The 60-Second Overview
Waters Edge is Port Orange's largest single-builder master plan: roughly 600 acres, 12 development phases, and more than 1,400 homes that ICI Homes spent nearly two decades constructing from 1997 through the final Phase 12 closing out in 2015. It sits off South Williamson Boulevard just north of Taylor Road, with a 24-acre central lake, a grand fountain entrance, and the community trail network that defines day-to-day life here. Cypress Head Golf Club -- voted Best Golf Course in Volusia County every year since 2009 -- is literally next door.
The community is built out, established, and increasingly mature: the landscaping is in, the neighbors are set, and there is no new construction noise. The gated Covendale Estates section inside Waters Edge adds an estate-scale tier with custom homes on premium and waterfront lots. What connects all of it is a two-part fee structure that every buyer needs to understand before comparing list prices to nearby communities.
That fee structure is the centerpiece of this guide. Waters Edge carries both a master HOA and a Community Development District. The HOA is the familiar kind. The CDD is a government entity whose assessment lands on your Volusia County property-tax bill as a non-ad valorem charge -- separate from your HOA dues, separate from your ad valorem taxes, and easy to miss in a listing description that only mentions the $640-a-year HOA. Run the full math before you compare this address to Cypress Head or Sabal Creek.
A community that looks affordable on the list price can look very different when you add the CDD line to your real annual cost of ownership.
The Fee Stack: HOA plus CDD equals the real number
Waters Edge has a two-layer cost structure. The master HOA is the top layer: mandatory, currently approximately $640 per year paid quarterly at $160, and maintained by the master homeowners association. That covers the grand entrance, common-area landscaping, entry fountains, and HOA administration. If you buy in the Covendale Estates gated section, there is likely a separate sub-association fee on top of the master HOA; confirm that structure in writing.
The CDD is the second and more important layer. The Waters Edge Community Development District was established by ordinance of the Volusia County Board of County Commissioners. Its assessment appears on the annual Volusia property-tax bill as a non-ad valorem charge -- the same line item as municipal service benefits, collected alongside your property taxes. The CDD funds the community's stormwater infrastructure, conservation areas, irrigation systems, common-area landscaping, and entry improvements. It is ongoing and does not expire when the original infrastructure bonds mature; only the debt-service portion tied to the bonds has an end date, and the operations-and-maintenance portion continues indefinitely.
Amenities: trail, lake, and the course next door
Waters Edge is not a resort-amenity community. There is no clubhouse, no community pool, no fitness center. What the community does have is meaningful: a 24-acre central lake with a gazebo, a connected trail network for walking and biking through the development, a community playground, and grand entrance landscaping that sets a maintained aesthetic tone. The CDD funds that common-area maintenance, which is why it is a government charge rather than an optional club membership.
The real amenity anchor is next door. Cypress Head Golf Club is a semi-private course open to non-members and non-residents, with public tee times available. Its back-to-back recognition as Best Golf Course in Volusia County since 2009 makes Waters Edge one of the most well-located non-golf-community addresses in Port Orange for golfers who want access without mandatory dues. Most Waters Edge homes have private pools, which explains why a community pool matters less here than it would in a townhome-dense address.
The Doris Leeper Spruce Creek Preserve -- a protected trail and boardwalk natural area with birdwatching and hiking minutes away -- adds nature access that is not on any amenity list but matters to a meaningful portion of the buyer pool. The Airport Road park has additional sports fields and tennis courts nearby.
Home Types: 12 phases, one builder, wide price range
ICI Homes built everything in Waters Edge, which gives the community a visual consistency that multi-builder master plans lack. Floor plans evolved significantly over the 18-year build-out: early phases delivered more compact homes in the 1,400-1,800 square foot range, while the final Phase 12 added larger plans up to 3,540 square feet and introduced the Tequesta model as the community signature. Throughout the development, ICI offered screened lanais, private pools, energy-efficient concrete block construction, and direct lake or conservation-backing lots on a significant share of the land.
The community divides into two distinct tiers. The main community is open (not gated) and spans the majority of the acreage and homes, with interior lots, lake-view lots, and conservation-backing lots at varying price points. Covendale Estates is the gated tier within the community, featuring custom and semi-custom estate homes on the premium lots, most backing to the lake or conservation areas. Covendale commands a structural premium and has its own access control. If Covendale is your target, plan to verify the sub-HOA fee on top of the master association fee.
Phase 12 -- the final phase off the southern Pioneer Trail entry -- standardized on 60-foot lots as the base, with select 70 and 80-foot lots. Buyers there are getting the newest ICI product in the community. Buyers in earlier phases may encounter more personalized finishes (both renovated and outdated) and the widest condition variance.
The Location: a corridor built for the next decade
Waters Edge sits at a genuinely strategic intersection. South Williamson Boulevard runs straight north to all of Port Orange's commercial corridor -- The Pavilion, Publix, Target, Walmart, Halifax Health -- and connects south to New Smyrna Beach via the 2017-completed Williamson Boulevard extension. Taylor Road to I-95 (Exit 256) is about six to eight minutes. The Daytona Beach airport is roughly 15-18 minutes north.
The growth story is to the south. The Pioneer Trail-I-95 interchange project -- a new direct highway connection that the City of Port Orange and FDOT are developing -- will add an interchange at Pioneer Trail, relieving pressure on the Dunlawton and Taylor Road on-ramps that currently carry almost all of southwest Port Orange's interstate traffic. Phase 12 of Waters Edge is specifically noted as positioned near the southern Pioneer Trail entry. When this interchange opens, the travel-time math for Waters Edge changes: Orlando becomes even more accessible, and the commercial nodes expected to follow interchange construction will bring new amenities to this part of the corridor.
For now, the practical read is: everything you need is within five to eight minutes in any direction. Daytona and NSB beaches are both reachable in 20-25 minutes. And the infrastructure investment coming to this corridor makes it one of the better-positioned master-plan addresses in Volusia County for long-term hold value.
Schools: the strongest middle in the corridor
Waters Edge is zoned for a Volusia County feeder that many Port Orange families specifically seek out. Cypress Creek Elementary (7/10 on GreatSchools) sits within walking distance of many Waters Edge homes. Creekside Middle School (8/10 on GreatSchools) consistently ranks among the better public middle schools in Volusia County, with gifted and Project Lead the Way programs and an enrollment of about 1,162. Spruce Creek High School (6/10 on GreatSchools) is named one of the better public high schools in Port Orange and draws from the same southwest Port Orange catchment area.
The honest read: the school feeder here is above average for Volusia County, with Creekside Middle as the standout. Families relocating from top-performing school districts will want to tour each school personally and check current state accountability grades from the Florida Department of Education -- GreatSchools ratings are a useful starting point but not the final word.
What living here is actually like
Day to day, Waters Edge is mature suburban Port Orange: established trees, a well-maintained entrance, quiet streets, and a trail that winds past the central lake toward the back of the development. Residents walk to the lake gazebo in the morning, drive three minutes to Publix, and golf next door in the afternoon. It is a family-and-professional community with a mix of long-term owners from the early phases and newer buyers in the final sections.
Who actually lives here?
A mix of professional families attracted by the school feeder and the ICI build quality, empty-nesters who bought later phases for the larger plans and the golf proximity, and commuters who value the I-95 access and the Daytona Beach airport within 15 minutes. The owner-occupancy rate is high -- approximately 85% of residents own rather than rent, which keeps the community stable and well-maintained.
What about private pools?
There is no community pool, but a large share of Waters Edge homes -- especially in middle and later phases -- were built with or later had screened pools added. When you are making the no-community-pool trade-off, factor in whether the specific home you are considering has a pool or the space and structural clearance to add one. We check this in the property records before every showing.
How is traffic and access?
South Williamson Boulevard is a well-maintained arterial with good capacity. The main friction is the Taylor Road I-95 on-ramp, which congests during morning drive time. The Pioneer Trail interchange project will meaningfully improve this when complete. Williamson's 2017 southern extension to New Smyrna Beach added a second useful route. For Orlando commuters, plan 55-65 minutes via I-95 to I-4.
What is the Covendale section like day to day?
Covendale Estates is quieter, more private, and estate-scaled -- larger homes on larger lots, a manned or card-access gate, and conservation-or-lake backdrops on many lots. It draws buyers who want the Waters Edge address with an additional layer of privacy and a home that reads more custom than production. The fee structure has an additional component; confirm the sub-HOA total during due diligence.
Five costly mistakes Waters Edge buyers make
We have watched buyers make all of these. Every one is avoidable.
Forgetting the CDD when comparing list prices
The $640 HOA sounds affordable next to competitors. But the CDD appears as a separate non-ad valorem line on your Volusia tax bill. Add both charges to every list-price comparison; the gap against no-CDD neighbors is meaningful over a five-year hold.
Pricing a lake-view home against interior comps
Interior and lake-view lots are priced in different bands here. An interior comp does not justify a lake-view ask, and vice versa. Pull comps by the correct lot type or you are starting from the wrong number.
Skipping the Covendale sub-HOA disclosure
Covendale carries its own gate and likely a sub-association on top of the master HOA. Buyers who only budget the master HOA get a surprise at closing. Get the full fee stack in writing for the specific address.
Not pulling the flood zone for lake-adjacent lots
The 24-acre central lake and the stormwater ponds give Waters Edge some of its most desirable lots -- and some flood-zone exposure that varies parcel by parcel. Get the FEMA designation and an insurance quote before you go under contract on any waterfront or conservation-adjacent lot.
Offering renovated money for original-condition homes
ICI built consistently, but 18 years of individual owner decisions left a wide condition gap between upgraded and original homes. Renovated and original Phase 4 twins can be $60K-$80K apart. Pay the renovated premium only for genuinely documented completed work.
Lots and Product Mix
Lot type is the durable value driver in Waters Edge
An interior lot can be renovated; a lake or conservation backdrop cannot be added after the fact. The 24-acre central lake creates a permanent tier of lots that hold value across market cycles. Covendale larger footprints are the scarcest product in the community. Know which tier you are buying before you compare prices.
The Waters Edge buyer checklist
- Pull the actual CDD line. Get the non-ad valorem assessment from the current Volusia County tax bill for the specific parcel -- not from the listing sheet.
- Confirm the HOA total. Current master HOA dues, payment schedule, what is covered, and any planned increases -- in writing from the association.
- Check Covendale sub-HOA. If buying in Covendale Estates, get the gate sub-association budget and reserve figures in addition to the master HOA.
- Pull the FEMA flood zone. Lake-view and conservation-adjacent lots vary by parcel; get the designation and an insurance quote before waiving anything.
- Verify school zoning. Confirm Cypress Creek / Creekside / Spruce Creek assignment with Volusia County Schools for the exact address -- lines do move.
- Run lot-type-accurate comps. Interior, lake-view, and Covendale lots each have their own comp pool. Cross-tier comparisons produce wrong conclusions.
- Assess condition versus renovation quality. On Phase 1-8 homes, distinguish genuinely completed renovations (permitted) from cosmetic refreshes before pricing the condition premium.
- Factor in the Pioneer Trail interchange timeline. If you are buying near the southern entry, understand the likely construction impact and the long-term access improvement when underwriting the location.
Waters Edge is the community spreadsheets over-simplify. The listing shows a $640 HOA. The spreadsheet says affordable. What the spreadsheet misses is the CDD on the tax bill -- a real annual charge that does not appear in the listing description and that most buyers only learn about when they see their first tax notice after closing.
Our job is to surface that number before you offer, run the true side-by-side against Cypress Head and Sabal Creek at the same list price, and make sure you know exactly what you are buying: an established ICI master plan with strong schools, a lake, and adjacency to the best golf course in the county -- at a real carrying cost that is higher than the HOA alone suggests. That is how we represent you, not the seller.
Waters Edge vs. the alternatives
Most Waters Edge shoppers are cross-shopping nearby Port Orange and Daytona Beach communities. The honest comparison on the fees and trade-offs:
| Community | HOA annual | CDD | The trade |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cypress Head | ~$540/yr | None | Adjacent golf community with no CDD; slightly smaller lots and less lake frontage than Waters Edge premium sections |
| Spruce Creek Fly-In | Varies by section | None | Private aviation community with an airstrip; niche buyer pool; different lifestyle product entirely |
| Summer Trees | ~$135/mo (some sections) | None | Active-adult 55+ community on Taylor Road; lower price point, lawn-care included in some sections, age-restricted |
| Mosaic | Higher HOA | Yes | ICI's newer Daytona Beach master plan; resort amenities, newer homes, higher fees -- the upgraded ICI ecosystem |
| LPGA International | Varies | Yes | Golf-community comparison with CDD; Daytona Beach address; optional club structure similar to Grand Haven |
| Waters Edge | ~$640/yr | Yes (verify amount) | ICI build quality, 24-acre lake, Covendale estate tier, top middle school; carrying cost is higher than HOA alone implies |
The verdict: Waters Edge offers the best ICI build quality in Port Orange, the strongest middle school in the corridor, and a lake-and-gateway setting that competing non-CDD addresses cannot match. What it costs you is the CDD carrying cost every year. Run the true total cost comparison -- not the list-price comparison -- before you decide.
Pros and cons, no varnish
Pros
- Mature, fully built-out ICI master plan with established landscaping
- 24-acre central lake and conservation lots with permanent backdrops
- Covendale Estates gated section for estate-scale buyers
- Creekside Middle School (8/10 GreatSchools) is among the best in Volusia County
- Cypress Head Golf Club immediately adjacent and open to the public
- Pioneer Trail interchange will improve access and corridor growth
Cons
- CDD on the Volusia tax bill adds annual cost listings rarely feature prominently
- No community pool or fitness center
- Market has softened; days on market above national average suggests buyer leverage but also slower resale for sellers
- No-CDD neighbors (Cypress Head, Sabal Creek) are cheaper to carry at the same list price
- Interior lots have no durable view premium; condition and renovation drive all the value
- Covendale sub-HOA adds a third fee layer that requires separate verification
The offer playbook
How we run a Waters Edge purchase, in order:
- Pull the actual tax bill first. Every Waters Edge offer starts with the non-ad valorem CDD line for the specific parcel -- not the listing estimate.
- Identify the tier. Interior, lake-view, conservation, or Covendale -- the comp pool and negotiation strategy differ completely by tier.
- Run the fee-stack comparison. Side-by-side monthly cost against Cypress Head and Sabal Creek at the same list price; then determine what the Waters Edge premium is actually worth to you.
- Front-load the flood check. Lake and conservation lots need FEMA zone and insurance quotes before the offer, not after. Surprises here kill deals late.
- Request association documents immediately. Master HOA budget, reserves, Covendale sub-HOA if applicable, and CDD annual meeting minutes -- reviewed inside the inspection window.
Questions we ask before you offer
The six questions that surface what listing descriptions omit:
- What is the current CDD per-lot assessment on the tax bill for this specific parcel?
- What is the current master HOA amount, and is this home in a sub-association with additional dues?
- What FEMA flood zone is this lot in, and what will insurers actually quote for coverage?
- Is this an interior, lake-view, conservation-backing, or Covendale lot -- and are the comps pool-matched to the correct tier?
- What is the condition history: which renovations are permitted, and what systems are original?
- Has the Pioneer Trail interchange construction timeline changed access or noise conditions near this address?
Is Waters Edge for you?
No community is right for every buyer, and we would rather lose you to the right address than close on the wrong one.
Consider elsewhere if you want
- No CDD on the property-tax bill
- A community pool and fitness center included
- New construction with builder warranty still active
- A walkable town center or shops within the gates
- To avoid a mandatory HOA entirely
- Lower carrying costs than the HOA-plus-CDD stack
Waters Edge fits if you want
- A mature ICI-built master plan with no construction disruption
- A 24-acre lake with gazebo and water-view lot options
- The best middle school feeder in southwest Port Orange
- Golf-adjacent lifestyle without mandatory golf fees
- Covendale estate-scale privacy within a larger community
- A corridor growing toward a new I-95 interchange
