this is the order of operations we would run, and the one we run for our clients.
- Define the boat question first. Kayaks and a skiff, a tide-aware pontoon, or no boat at all: the creek's honest depth decides whether the marina is a centerpiece or a backdrop for you.
- Pull the condo documents early. Budget, the verified fee for the unit, reserves, SIRS, insurance, pending assessments, before you fall for a terrace.
- Comp by plan and position. Same plan, same view tier, same building vintage, reaching back years if needed; ignore the community average.
- Walk all three plans. The San Jose, San Marco, and Epping live very differently; an hour of back-to-back showings saves a mispriced offer.
- Use the thin market's pace. Listings here can sit; negotiate calmly from documents and comps, and let boutique-market leverage work for you.
Questions We'd Ask Before Buying Here Ourselves
The questions a local who knows The Palazzo asks are different from the ones a portal answers. On any specific residence, we want to know:
- What is the exact current fee for this unit on this year's budget, and which of the conflicting published numbers is simply wrong?
- What does the SIRS and reserve schedule show, and is any assessment planned or pending?
- Is a slip available or conveying, how is it documented, and what is the honest tide window for the buyer's actual boat?
- Which building and position is this, river-facing, creek-marina, courtyard, or parking-side, and how does it comp against same-plan sales?
- How much is original developer finish versus updates, and what would the refresh actually cost?
- How long has it sat and at what price cuts, and what does that say about our leverage?
The Palazzo May Not Be Right For You If
We would rather tell you the truth than sell you the wrong community. The Palazzo may not be the right fit if any of these are deal-breakers, and that is a property question, not a personal one.
Consider elsewhere if you want
- Deep water under a big boat; Goodbys Creek is small-craft, tide-aware water (Marina San Pablo is the deep-water answer).
- A yard, a workshop, or single-family privacy (Beauclerc and the San Jose estates fit better).
- Walk-to-dinner urban living (San Marco Place and The Peninsula fit better).
- Short-term rental income; this community's documents and culture do not run that way.
- A rock-bottom monthly carry; the all-inclusive fee is structural here, whatever the verified number turns out to be.
The Palazzo fits if you want
- House-sized single-level rooms, a private elevator landing, and a terrace that works as an outdoor room.
- A kayak launch and a small-boat slip a boardwalk away from your door.
- Newer construction with no CDD and decades of runway before milestone-inspection age.
- A boutique gated community of roughly 56-58 homes where the pool is never crowded.
- The San Jose corridor: Bolles, San Marco, the hospitals, and the Avenues all inside fifteen minutes.
