The 60-Second Overview
The Reserve at Plantation Bay is ICI Homes' answer to a specific buyer: you want Plantation Bay's 45 holes, Founders Club, spa, and pools, but you want a brand-new house and you do not want to renovate something from the master plan's earlier decades. The solution is a 75-homesite gated enclave at 20 Deer Park Drive, directly across the street from the club's main campus, on 40-plus acres of conservation land with mature oaks and stocked ponds.
Homes run 2,814 to 4,136 square feet at $825,900 to $1,259,900, all ICI, with the builder's customary structural flexibility. Membership at Plantation Bay is genuinely optional and tiered, golf, fitness, or social, so your deed buys the gate and the setting, and the club is a la carte from there.
Across the street is the whole pitch: new construction beside a mature club. It is also the fine print, the amenities are near your house, not in your community, and they bill separately.
Location-wise this is the county line: a Bunnell address in Ormond Beach's orbit, with I-95 minutes away, Daytona's airport about 25 minutes, and sand in 22-plus. For buyers anchored to Palm Coast proper, that is the wrong direction; for buyers splitting life between the club and Ormond/Daytona, it is exactly right.
The Fee Stack: HOA, District, and the Optional Club
Three layers, in honest order. First, the HOA: Plantation Bay-associated dues begin around $2,400 a year, with The Reserve's exact current amount and inclusions to be confirmed in the estoppel, enclave sub-associations within Plantation Bay differ, and quoting the wrong section's number is a classic mistake here.
Second, the tax bill: Plantation Bay's sections have varied assessment histories, so pull the parcel's TRIM notice and read every non-ad-valorem line for the specific lot before you offer.
Third, the club, the layer that actually changes the math: full golf at $12,000 initiation plus $6,900 annual family dues for unlimited play on all three courses; a fitness tier at a $500 initiation for the fitness center, spa, and pools; a social tier at $100 plus $375 a year for dining and events. All optional, all changeable, confirm current pricing with the club in writing.
Want the full stack priced for your household? HOA, tax bill, and your actual club tier, one honest annual number.
Get the numbers →The Club Menu: 45 Holes, A La Carte
Plantation Bay Golf and Country Club is the amenity engine: 45 holes across three courses, the Founders Club clubhouse, a spa, fitness center, resort pools, tennis and pickleball, and a full dining and social calendar. Reserve residents access all of it through membership, and only through membership.
The menu structure rewards honesty about your habits. Daily golfers amortize the $12,000/$6,900 golf tier easily against Florida green fees. Households that mostly want the pools and gym take the fitness tier at a fraction of the cost. Social members keep the dining room and the calendar for a few hundred a year. The mistake is buying the house for the club and then discovering, a year in, which member you actually are, run that math before closing, not after.
Homes & Lots
All 75 homes are ICI, which means genuine structural customization, moved walls, added suites, extended outdoor living, on plans from 2,814 to 4,136 square feet. Finishes spec to the price point, and the conservation framing does real work: oak-canopy and pond lots here feel established in a way new construction rarely does.
Two cautions earned from experience. First, in a 75-lot enclave every closing is a comp, so a heavily customized flagship plan can outrun the appraisal curve early in the community's life, plan financing accordingly. Second, lot releases are small and the best pond/oak lots go first; if the setting is why you are buying, get on the release list early rather than choosing from remainders.
Schools
The Reserve feeds Bunnell-area Flagler schools, typically Bunnell Elementary, Buddy Taylor Middle, and Flagler Palm Coast High, which rate mid-pack and below the price point's usual expectations. The county-line location puts Volusia private options within practical reach, and many buyers at this tier use them. Verify current zoning for the specific lot with Flagler Schools, and ask us for the honest private-school logistics from Deer Park Drive.
Schools matter to your move? We will map every option, public and private, from this exact corner of the county.
Ask us →More on Living in The Reserve
What buyers actually ask about enclave life at the county line:
Do I have to join the club?
No. Membership is entirely optional at every tier. Your deed buys the gated enclave and its conservation setting; the club across the street bills separately, if and when you join.
Can I use Plantation Bay's gates and roads?
The Reserve has its own gated entry off Deer Park Drive. Access to the club campus is as a member or guest; the two properties are neighbors, not one community. Worth understanding before you assume golf-cart-to-the-tee living.
Is there a build timeline if I buy a lot release?
ICI runs standard construction timelines, typically 10-14 months once permitted; confirm current schedules and any build-commencement requirements in the contract.
What about hurricanes and insurance?
You are well inland, west of I-95, with new construction to current code, among the better insurance profiles in coastal-county Florida. Quote the actual address during your contingency window regardless.
5 Mistakes Buyers Make in The Reserve
The avoidable ones:
Buying for the club without pricing the club
Golf is $12,000 down and $6,900 a year for a family, on top of the house. Decide your tier and budget it before you fall for a pond lot.
Quoting another Plantation Bay section's fees
HOA and assessment figures vary across the master plan's sections and enclaves. The Reserve's estoppel is the only number that counts.
Customizing past the enclave's comp curve
Seventy-five lots means thin comps for years. Spend on structure, and brief your lender on appraisal risk before you spec $1.2M+.
Assuming amenities are inside the gate
They are across the street and membership-gated. If you want amenities your fees already bought, Grand Haven's model fits better, know which buyer you are.
Waiting for discounts on scarce lots
Small releases and one builder keep pricing firm. The leverage here is timing and option negotiation, not sticker haggling, work the releases, not the list price.
Buying here? We price the club, the comps, and the release calendar before you commit.
Talk to us first →Which Lots & Views Hold Value Best
Want the current release map? We track which pond and oak lots remain.
Get the lot map →What to Check Before You Offer
- Get The Reserve's own estoppel. Not Plantation Bay-general figures, this enclave's dues and inclusions.
- Pull the TRIM notice. Every non-ad-valorem line on the specific parcel.
- Price your club tier in writing. Current initiation, dues, minimums, from the club, dated.
- Brief your lender on thin comps. Appraisal strategy before you spec, not after.
- Review ICI's contract addenda. Timelines, escalation, and option pricing, line by line.
- Walk the lot at golden hour. Oak canopy and pond light are the product; meet them.
- Quote insurance early. Inland new-build helps; verify the address anyway.
- Confirm school zones. County-line addresses surprise people; check, do not assume.
The Reserve is the cleanest luxury proposition at the south end of the county: new ICI construction, 75 lots, and a 45-hole club across the street that you can join, or not. The buyers who win here decide their club tier before they pick their lot, because that decision changes which lot is actually worth the premium.
And in an enclave this small, the release calendar is the market. We watch it so our clients pick from the front of the line, not the leftovers.
The Reserve vs. Comparable Communities
The honest cross-shops at this budget:
| Community | Scale | Golf model | Amenity model | Typical buy-in |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Reserve at Plantation Bay | 75-lot gated enclave | 45 holes, optional tiers | Club across the street, a la carte | $826K–$1.26M |
| Plantation Bay (master plan) | Large gated master plan | Same club, same tiers | In-plan, mixed home vintages | $300s–$1M+ |
| The Conservatory | 340 lots, gated | Watson course, club-member access | No community amenities; optional club | $850K–$1.4M new |
| Grand Haven | ~1,900 homes, guard-gated | Nicklaus, optional club | CDD-owned, everyone funds | $300s–$1M+ |
| Hammock Dunes | Oceanfront private | Two courses, equity club | Equity model | $500K–$5M+ |
The verdict: against the Conservatory it is course quality (Watson) versus course quantity (45 holes) at similar money, and Daytona-orbit versus Hammock-orbit living. Against Plantation Bay's own resale market, The Reserve charges a new-construction premium for current code and zero renovation, fair value for buyers who hate projects. Against Grand Haven, it is the a-la-carte club model versus everyone-funds amenities. Geography usually decides it.
Cross-shopping the luxury tier? One tour: Reserve, Conservatory, Grand Haven, with the club math for each.
Plan the tour →The Honest Trade-offs
Why people love it
- 75-lot scarcity, real enclave living
- New ICI construction beside a mature 45-hole club
- Optional-everything membership menu
- Conservation-and-ponds setting with mature trees
- Best airport access of any Flagler luxury community
- No renovation projects, current code throughout
Why people pass
- Club costs are real and additional
- Amenities are across the street, not in-community
- County-line location, away from Palm Coast proper
- Mid-pack Bunnell-zone schools at a $1M price point
- Thin comps for years in a 75-lot enclave
- Firm pricing, small releases, little discount leverage
The Reserve Playbook
How we run a purchase here:
- First: club tier decided and priced in writing; it changes the lot and plan math.
- Release strategy: on ICI's list early; pond and oak lots evaluated against the calendar, not the remainder map.
- Contract: ICI addenda reviewed, structural options prioritized over finishes, appraisal-gap plan set with the lender.
- Diligence: Reserve-specific estoppel, TRIM pull, insurance quote, school-zone check.
- Closing: fees and every promised option re-verified on the final disclosure.
Questions We'd Ask Before Buying Here Ourselves
Six questions that get to the truth:
- Which club tier will we actually use, and what does it cost this year? In writing, from the club.
- What is The Reserve's own estoppel number? Not the master plan's.
- What is on this parcel's TRIM notice? Every line.
- How many lots remain, and which release is next? The scarcity math, current.
- What have the enclave's closings appraised at versus contract? The thin-comp reality check.
- Does the county-line geography fit our weekly life? Drive it on a Friday evening before deciding.
The Reserve May Not Be Right For You If
The honest fit test:
Consider elsewhere if you want
- Amenities owned by your community (see Grand Haven)
- Palm Coast-proper or beachside living
- The single best course over course quantity (see the Conservatory)
- Lower entry points inside the same club (see Plantation Bay resales)
- Top-tier public schools at this budget
- Negotiable builder pricing
The Reserve fits if you want
- New construction beside a mature 45-hole club
- A 75-lot enclave's quiet and scarcity
- Club membership on your terms, or not at all
- Conservation framing and stocked ponds
- Daytona-orbit convenience with a Flagler address
- A renovation-free path into Plantation Bay life
