Community Details at a Glance
The Homes
Type
Established single-family on the Westside
Built
Largely 1960s to 1990s
Size
About 1,200 to 2,400 sq ft
Status
Established, value-oriented resale market
Costs & Fees
HOA
None on most homes
CDD
None
Taxes
Duval County millage; confirm per parcel
Amenities
Setting
Established Westside near 103rd and Wesconnett Boulevard
Access
I-295, Blanding, and the First Coast Expressway
Jobs
Near NAS Jacksonville and Westside employers
Schools
Duval Westside public schools
Location
Area
Westside Jacksonville near 103rd and Wesconnett
Access
Minutes to I-295 and Blanding
Downtown
About 20 minutes
Beaches
About 45 to 55 minutes east
The Homes & Style
Wesconnett is a value Westside neighborhood. Third-party data in 2026 put the median in the high $200,000s, with NeighborhoodScout around $237,785 and other sources lower, so the area sits in the low-to-high $200,000s depending on the home.
For county context, the NEFAR April 2026 report put the Duval County median single-family price at about $332,500, a county-wide figure. Wesconnett prices well below that, which is its defining advantage for value and first-time buyers.
Wesconnett is a established single-family neighborhood, so the variation is mostly in home age, size, and lot.
Most homes are older single-family houses from the mid-to-late 1900s on standard lots, at value prices for the Westside.
Homes closer to the community parks and the walkable schools are a particular draw for buyers, while the wider area offers a quiet residential setting.
Living Here
Wesconnett is a residential neighborhood rather than an amenity community, and its appeal is the parks and the walkable schools.
Wesconnett has community parks, including the park at the elementary school, which give residents green space and recreation close to home.
Several schools sit within walking distance, which is uncommon and a real draw for buyers in the neighborhood.
Everyday shopping and dining sit along the 103rd Street and Blanding Boulevard corridors, with grocery, retail, and restaurants a few minutes away and the Orange Park retail centers nearby.
Wesconnett is known for walkable schools, but Duval assignments are by address and can shift, so confirm the specific zoning with the district rather than assuming.
Wesconnett homes are older, so set aside for the roof and the systems and get a thorough inspection before you offer.
Before You Offer
Confirm the fee situation per home. Most Wesconnett homes carry no HOA, so verify any small-subdivision dues before you offer.
Inspect systems on older homes. Many Wesconnett houses date to the 1960s through 1990s, so roof, HVAC, electrical, plumbing, and any cast-iron pipe deserve close attention.
Check drainage and the flood map, since some lower Westside parcels near creeks and retention can carry wet-yard issues.
Confirm internet options and drive the I-295 and Blanding commute, including NAS Jacksonville traffic, at your real departure time.
Wesconnett vs. Comparable Westside Areas
Wesconnett competes with the other established, value-oriented Westside areas near 103rd Street. Against master-planned Oakleaf and Argyle to the south, it offers older homes, mostly no fees, and lower prices, while those communities counter with amenity centers and newer construction.
Against newer Westside subdivisions, Wesconnett trades sidewalks and HOA standards for value and bigger no-fee lots. The honest shorthand: pick Wesconnett for affordable, established Westside value near NAS and the expressway; pick a master plan for amenities and newer homes.
Who Wesconnett Fits Best
Wesconnett fits buyers who want affordable, established Westside value with mostly no fees and quick access to I-295 and the new First Coast Expressway, anyone working NAS Jacksonville or across the Westside, and renovators comfortable with older homes on real lots.
Wesconnett is a weaker fit buyers who want a master-planned amenity package and new construction, those who need a short beach commute, or anyone seeking a gated or luxury address.


















