★ Horse Country · Serious-Horseman Mini-Farms
Established 1998 · Between WEC, HITS & the forest trails · ZIP 32668

Winding Oaks Estates. Know what matters before you buy.

An established equestrian subdivision where the product is the farm, not just the house: gated mini-farms of roughly 5 to 16+ acres with barns and arenas, a verified $1.35M closing, current listings from $779K, and a position squarely between the World Equestrian Center, HITS, and the public trail systems.

LocationWEC / HITSThe commute that matters
Community1998Subdivision established
Price$1.35MVerified recent closing
Highlights~5-16+ acTypical farm parcels
Pricing$779KCurrent 5.85-ac listing
NotesBarns & arenasThe defining infrastructure
CDDNo CDD
SchoolsMarion County SchoolsWilliston Middle HS
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A Momentum Realty Winding Oaks Estates specialist will reach out personally, usually the same day. Check your inbox for a confirmation.

The Homes

Product

Mini-farms: custom homes paired with barns, paddocks, and often arenas on ~5–16+ acre parcels

Example stock

A 5-bed/4.5-bath on 5.85 gated acres listing at $779,000; a 16.5+ acre farm at $1,350,000 with a matching verified closing at $1.35M

Era

Established 1998 with continuous build-out and upgrading since — farm infrastructure varies widely by owner era

Identity

Where serious horse people consolidate: the subdivision markets to professionals and campaigners, not hobby acreage

Costs & Governance

HOA

Not published in current listings — some sections carry road or deed-restriction arrangements; we confirm the current structure in writing per parcel

CDD

None

Operations

Farm carry is the real ledger: wells sized for barns and irrigation, fencing, arena maintenance, and ag-exemption strategy on the tax bill

Amenities & Lifestyle

Position

Squarely between the World Equestrian Center, HITS Post Time Farm, and the public state-forest trail systems — the geographic sweet spot for campaigners

On-farm

The amenities are yours: barns, arenas, and paddocks per parcel rather than shared facilities

Trails

Goethe State Forest’s 53,000+ acres within an easy haul for conditioning and pleasure miles

Services

Ocala’s farriers, vets, and hay economy operate this corridor daily

Location & Nearby

Setting

Morriston, on Levy County’s eastern horse-country edge along the Marion line

Anchors

WEC ~20–25 min; HITS ~20 min; Williston ~15 min; Ocala ~30 min; Gainesville ~45 min

Trade-off

ZIP 32668 sits on the county line — confirm the county per parcel; taxes, schools, and ag rules differ

Public schools & ratings

Winding Oaks Estates is typically served by Levy County School District — the Williston feed — though county-line parcels demand verification. Confirm the assignment for the exact farm before you offer.

SchoolGreatSchoolsLinks
Williston Middle High School4/10GreatSchools

Ratings are one composite signal — most buyers here are equestrian households; verify the feed for the exact parcel either way.

Winding Oaks Estates is where the corridor’s serious horse people consolidate: an established-1998 subdivision of barn-and-arena mini-farms between WEC and HITS, with a verified $1.35M closing and current listings from $779K. The pricing logic is farm infrastructure first, house second — and the diligence is water, county line, and arena-grade land.

The short version

The sixty-second version: an established equestrian subdivision of ~5–16+ acre mini-farms in Morriston — barns, arenas, gated drives, a verified $1.35M sale, a $779K current listing, and the WEC–HITS–forest triangle as the daily geography.

  • Established 1998 and continuously upgraded — this is the corridor’s mature serious-horseman plat, not a speculative one
  • Verified market: a $1.35M closing and a $1,350,000 listing on 16.5+ acres; a 5/4.5 on 5.85 gated acres asking $779,000
  • The product is the farm: barns, paddocks, and arenas carry the value — price infrastructure on replacement cost, not sqft comps
  • Positioned between WEC (~20–25 min), HITS (~20 min), and the state-forest trail systems — campaign-season geography
  • HOA status unpublished — confirm the current road/restriction arrangements in writing per parcel
  • ZIP 32668 straddles the Levy–Marion line: verify county, taxes, and ag-exemption treatment per farm
  • Wells must carry barn-plus-irrigation loads — capacity homework before offer, every time
Quick verdict: is Winding Oaks Estates right for you?

Great if you want

  • The mature serious-equestrian plat on the Levy side of the corridor
  • Verified seven-figure demand — $1.35M closing evidence
  • Farm infrastructure already amortized on established parcels
  • WEC–HITS–forest triangle geography
  • Levy-side carrying costs against Marion-side convenience

Look elsewhere if you want

  • Seven-figure ceiling means thin, slow comps
  • Infrastructure quality varies wildly by owner era
  • County-line ambiguity demands parcel-level verification
  • HOA/restriction structure unpublished — must be confirmed
  • Farm operations are a real second budget
Entry mini-farms (~5–6 ac)
~$700Ks–$800Ks

The current entry tier: a 5-bed/4.5-bath on 5.85 gated acres asks $779,000. At this tier expect a quality home with core horse infrastructure — barn and paddocks — and price the arena separately if present.

~5–6 ac · barn + paddocks
Full campaign farms (10–16+ ac)
~$1.1M–$1.4M

The signature product: 16.5+ acres listed at $1,350,000 with a verified closing at $1.35M. Arena quality, barn stall count, and pasture condition decide position within the tier.

10–16+ ac · arena-grade
Land & infrastructure-light parcels
Thin — confirm live comps

Occasional parcels trade below the farm tiers when infrastructure is dated or absent — the renovation-math play for buyers building their own program.

varies · occasional

Figures from MLS-fed listings and the verified closing as cited; farm-tier pricing moves with infrastructure quality more than acreage — we price each layer separately.

Recently sold in Winding Oaks Estates

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.

Campaign farm · 16.5+ ac
Verified closing
Sold price $1,350,000
🔒 Unlock the real number
Mini-farm · 5.85 ac gated
5 bed · 4.5 bath
Sold price $779,000 (list)
🔒 Unlock the real number
Subdivision established
Continuous upgrading since
Sold price 1998
🔒 Unlock the real number
Want the verified closed prices for the exact homes you care about in Winding Oaks Estates?
See What Buyers Actually Paid →
DestinationApprox. distanceApprox. drive
HITS Post Time Farm~12–14 mi~20 min
World Equestrian Center, Ocala~15–18 mi~20–25 min
Goethe State Forest trailheads~8–12 mi~15 min
Williston (feed, fuel, errands)~10 mi~15 min
Ocala (downtown)~22 mi~30 min
Gainesville (UF / Shands)~30 mi~45 min
Black Prong Equestrian Village~12 mi~18 min

Two-lane horse-country roads; event weeks add trailer traffic in both directions.

WEC and HITS circuit calendars drive seasonal demand for farms here — and seasonal rental interest in barns with living quarters.

$1.35M
Verified recent closing (16.5+ ac farm)
$779K
Current 5.85-ac listing
1998
Subdivision established
~5–16+
Acre range of typical parcels
● infrastructure quality is the price axis
Price tiers
Entry mini-farms
~$700Ks–$800Ks
Campaign farms
~$1.1M–$1.4M
Infrastructure-light parcels
case-by-case
Relative tier positioning. Arena quality, stall count, and water capacity move a farm between tiers — acreage alone does not.

Sources: Showcase/Homes.com/neighborhoods.com listings and verified closing as cited. We price land, residence, and infrastructure separately on every file.

Want the real Winding Oaks Estates comps and a full carrying-cost read, not a Zestimate?
Get Real Comparable Sales →

The 60-Second Overview

Winding Oaks Estates is the Levy-side address where the Ocala corridor’s serious horse people consolidate: an equestrian subdivision established in 1998 in Morriston, built out into mini-farms of roughly 5 to 16-plus acres with barns, paddocks, and arenas as the standard equipment. The marketing line — the epicenter of Ocala’s equestrian world — is for once roughly accurate: the subdivision sits in the triangle between the World Equestrian Center, HITS Post Time Farm, and the public state-forest trail systems.

The verified market: a recent closing at $1.35 million, a 16.5+ acre farm listed at $1,350,000, and a 5-bed, 4.5-bath home on 5.85 gated acres asking $779,000. This is the corridor’s honest seven-figure tier on the Levy side — meaningfully below comparable Marion-side farm pricing, which is precisely its pitch.

Here the house is the second-most-expensive thing on the parcel. Price the farm — barn, arena, water, pasture — on its own evidence, or misprice everything.

What this guide adds to the listings: the pricing logic (land + residence + infrastructure, each layer on its own evidence), the county-line homework (ZIP 32668 straddles Levy and Marion, and taxes, schools, and agricultural-exemption treatment differ), and the water question — a well that serves a household is not a well that serves a twelve-stall barn and an irrigated arena.

Fees & Structure: Confirm, Don’t Assume

Current listings do not publish an HOA figure for Winding Oaks Estates, and in established farm plats like this the truth is usually a light structure — deed restrictions protecting the equestrian character, sometimes a road agreement, occasionally a voluntary association. We confirm the current arrangement in writing per parcel: the recorded restrictions, any dues or road-maintenance obligations, and what they actually bind you to. There is no CDD.

The real recurring ledger is farm operations: well capacity sized to the barn and irrigation, fencing maintenance on 5–16 acres, arena footing upkeep, and — the big one on the tax side — agricultural exemption strategy. Greenbelt classification on qualifying farm operations materially changes the carrying cost of a seven-figure parcel; which county you are in changes how that application runs. This is core math here, not a footnote.

The honest comparison point: a comparable campaign farm on the Marion side typically prices meaningfully higher for the same infrastructure — you are paying for the Ocala address and shorter hauls. Winding Oaks’ pitch is 80–90% of the geography at Levy-side pricing and taxes. For most programs that trade is the whole reason to look here first.
Want the restrictions, dues, and ag-exemption picture for a specific Winding Oaks farm?
Get the Parcel Homework →

The Farm Logic: Infrastructure Is the Price

Two farms with identical acreage and similar houses can trade $300K+ apart here, and the gap is in the outbuildings: a center-aisle concrete-block barn with twelve matted stalls, wash racks, and a climate-controlled tack room is a different asset than a wood shed-row; an irrigated, laser-graded arena with maintained footing is six figures of replacement cost; established board-fenced pasture with mature shade reads in every appraisal photo. Since 1998 this subdivision has accumulated owner-era infrastructure of every grade — which is exactly why farm-level diligence beats subdivision-level assumptions.

Our pricing method on every Winding Oaks file: land at corridor land comps, residence at residential comps, infrastructure at depreciated replacement cost — then sanity-check the sum against the thin sale history. Sellers who paid for quality get credit; buyers avoid paying arena money for a round pen.

The Homes: Built to Match the Barns

Residences run custom and substantial — the current $779K listing carries five bedrooms and four-and-a-half baths, and the upper tier matches house quality to farm quality. Eras vary from late-90s originals (roof, HVAC, and systems homework applies) to current builds. Gated private drives are common; so are guest quarters and barn apartments, which matter both for staff and for the seasonal-circuit rental demand this corridor generates.

One honest note for resale thinking: in this product class the buyer pool is equestrian by definition, so improvements that serve a horse program hold value while general-luxury improvements (pools, theaters) return less here than they would in town. Spend accordingly.

The County-Line Homework

Morriston’s ZIP 32668 sits on the Levy–Marion line, and parcels in and around this subdivision can paper to either county. The county determines your tax rate and assessment practice, school zoning, permitting office, and — critically for farms — the agricultural-exemption process. Before you offer: pull the parcel on the county appraiser’s site, confirm the county, the current assessed value and exemptions, and how that county treats greenbelt on a property your size running your kind of program. Ten minutes that move five figures of annual carry.

Want the county, tax, and greenbelt picture for a specific farm before you write?
Run the Parcel Homework →

Schools

Levy-side parcels typically feed the Williston schools — Williston Middle High rates 4/10 on GreatSchools with a 92% graduation rate — while a Marion-side parcel would zone to Marion County schools. Most buyers here are equestrian households for whom this is a resale variable more than a daily one; for families it is one more reason the county-line verification comes first.

More on Living at Winding Oaks

The depth without the wall of text. Open what matters to you.

The campaign-season rhythm
Winter is the season: HITS circuit weeks and WEC’s calendar fill this corridor with horses, trainers, and trailer traffic from January through March. Farms here let you campaign from your own barn — the entire value proposition for show households — and barn apartments rent well to circuit staff in season.
Water and wells, the farm version
Confirm well capacity against the actual program: stall count, wash racks, irrigation zones. Many farms run multiple wells. On purchase, test capacity and quality, and verify the irrigation system’s condition — arena irrigation failures are expensive discoveries in February.
Services and logistics
The Ocala corridor’s farriers, equine vets, hay haulers, and feed stores work Morriston daily — this is the deepest horse-services economy in the country. Williston covers fuel and errands at 15 minutes; Ocala and Gainesville split the city needs at 30–45.
Internet and the practical stuff
Coverage varies by parcel — fixed wireless has improved across the corridor, and several farms run boosted setups. Verify at the exact address if remote work or barn cameras matter. Power outages run rural-length; most serious barns keep generators.

5 Mistakes Buyers Make at Winding Oaks

Seven-figure farm purchases fail on predictable mistakes. These five cost the most here.

1

Paying arena money for a round pen

Infrastructure descriptions inflate. We price barns, arenas, and fencing at depreciated replacement cost from inspection — not from listing adjectives — and the gap routinely exceeds $100K.

2

Skipping the well-capacity test

A household well and a twelve-stall-plus-irrigation well are different machines. Test capacity against your actual program before waiving anything — drilling a second well is real money on a tight timeline.

3

Assuming the county

Levy or Marion changes taxes, schools, permitting, and greenbelt treatment. Pull the parcel record first — five-figure annual consequences hide in this detail.

4

Calling the listing agent

The agent on the sign works for the seller, and in a thin seven-figure market the narrative does heavy lifting. Bring representation that prices the layers separately.

5

Ignoring the ag-exemption transition

Greenbelt status does not automatically transfer with the deed — plan the application and the operation evidence before closing, or budget the unexempted tax year.

Want farm-level comps with infrastructure priced separately before you offer?
See What Buyers Actually Paid →

Which Farms Hold Value Best

In a serious-horseman plat, program-ready infrastructure is the resale insurance

Turn-key campaign farms — quality barn, maintained arena, sound fencing, proven water — sell to the deepest buyer pool in the corridor and hold value through cycles. Project farms trade at honest discounts that often exceed the renovation cost gap.

The mistake is paying turn-key money for a project with good photos. Inspection-based replacement-cost pricing is the defense.

Turn-key campaign farms
Quality barn, no arena
Dated infrastructure, good land
House-led parcels, light farm

Relative resale strength by farm tier, illustrative of how Winding Oaks parcels trade against the corridor’s equestrian buyer pool.

Want first look at turn-key farms here, including quiet listings?
Find the Strong Farms →

What to Check Before You Offer

Before you write on any Winding Oaks farm, run this list.

  • County confirmation via the property appraiser — taxes, schools, permitting
  • Recorded restrictions and any dues/road obligations in writing
  • Well capacity tested against your program — stalls, wash racks, irrigation
  • Infrastructure at replacement cost: barn, arena, fencing, from inspection
  • Ag-exemption status and transition plan with the county appraiser
  • Arena base and footing condition — the expensive invisible
  • Residence systems by era: roof, HVAC, septic sized to the household
  • Insurance quote covering house, barns, and farm liability
Jon Brooks · Co-Founder, Momentum Realty

Winding Oaks is where the corridor’s pricing logic shows itself most clearly: the $1.35M farm and the $779K farm are not separated by acreage or bedrooms — they are separated by infrastructure and readiness. We price every layer on its own evidence because that is how the eventual resale buyer will price it, and in a market where the buyer pool is professional horse people, sentiment does not survive the barn walk-through. The Levy-side discount against comparable Marion farms is real and durable; so is the obligation to verify which county you are actually standing in.

Cross-shop honestly: The Village at Hidden Lakes for gated-trails living at half the ticket, Steeplechase Farms for trailhead land to build your own program, Golden Ocala for the club lifestyle beside WEC. For a working campaign farm at the corridor’s honest value tier, this is the subdivision.

Winding Oaks vs. Comparable Communities

The honest comparison set for a serious-horseman buyer on this corridor.

CommunityHow it compares to Winding Oaks Estates
The Village at Hidden LakesGated equestrian living with internal trails at roughly half the price tier — residential-equestrian rather than campaign farms. The step before a full program.
Steeplechase FarmsFive-acre trailhead land at Goethe with no dues — the build-your-own-program play at a fraction of entry, without the established infrastructure.
Meadow Wood FarmsThe Marion-side acreage standard with deeper services and shorter hauls at higher pricing and taxes — the direct cross-county comparison.
Golden OcalaThe luxury club product beside WEC — golf, dining, and amenities instead of your own barn. A different way to spend the same seven figures.

Winding Oaks’ case: established campaign-farm infrastructure in the venue triangle at Levy-side pricing. The case against: thin seven-figure liquidity, owner-era infrastructure variance, and the county-line homework every parcel demands.

Cross-shopping farms across the corridor? We will compare them layer by layer for your program.
Compare Farms →

The Honest Trade-offs

Pros

  • The corridor’s mature serious-horseman subdivision since 1998.
  • Verified seven-figure demand: $1.35M closing.
  • WEC–HITS–forest triangle geography.
  • Established barns, arenas, and pasture — amortized infrastructure.
  • Levy-side pricing and taxes against Marion alternatives.
  • The deepest equestrian-services economy in the country.

Cons

  • Thin comps and slow liquidity at the seven-figure tier.
  • Infrastructure quality varies sharply by owner era.
  • County-line verification required parcel by parcel.
  • HOA/restriction structure unpublished — confirm in writing.
  • Farm operations are a genuine second budget.
  • Equestrian-only buyer pool narrows exit options.

The Winding Oaks Playbook

How prepared buyers win here, in order:

  • Define the program first — stalls, arena needs, pasture — then shop farms that match
  • Price the three layers separately: land, residence, infrastructure
  • Verify county and greenbelt before the first showing
  • Test water against the program, not the household
  • Negotiate on inspection evidence — replacement-cost gaps are leverage

Questions We Ask Before You Offer

When Momentum represents you here, these go out before the offer is drafted:

  • To the county appraiser: which county, current taxes, and greenbelt treatment for this operation
  • To the title agent: recorded restrictions, road obligations, and any dues structure
  • To the seller: well capacity records, arena base/footing history, barn permits
  • To the inspector: replacement-cost reads on every outbuilding
  • To the comps: what did land, house, and infrastructure each contribute in recent closings?
  • To the insurer: house, barns, and farm-liability coverage at today’s rates

Is Winding Oaks For You?

The honest fit check — this subdivision serves a specific program.

Consider elsewhere if you want

  • A first horse property to learn on — start smaller
  • Club amenities and managed living
  • Maximum house for the money
  • Quick resale liquidity
  • Hands-off, low-maintenance ownership
  • Town conveniences within ten minutes

Winding Oaks fits if you want

  • A working campaign farm in the venue triangle
  • Established infrastructure someone else amortized
  • Levy-side carrying costs near Marion-side venues
  • Neighbors who run real programs
  • Seven-figure farm value priced layer by layer
  • The deepest horse-services bench in America

Get the inside read on Winding Oaks Estates

Winding Oaks farms trade quietly between serious horse people — often before the portals notice. Tell us your discipline, program, and budget, and we will watch the subdivision with the county, water, and infrastructure homework already done. We represent you, not the seller.

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

You are all set.

A Momentum Realty Winding Oaks Estates 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.

Your buyer pool is professional — market to it

Campaign farms sell on stall counts, arena specs, and water records before kitchens. We package the farm documentation that this corridor’s buyers actually underwrite, and position your price against the verified tier evidence.

What is your Winding Oaks Estates home worth?

Get a no-obligation home value based on real comparable sales in Winding Oaks Estates 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.

Thank you.

We will prepare your Winding Oaks Estates home value from real comparable sales and reach out personally.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where is Winding Oaks Estates?
In Morriston, FL 32668, on Levy County’s eastern horse-country edge — positioned between the World Equestrian Center (~20–25 min), HITS (~20 min), and the state-forest trail systems.
What do farms cost at Winding Oaks?
The verified ledger: a recent closing at $1.35M and a 16.5+ acre farm listed at $1,350,000 anchor the campaign tier; a 5/4.5 on 5.85 gated acres asks $779,000 at the entry tier. Infrastructure quality decides position within tiers.
Is there an HOA?
Current listings do not publish one — established farm plats here typically run on recorded deed restrictions, sometimes with road agreements. We confirm the current structure in writing per parcel. No CDD.
When was the subdivision established?
1998, with continuous build-out and infrastructure upgrading since — which is why farm quality varies by owner era and why farm-level diligence matters.
Which county is it in?
ZIP 32668 straddles the Levy–Marion line. Confirm the county for the exact parcel via the property appraiser — taxes, schools, permitting, and ag-exemption treatment differ.
How far is the World Equestrian Center?
Roughly 20–25 minutes — with HITS about 20 and Goethe State Forest trailheads about 15. The triangle is the product.
What infrastructure do farms typically have?
Barns, paddocks, and often arenas — from shed-rows to center-aisle show barns with irrigated, graded arenas. We price every structure at depreciated replacement cost from inspection.
Can I get an agricultural exemption?
Qualifying farm operations can pursue greenbelt classification, which materially cuts carrying costs — but status does not transfer automatically at sale. Plan the application before closing; the county determines the process.
What about water?
Wells must carry the program — stalls, wash racks, irrigation. Test capacity and quality against your actual operation before waiving contingencies; many farms run multiple wells.
What schools serve the area?
Levy-side parcels typically feed the Williston schools (Williston Middle High: 4/10 on GreatSchools); Marion-side parcels zone to Marion County. Verify per parcel.
Can I run a business from my farm?
Training and boarding operations exist throughout this corridor — confirm the recorded restrictions and county zoning for the specific parcel and scale before you buy around a commercial plan.
Are there barn apartments or guest quarters?
Common in this product class — and they rent well to circuit staff in season. Verify permits on existing quarters and restrictions before adding new ones.
How liquid is the market?
Thin and slow, like all seven-figure farm markets — a few trades a year, often direct between horse people. Buyers benefit from watch lists; sellers from complete documentation.
Why buy here instead of the Marion side?
Levy-side pricing and taxes for nearly the same geography — comparable Marion farms typically cost meaningfully more for equivalent infrastructure. The trade is a slightly longer haul to Ocala proper.
Is this a gated community?
The subdivision is not gated as a whole; individual farms commonly have gated private drives — like the current $779K listing on 5.85 gated acres.
What should I verify before offering?
County and greenbelt status, recorded restrictions, well capacity against your program, infrastructure at replacement cost, arena base condition, and the residence’s systems — the full checklist is on this page.

Winding Oaks is the campaign-farm tier of our horse-corridor coverage — these guides cover the steps before, beside, and above it.

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