Thomas Creek. Know what matters before you buy.

Land purchased Dec 2025 · Lem Turner Rd near JIA · ZIP 32218 area

An announced, not-yet-built master plan: The Hutson Companies, the developer behind SilverLeaf and OakLeaf Plantation, paid $29.48 million in December 2025 for roughly 1,089 acres on Lem Turner Road near Jacksonville International Airport, carrying 2022 entitlements for up to 2,300 homes and 125,000 sf of commercial. No builders, no pricing, no timeline announced.

LocationLem Turner Rd near JIAZIP 32218 area
CommunityTBDBuilders, pricing, timeline
HomesUp to 2,300Homes entitled (2022 rezoning)
Price$29.48MHutson land buy (Dec 2025)
Highlights~1,089Acres on Lem Turner Rd
Sizes125,000 sfCommercial entitled
Pricing$0 listedNothing for sale yet
SchoolsDuval County SchoolsGarden City, Highlands MS, First Coast HS
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The Homes

Status

Announced master plan only; no homes built, no models, no lots released as of this writing

Entitlement

2022 Jacksonville City Council rezoning allows up to 2,300 residential units: a mix of single-family homes and townhomes is expected

Builders

None officially announced; third-party new-home portals have shown placeholder Lennar collections at the site address, which we treat as a signal to verify, not a fact

Product mix

Per the announced plan, single-family homes, townhomes, and neighborhood-scale retail and services; details TBD

Costs & Governance

Pricing

Nothing is priced; any number you see quoted for Thomas Creek today is speculation

HOA / CDD

Unknown. Hutson built SilverLeaf famously without a CDD; whether that financing model repeats on the Northside is the single biggest open question, and we are watching district filings for the answer

Taxes

Duval County; with no CDD formed and no homes assessed, the eventual carrying cost is genuinely TBD

Amenities & Lifestyle

Announced

Neighborhood-scale retail and services within the plan (up to 125,000 sf commercial entitled); no amenity package has been published

Setting

Roughly 1,089 acres of largely undeveloped land between Terrell and Braddock roads off Lem Turner Road, near the Thomas Creek corridor at the Nassau County line

Developer track record

Hutson communities (SilverLeaf, OakLeaf Plantation, Johns Creek) have historically led with pools, trails, and amenity centers; assume nothing here until plans are filed

Commercial

125,000 sf entitled; tenant mix and timing unannounced

Location & Nearby

Setting

Northside Jacksonville at 14158 Lem Turner Road, between Terrell and Braddock roads, northwest of the Lem Turner / I-295 interchange

Drive times

Roughly 10-15 minutes to Jacksonville International Airport and the I-295 North beltway; River City Marketplace is the nearest major retail node

ZIP

32218 area, Duval County, just south of the Nassau County line

Public schools & ratings

There is no school zoning for Thomas Creek because there are no homes; Duval County will assign zoning as the community is platted, and a development of up to 2,300 homes is exactly the kind that can trigger boundary changes or even new-school conversations along the Lem Turner corridor. The schools currently serving nearby corridor addresses are the honest starting point.

SchoolGreatSchoolsLinks
Garden City Elementary (nearby corridor)Confirm currentGreatSchools
Highlands Middle (nearby corridor)Confirm currentGreatSchools
First Coast High (nearby corridor)Confirm currentGreatSchools

These are corridor reference points, not Thomas Creek assignments; no zoning exists for this site yet. Duval County sets boundaries by address and revises them as growth lands, so verify with the district when homes are actually platted.

Thomas Creek is a watch-list page, not a buying guide: in December 2025 The Hutson Companies, the developer behind SilverLeaf and OakLeaf Plantation, paid $29.48 million for roughly 1,089 acres on Lem Turner Road near JIA, carrying 2022 entitlements for up to 2,300 homes and 125,000 sf of commercial. Nothing is built, nothing is priced, and no builders or timeline are announced, which is exactly why the smart move now is tracking the CDD formation, the builder lineup, and phase-one pricing before the marketing machine turns on.

The short version

Thomas Creek in 30 seconds: an announced ~1,089-acre Hutson Companies master plan at 14158 Lem Turner Road on Jacksonville's Northside, bought December 1, 2025 for $29.48 million, entitled since a 2022 City Council rezoning for up to 2,300 homes plus 125,000 sf of commercial. No homes exist, no prices exist, no builders or timeline are official. This page tracks what to verify before sales open.

  • Roughly 1,089 acres between Terrell and Braddock roads off Lem Turner Road, northwest of the I-295 interchange and near Jacksonville International Airport
  • Purchased December 1, 2025 by The Hutson Companies of St. Augustine for $29.48 million, per the Jacksonville Daily Record
  • 2022 Jacksonville City Council rezoning allows up to 2,300 residential units: single-family homes and townhomes expected, plus neighborhood-scale retail
  • 125,000 square feet of commercial space entitled within the plan
  • Hutson's resume: SilverLeaf, OakLeaf Plantation, and Johns Creek, including SilverLeaf's well-known no-CDD financing model; whether that repeats here is unannounced
  • Third-party portals have shown placeholder Lennar collections at the site address; no builder has been officially announced, so treat portal listings as a signal to verify
  • Nothing is for sale, nothing is priced, and no opening timeline exists; anyone quoting Thomas Creek prices today is guessing
Quick verdict: is Thomas Creek right for you?

Great if you want

  • First position when a proven master-plan developer opens a brand-new community on the more affordable Northside
  • The possibility, unconfirmed, of a SilverLeaf-style no-CDD cost structure near JIA
  • Airport, I-295, and River City Marketplace access from a corridor still priced below the St. Johns County machine
  • Phase-one buying leverage if you are organized before the sales office opens
  • A multi-year runway to watch entitlement, infrastructure, and school moves before committing

Look elsewhere if you want

  • A home you can tour, price, or close on this year; nothing is built
  • Certainty on fees, builders, schools, or timeline; all of it is genuinely TBD
  • A finished-amenity move-in; phase-one buyers in any master plan live with construction for years
  • An established resale track record; the Lem Turner corridor data is thin for this product type
  • Guarantees that the SilverLeaf no-CDD model repeats here; the financing structure is the open question
Phase one, when it opens
Not priced

The first released lots in any Hutson community historically carry the sharpest pricing of the project's life, and the most construction-era patience. Nothing is released; we will flag the opening before the portals do.

Status: not released · watch list
Townhome product (expected)
Not priced

The announced plan anticipates townhomes alongside single-family. On this corridor, attached product is typically the entry point; confirm nothing until a builder publishes a price sheet.

Status: entitled, unannounced
Single-family collections (expected)
Not priced

Portal placeholders hint at 40-foot and 60-foot lot collections, but no builder, plan, or price is official. The 2,300-unit cap is a ceiling, not a commitment.

Status: speculation until filed

Source: Jacksonville Daily Record reporting on the December 2025 land sale and 2022 entitlements. No MLS or builder pricing exists for this community; any Thomas Creek price you see online today is a placeholder or a guess.

Recently sold in Thomas Creek

List prices tell you what sellers want. Closed sales tell you what buyers actually paid. We pull the verified recent solds for the exact homes and views you are weighing.

Phase one closings
TBD · nothing has sold
Sold price $TBD
🔒 Unlock the real number
Townhome closings
TBD · no product exists
Sold price $TBD
🔒 Unlock the real number
Single-family closings
TBD · watch this space
Sold price $TBD
🔒 Unlock the real number
Want the verified closed prices for the exact homes you care about in Thomas Creek?
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DestinationApprox. distanceApprox. drive
Lem Turner Rd / I-295 interchange~2-3 mi~5-7 min
Jacksonville International Airport~7-9 mi~12-15 min
River City Marketplace~8-10 mi~14-18 min
Downtown Jacksonville~14-16 mi~22-28 min
Callahan (US-1, Nassau County)~9-11 mi~15-20 min
Oceanway / Yellow Bluff corridor~9-11 mi~16-20 min
Jacksonville beaches~28-32 mi~40-50 min

Distances and drive times are approximate from the 14158 Lem Turner Road site address and assume normal traffic; Lem Turner is a two-lane corridor for much of this stretch today, which is precisely why the road-improvement question matters.

The map shows raw land. What 2,300 homes do to this corridor, school capacity, Lem Turner widening, retail follow-on, is the real story of the next five years here.

$29.48M
Hutson land purchase, December 1, 2025
~1,089
Acres between Terrell and Braddock roads
2,300
Maximum homes entitled by the 2022 rezoning
0
Homes built, priced, or for sale today
● Watch list: nothing to buy yet
Price tiers
Entitled homes (ceiling)
2,300
Commercial entitled
125,000 sf
Homes built so far
0
These are entitlement figures from the 2022 rezoning and the December 2025 land sale, not sales data. The 2,300-unit figure is a maximum; master plans routinely build fewer units than entitled, on timelines that stretch a decade or more.

Anyone modeling Thomas Creek values today is extrapolating from corridor comps like Yellow Bluff Landing and the Pecan Park communities. We do that work honestly when you are ready, and we will replace this section with real numbers the day they exist.

Want the real Thomas Creek comps and a full carrying-cost read, not a Zestimate?
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The 60-Second Overview

Let us be unusually clear about what this page is: Thomas Creek is an announced master plan, not a community. There are no homes, no models, no streets, no price sheets, and no sales office. What exists is roughly 1,089 acres of land at 14158 Lem Turner Road on Jacksonville's Northside, between Terrell and Braddock roads near the airport, that The Hutson Companies bought on December 1, 2025 for $29.48 million, per the Jacksonville Daily Record. The land carries a 2022 City Council rezoning that allows up to 2,300 homes and 125,000 square feet of commercial space.

Why does an empty tract deserve a full guide? Because of who bought it. Hutson is the St. Augustine developer behind SilverLeaf, the St. Johns County juggernaut famous for delivering master-plan amenities without a CDD, plus OakLeaf Plantation and Johns Creek. When a developer with that resume spends nearly thirty million dollars on Northside land, it is the strongest institutional bet on the Lem Turner corridor in a generation, and it puts a clock on a part of Duval County that has been Jacksonville's affordability release valve.

Everything else is genuinely TBD. No builders are officially announced, though third-party portals have shown placeholder Lennar collections at the site address, a signal we verify rather than repeat as fact. No pricing exists. No timeline exists. The honest job right now is the watch list: track the financing structure (CDD or no CDD), the builder lineup, and the phase-one release, so that when the sales office finally opens, you negotiate from knowledge instead of launch-weekend adrenaline.

Nothing is built, nothing is priced, and that is precisely the moment to start paying attention, because the developer's next three filings will decide what this community costs to own.

The Deal: $29.48M and a 2,300-Home Entitlement

The verifiable facts are compact. On December 1, 2025, The Hutson Companies closed on about 1,089 acres at 14158 Lem Turner Road for $29.48 million, roughly $27,000 per acre. The site sits northwest of the Lem Turner / I-295 interchange, west of Jacksonville International Airport, just south of the Nassau County line near the Thomas Creek waterway that gives the project its working name.

The entitlement came first: in 2022, Jacksonville City Council approved a rezoning allowing up to 2,300 residential units, expected to mix single-family homes and townhomes, plus 125,000 square feet of commercial space for neighborhood-scale retail and services. That sequencing matters. Hutson did not buy raw hope; it bought land with three years of entitlement work already banked, which shortens the runway between purchase and sales office compared with a project that still needs council approval.

Two honest caveats on the headline numbers. First, 2,300 is a ceiling, not a plan: master plans routinely build fewer units than entitled, in phases that respond to the market over a decade or more. Second, entitlement is not engineering: site work, permitting, utilities, and horizontal construction all stand between the December 2025 closing and the first model home, and none of it has been publicly scheduled. As of this writing, the verified record stops at the land sale and the zoning; anything more specific you read elsewhere is forecast, not fact.

The three filings that turn this from announcement into community: a community development district petition (or its conspicuous absence), the first builder lot-purchase recordings, and the plat for phase one. Those are public documents, and they will tell you the real story months before the marketing does. We watch all three for our clients.
Want to hear about the first filings and the phase-one release before the billboards go up on Lem Turner?
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The Hutson Question: Will the No-CDD Model Repeat?

Here is the single question that will define what Thomas Creek costs to own. Hutson's flagship, SilverLeaf in St. Johns County, was built and marketed around a striking proposition: full master-plan amenities, pools, trails, amenity centers, without a community development district. In a region where big new communities routinely carry CDD assessments of one to three thousand dollars a year on the tax bill for decades, no-CDD is not a footnote; it is hundreds of dollars a month of carrying cost, and it became SilverLeaf's signature competitive weapon.

Will that model cross the county line to the Northside? Nobody has said, and we will not pretend to know. The honest analysis cuts both ways. In favor: it is the playbook this developer is famous for, it worked commercially at enormous scale, and a no-CDD pitch would be even more potent in a value-driven corridor where every dollar of monthly cost matters to the buyer pool. Against: no-CDD means the developer fronts infrastructure capital itself rather than financing it through district bonds, and a 1,089-acre site with creek frontage, wetlands, and a two-lane corridor may carry infrastructure costs that argue for district financing. Different submarket, different land, different math.

What we can tell you is how to find out before the sales office tells you. CDD formation in Florida is a public process: a petition, hearings, and an establishment ordinance, all of it filed and searchable long before the first contract is signed. If a district petition for this site appears, you will know the financing structure, and roughly the assessment scale, before pricing is even announced. If sales open with no district formed, the SilverLeaf model has crossed the river, and the monthly math gets meaningfully friendlier. Either way, this is the first line we read on any Thomas Creek contract, and we will publish what we find.

We will flag the CDD-or-no-CDD answer the moment it is filed, with the honest cost math attached.
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What 2,300 Homes Do to the Lem Turner Corridor

Drive Lem Turner Road past the site today and you see why the announcement landed hard: this is a largely two-lane corridor of rural-residential parcels, churches, and pine, a world away from the master-plan arcs of St. Johns County. Dropping up to 2,300 homes and 125,000 sf of commercial onto it is not an infill project; it is a corridor-scale event, and the second-order effects are where both the opportunity and the friction live.

Roads first. A development of this size typically triggers traffic studies, turn-lane and signal work, and pressure for corridor improvements as conditions of approval and phasing. How much of Lem Turner gets widened, when, and on whose dollar is exactly the kind of detail buried in the development order and mobility-fee agreements, public documents worth reading before you believe any commute promise. Schools second. Duval County will eventually zone these homes, and 2,300 units is the scale that shifts boundaries or forces capacity projects; nearby corridor schools are the starting point, not the answer. Retail third. The 125,000 sf of entitled commercial is the corridor's first serious neighborhood-retail commitment, and in the Hutson playbook, retail and amenities are demand drivers, not afterthoughts.

For buyers, the corridor context is the value case: the Northside near JIA has been where Jacksonville's new-construction dollar stretches furthest, with River City Marketplace, the airport, and I-295 minutes away and pricing that the Southside and St. Johns left behind years ago. A proven master-plan developer arriving here validates that thesis. For existing owners nearby, it is more complicated: announcement-era sentiment lifts now, years of construction and new-home competition later, and a structurally stronger corridor at the end. Both readings are honest, and which one applies to you depends entirely on your timeline.

The Pre-Launch Buyer Playbook

Waiting for a community that does not exist is only a strategy if you wait productively. When master-plan sales offices open, the first weekend is engineered urgency: lot maps with red stickers, price sheets that escalate by release, and contracts written by the developer's lawyers. Everything that protects you in that room happens in the months before it. This is the sequence we run for watch-list clients.

Verify the structure before the pricing. CDD or no CDD, HOA budget, and what the amenity promise actually obligates the developer to build, and by when. Verify the builder lineup. Who is actually buying lots, what they build elsewhere on this corridor, and what their real closed prices look like in comparable communities, so phase-one sheets can be judged against data instead of excitement. Verify the phasing. Where phase one sits relative to the eventual amenity center, the commercial parcel, and the construction-traffic routes, because the first lots released are not always the best lots in the plan.

And run the honest alternative in parallel: the corridor already has communities selling today, Yellow Bluff Landing, the Pecan Park communities, Villages of Westport, and for some buyers, owning now beats waiting eighteen-plus unannounced months for a maybe. The point of the playbook is not to convince you to wait for Thomas Creek; it is to make sure that if you do, you walk into that sales office as the best-prepared buyer in the room.

Want the wait-versus-buy-now analysis run honestly for your timeline and budget?
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Schools

There is no school zoning for Thomas Creek because there are no homes to zone. Today the corridor around the site is served by Duval County schools such as Garden City Elementary, Highlands Middle, and First Coast High, but treat those strictly as reference points: a 2,300-home development is exactly the scale that shifts attendance boundaries or pushes the district toward capacity projects, and assignments will be set, and possibly reset, as the community plats out over years. Relocating families should also know the honest corridor context: Northside school ratings have generally trailed the St. Johns County districts that anchor Hutson's SilverLeaf, and that gap is part of why the price gap exists. Check current ratings at the links above and verify any zoning claim with Duval County Public Schools directly, in writing, before it influences a contract.

Weighing Northside value against St. Johns schools? We will map the trade-off with current data, not brochure talk.
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More on Living Here, Eventually

Since nothing is built, the honest version of this section is about the location you would be living in and the realities of early life in any master plan. Four questions watch-list buyers ask us, answered straight.

What is the area around the site actually like today?
Quiet, rural-feeling Northside: two-lane stretches of Lem Turner, large wooded parcels, the Thomas Creek waterway toward the Nassau line, and working-class established neighborhoods closer to I-295. Daily needs run through the Dunn Avenue corridor and River City Marketplace, 14 to 18 minutes away. If you need walkable retail today, this is not it; the 125,000 sf of entitled commercial is the long-game answer.
What is phase-one life in a master plan really like?
Construction, candidly: years of trucks, dust, model-home traffic, and amenities that arrive on the developer's schedule. The compensation is usually the sharpest pricing of the community's life and first pick of lots. Buyers who go in understanding the trade do fine; buyers sold a finished-community rendering get frustrated. We make sure the contract pins down what is promised and when.
How close is the airport, and is noise a factor?
JIA is roughly 12 to 15 minutes east. The site sits west of the airport rather than under the primary north-south approach paths, but aircraft noise is lot-specific and subjective; when lots exist, stand on yours at different hours before you sign. We do exactly that with clients on every airport-adjacent community.
Could the project stall or change?
Yes, honestly. Entitled land can sit, phasing can shrink, product mixes change with the market, and 2,300 units is a ceiling that may never be fully built. Hutson's track record of actually delivering very large communities is the best counterargument, but a watch-list page owes you the truth: until plats record and vertical construction starts, this is a plan, and plans move.

5 Mistakes Buyers Make With Announced Communities

Pre-launch is where the most expensive assumptions get made, because there is no data to contradict them yet. These are the five we see most.

1

Treating portal placeholders as listings

Aggregator sites already show Thomas Creek collections with builder names attached. Nothing is official, nothing is priced, and placeholder pages exist to harvest your contact information for someone else's pipeline. Verified filings beat portal pages, every time.

2

Assuming the SilverLeaf no-CDD deal travels

Hutson's flagship has no CDD; that does not mean this site will not. The financing structure is undecided in public record, and it swings the monthly cost by hundreds of dollars. Watch the district filings, not the brand halo.

3

Putting life on hold for an unannounced date

No timeline exists. Buyers who need a home in 12 to 24 months and wait for Thomas Creek are betting their housing plan on a schedule nobody has published. Run the buy-now corridor alternatives in parallel; waiting should be a choice, not a trap.

4

Signing launch-weekend paper unread

When sales do open, the contract, HOA documents, and fee disclosures are written by the developer and presented in a hurry-up room. Phase-one discounts do not require skipping diligence; we read everything before our buyers sign, launch energy or not.

5

Ignoring what 2,300 homes mean for the corridor

School boundaries, Lem Turner traffic during build-out, and years of construction phasing are part of the purchase whether the brochure mentions them or not. Buy the corridor's trajectory with eyes open, not just the rendering.

We have walked buyers through master-plan launches across Northeast Florida. Let us keep this one honest for you.
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What Will Hold Value in a Community That Doesn't Exist Yet

The pattern from every Hutson-scale master plan

We cannot rank lots that have not been platted, but the value hierarchy in large Northeast Florida master plans is remarkably consistent: preserve and water frontage outperforms interior lots, proximity to the eventual amenity core pays, and positions buffered from the commercial parcel and construction routes age best. When the Thomas Creek plat records, we will map it against exactly this pattern.

Preserve / creek-adjacent lots (when platted)
Near the eventual amenity core
Standard interior single-family lots
Lots backing Lem Turner, commercial, or construction routes

A projected hierarchy based on how comparable Northeast Florida master plans have behaved, not Thomas Creek data, because none exists. We replace projection with plat-specific analysis the day the plat records.

Want the lot map read against this hierarchy the week phase one is released?
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The Watch-List Checklist

  • CDD petition or its absence. The financing-structure filing is the single biggest cost variable; we monitor for district formation on this site.
  • Builder lot purchases. Recorded lot takedowns name the real builder lineup long before press releases do.
  • Phase-one plat. The recorded plat reveals lot sizes, preserve frontage, and where the amenity and commercial parcels actually sit.
  • Development order conditions. Road improvements, turn lanes, and timing obligations for Lem Turner live in these documents.
  • HOA budget and amenity obligations. What the developer is contractually required to build, and by when, versus what the renderings imply.
  • School-zoning signals. Duval County boundary processes and capacity planning as homes approach delivery.
  • Corridor comp movement. Yellow Bluff Landing and Pecan Park closings frame what phase-one pricing should look like.
  • Your own timeline. The honest deadline by which waiting stops making sense and a buy-now community wins.
Jon Brooks · Co-Founder, Momentum Realty

Pages like this one are the most honest thing we publish, because the most valuable thing we can tell you about Thomas Creek today is what nobody knows yet. A $29.48 million land buy by the SilverLeaf developer is a real signal about the Northside, the strongest one this corridor has had, but a signal is not a price sheet, and I have watched too many buyers organize their lives around announced communities that opened two years late or shaped up differently than the first article implied.

The edge here is not predicting; it is monitoring. The CDD question, the builder takedowns, and the phase-one plat are all public record, and they will tell the truth before the marketing does. We read those filings for our watch-list clients, and when this community becomes real, the people we represent will walk into that sales office knowing more than the person across the table expects. That is the whole job.

Thomas Creek vs. What You Can Buy Today

The honest comparison set is not other announced projects; it is the corridor communities selling right now, plus the Hutson flagship that defines the expectation this project will be measured against.

CommunityStatusThe honest one-liner
Yellow Bluff LandingEstablished, buyable nowThe Northside master-plan benchmark with amenities you can tour today; the closest preview of what corridor master-plan living feels like.
The Landings at Pecan ParkNew construction, buyable nowAirport-corridor new builds for buyers whose timeline cannot wait for an unannounced opening.
Hansen CreekNew construction, buyable nowAnother corridor option proving what the Northside new-construction dollar buys today.
Bradley PondNew construction, buyable nowValue-tier Northside product; useful as the floor of the corridor comp set.
Villages of WestportEstablished master planThe nearby example of how a corridor master plan matures, amenities, fees, and all.
SilverLeafHutson flagship, St. JohnsThe no-CDD playbook Thomas Creek will be measured against, in a far more expensive county; the question is whether the model travels north.

The verdict: if you need a home soon, the corridor already offers real choices and we will show you all of them. If you can wait, Thomas Creek is the most consequential thing on the Northside watch list, and the comparison to buy today versus phase-one tomorrow should be run with numbers when numbers exist, not with renderings now.

Want the buy-now corridor tour and the watch list at the same time? That is the smart play.
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The Honest Trade-offs

What the Thomas Creek announcement gets right

  • A proven master-plan developer, the SilverLeaf and OakLeaf name, betting $29.48M on the Northside
  • Three years of entitlement work already banked: up to 2,300 homes and 125,000 sf commercial approved in 2022
  • A corridor where the new-construction dollar still stretches: airport, I-295, and River City Marketplace minutes away
  • The possibility of a no-CDD cost structure, if the SilverLeaf model repeats
  • Phase-one positioning available to anyone organized enough to watch the filings
  • Scale that brings roads, retail, and investment to a corridor that has waited decades for it

What it asks you to accept

  • Nothing exists: no homes, no prices, no builders, no timeline, and no guarantee of any of them
  • The CDD-or-not question is open, and it swings the monthly cost materially
  • School zoning is undetermined and corridor ratings currently trail St. Johns County
  • Years of construction-era living for whoever buys phase one
  • Lem Turner is largely two-lane today; road improvements arrive on a phased, unpublished schedule
  • Entitled plans can shrink, stall, or change; 2,300 is a ceiling, not a promise

The Thomas Creek Pre-Launch Playbook

When sales open, the prepared buyer wins the lot, the price tier, and the contract terms. This is the sequence we run for watch-list clients between now and opening day.

  • Join the watch list now. We monitor the district filings, builder takedowns, and plat recordings so the opening is a phone call, not a surprise billboard.
  • Verify the financing structure first. CDD or no CDD gets confirmed in public record before any price sheet is trusted.
  • Benchmark the builders. Whoever takes lots here builds elsewhere on this corridor today; we pull their real closed prices and build-quality record before launch.
  • Pre-position financing. Approval done early, with lender terms compared against whatever in-house incentive the builders dangle at launch.
  • Keep the buy-now option alive. The corridor's existing communities stay on the table until waiting is clearly the better trade for your timeline.

Questions We'd Ask Before Reserving Anything Here

These are the exact questions we will put to the developer, the builders, and the public record before advising any client to sign a Thomas Creek contract.

  • Is a CDD being formed, and at what assessment scale? The petition, or its absence, answers the biggest cost question on the project.
  • What amenities are contractually obligated, and by what date? Renderings are marketing; the development agreement is the promise.
  • Which builders have actually closed on lots? Recorded takedowns, not press releases or portal placeholders.
  • What Lem Turner road improvements are conditioned, and on whose timeline? The development order tells you what the commute really becomes.
  • How is school zoning expected to shake out? In writing from Duval County, with the honest caveat that 2,300 homes can move boundaries.
  • What does phase-one pricing look like against today's corridor closings? Yellow Bluff Landing and Pecan Park comps keep launch pricing honest.

Thomas Creek May Not Be Right For You If…

A watch-list community is a specific bet: time and uncertainty traded for position and, possibly, price. Here is the honest sorting.

Consider elsewhere if you want

  • A home you can tour, price, and close on this year
  • Certainty on fees, builders, schools, and move-in dates
  • A finished community with mature amenities and no construction era
  • Established resale data before you commit a dollar
  • Top-rated school zoning as a non-negotiable
  • No exposure to a project that could phase slowly or change shape

Thomas Creek fits if you want

  • First position in a proven developer's newest master plan
  • The Northside value corridor with airport and beltway access
  • A shot at SilverLeaf-style economics in Duval County, if the model repeats
  • Phase-one pricing leverage in exchange for construction-era patience
  • A multi-year runway to plan a move instead of a scramble
  • An advocate reading the filings while everyone else reads the billboards

Get the inside read on Thomas Creek

Tell us what you are weighing: getting in at phase one of Thomas Creek when it opens, buying on the Northside now instead of waiting, or just understanding what 2,300 homes mean for a corridor you already live on. We will put you on the watch list, flag the CDD formation, builder lineup, and first price sheets the moment they are real, and tell you honestly whether waiting beats buying. No pressure, no spam; we represent you, not the developer.

We respond personally, usually the same day. Your information is never sold.

You are all set.

A Momentum Realty Thomas Creek specialist will reach out personally, usually the same day.

Momentum listings (YTD)
97.98%
Sold-to-list ratio across our markets for our agents, sellers keeping more of their price.
Market average (YTD)
96.73%
The broader metro average sold-to-list ratio over the same period.
Momentum days on market
64 days
Median days on market for our listings, faster sales mean less carrying cost and stronger leverage.
Market days on market
72 days
The broader metro median over the same period.

Sold-to-list and days-on-market figures reflect Momentum Realty listings versus the metro average, year to date. Your home's result depends on pricing, condition, lot, view, and preparation.

Sell into the announcement, or hold through the build-out?

Announcements lift sentiment before they lift comps; new-home sales offices then compete hard with resales for years; and matured master plans ultimately raise the whole corridor. Where you sit in that arc depends on your product, condition, and timeline. We map your specific home against the Thomas Creek timeline as it firms up, with real corridor comps, not portal estimates.

What is your Thomas Creek home worth?

Get a no-obligation home value based on real comparable sales in Thomas Creek matched to your condition, lot, and view, not an automated guess. Tell us about your home and we will personally prepare your numbers and a pricing strategy. No obligation, no spam.

Real comps, not a Zestimate. Prepared personally, never sold.

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We will prepare your Thomas Creek home value from real comparable sales and reach out personally.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Thomas Creek in Jacksonville?
An announced, not-yet-built master-planned community on roughly 1,089 acres at 14158 Lem Turner Road on Jacksonville's Northside, near Jacksonville International Airport. The Hutson Companies purchased the land on December 1, 2025 for $29.48 million; a 2022 City Council rezoning allows up to 2,300 homes and 125,000 square feet of commercial space. Nothing is built or priced yet.
Can I buy a home in Thomas Creek right now?
No. There are no homes, no models, no released lots, and no price sheets. Any Thomas Creek listing or price you see on a portal today is a placeholder or speculation. We maintain a watch list and will flag the real opening when it happens.
Who is developing Thomas Creek?
The Hutson Companies of St. Augustine, the developer behind SilverLeaf in St. Johns County, OakLeaf Plantation, and Johns Creek. That track record is the main reason this announcement matters: this is a developer that has delivered very large Northeast Florida master plans before.
When will Thomas Creek open for sales?
No timeline has been announced. Master plans of this scale typically take years from land purchase through engineering, permitting, and horizontal construction before the first model opens. We watch the permit and district filings and will tell you when a real date exists; until then, any date is a guess.
How much will homes in Thomas Creek cost?
Unknown, and we will not invent a number. The honest reference points are today's new-construction comps along the Lem Turner and Pecan Park corridors, which have served as Jacksonville's value alternative to St. Johns County pricing. We run that corridor analysis for buyers deciding whether to wait for Thomas Creek or buy now.
Will Thomas Creek have a CDD?
Unknown, and this is the single most important question to watch. Hutson built SilverLeaf without a CDD, a major carrying-cost advantage it markets heavily. Whether that financing model repeats on the Northside, or whether a community development district is formed to fund infrastructure here, will materially change what ownership costs. We are watching for district formation filings and will report what we find.
What was approved in the 2022 rezoning?
Jacksonville City Council approved rezoning that allows up to 2,300 residential units, expected to mix single-family homes and townhomes, plus 125,000 square feet of commercial space for neighborhood-scale retail and services, per Jacksonville Daily Record reporting. The 2,300 figure is a ceiling, not a commitment.
Which builders will build in Thomas Creek?
None have been officially announced. Third-party new-home portals have shown placeholder Lennar collections at the site address, which suggests builder conversations are underway, but we treat portal placeholders as a signal to verify, not a fact. The builder lineup is one of the three things we verify before advising anyone to wait for this community.
Where exactly is the Thomas Creek site?
At 14158 Lem Turner Road, between Terrell and Braddock roads, northwest of the Lem Turner / I-295 interchange on Jacksonville's Northside, ZIP 32218 area. It sits near the Thomas Creek waterway at the Duval-Nassau line, roughly 12 to 15 minutes from Jacksonville International Airport.
What schools will serve Thomas Creek?
Undetermined. Duval County assigns zoning by address, and no addresses exist yet. Nearby corridor schools like Garden City Elementary, Highlands Middle, and First Coast High are reference points only; a development of 2,300 homes can shift boundaries or trigger capacity projects, so treat school zoning as one of the open questions, not a settled fact.
What does this mean for the Lem Turner corridor?
A lot, over years: 2,300 homes plus 125,000 sf of commercial would bring road improvements, retail follow-on, and school-capacity pressure to a corridor that is largely two-lane and rural-residential today. If you own nearby, the announcement is a sentiment positive now and a competition factor when the sales office opens.
Is the Hutson SilverLeaf model coming to the Northside?
That is the framing question of this whole page. SilverLeaf's pitch was master-plan amenities without a CDD, and it pulled enormous demand in St. Johns County. Hutson has not said whether Thomas Creek follows that model. If it does, this becomes one of the most cost-interesting new communities in Duval; if a CDD is formed, the math changes. Watch the financing structure before anything else.
Should I wait for Thomas Creek or buy on the Northside now?
It depends on your timeline. If you need a home within a year or two, waiting for an unannounced opening is not a plan; communities like Yellow Bluff Landing, the Pecan Park corridor, and Villages of Westport are selling today. If you are flexible and want phase-one positioning in a proven developer's new master plan, the watch list is free. We help you weigh both honestly.
What are the risks of buying in phase one when it opens?
The classic ones: years of construction traffic and noise, amenities delivered on the developer's schedule rather than yours, school zoning that can change mid-build, fee structures that get finalized after early contracts, and resale competition from the builder's own newer phases. Phase-one pricing is usually the compensation for all of that. We negotiate those trade-offs in writing.
Has anything been built on the site in 2026?
As of this writing, the verified public record is the December 2025 land purchase and the 2022 entitlements; no vertical construction, builder announcement, or pricing has been published. We update our watch-list intel as filings appear, and we will tell you what is actually verified versus rumored.
Do I need an agent for a community that does not exist yet?
This is exactly when independent representation earns its keep. When sales open, the people in the model home work for the developer. Your own agent verifies the CDD or no-CDD structure, reads the HOA budget and contract before you sign in a launch-weekend rush, compares phase-one pricing against real corridor comps, and negotiates terms the sales office will not volunteer. Momentum Realty tracks this community now; call (904) 351-6461 or use the form on this page to get on the list.

While Thomas Creek stays on the watch list, these are the Northside communities you can actually tour and buy today, plus the Hutson flagship that explains the developer's playbook.

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