The 60-Second Overview
Yacht Harbor Village is the marina arm of the Hammock Beach story: a gated, 76-acre community the Ginn Company laid out in the mid-2000s on the Intracoastal Waterway along A1A, with more than 4,000 linear feet of waterway frontage, on the beach side of the Hammock Dunes bridge. The plan blends three products: 88 waterfront condominiums stacked over the marina with west-facing sunset views, roughly 205 homesites on the marina basin, protected saltwater canals, and the Intracoastal itself, and the centerpiece, a 209-slip deep-water marina at ICW mile marker 803 now operated as Hammock Beach Marina.
Three facts define the buy, and listing remarks rarely spell out any of them. First, the slips are leased from the marina operator, not deeded with the homes, monthly or annual, priced by slip size. Second, the on-site pool, fitness center, and tennis center belong to the Club at Hammock Beach, not the HOA, so using them requires an optional club membership. Third, there is no amenity CDD here; the Dunes CDD that serves the corridor is a utility-and-bridge district, debt-free since 2012, so the community's carrying costs live in the HOA and condo fee stack, which varies widely by product.
The marina is priced into every listing. The money is made or lost on the slip economics, the fee stack, the club decision, and the insurance read.
Pricing runs from the $400s for the 2-bed condos to $1M-$2M+ for direct-Intracoastal homes, with built homes recently averaging around $1.0M at roughly $326 per square foot on a small sample, and buildable lots from the $200s. The community is not fully built out: waterfront homesites with seawalls and utilities in place still trade, which makes Yacht Harbor Village one of the few places on this coast where you can still buy water and build to suit. The coastal market cooled through 2025, listings sat longer, and prepared buyers gained leverage, especially on lots and condos.
The Fee Stack: HOA, Condo Fees, No CDD, and the Club
Here is the single most important thing to understand about Yacht Harbor Village: the carrying cost is a stack of three or four separate decisions, and the listing's HOA field captures only one of them.
1) The HOA / condo association. Third-party research shows home HOA dues running roughly $313 to $941 and condo association fees roughly $119 to $874, but the cadence (monthly versus quarterly) and the inclusions vary by product, and condo fees here tend to bundle heavily, security, building insurance, exterior and grounds, and in some cases cable, internet, water, sewer, and trash. A bigger fee that includes building insurance and utilities can be cheaper in practice than a smaller fee that includes nothing. We verify the current amount, the cadence, and exactly what it covers, in writing, for any specific address before you offer.
2) No CDD, but read the district right. There is no Grand Haven-style amenity assessment on the tax bill. The Dunes Community Development District that serves the Hammock corridor is a utility-and-bridge district, it runs water, sewer, reclaimed irrigation, and the Hammock Dunes toll bridge, and it has been debt-free since 2012, funded by rates and tolls. That is a genuine carrying-cost advantage over CDD-heavy communities, and we still confirm parcel specifics on every purchase.
3) The club and the slip, both optional, both real numbers. The Club at Hammock Beach is a separate membership (reported figures: ~$15K initiation for Beach Club, ~$40K for Full Golf, plus annual dues; confirm the current amounts with the club), and the marina slip is a separate lease priced by size. A boating household that joins the club carries a very different true monthly cost than a non-boating household in the same condo, and neither number appears in the listing.
The 209-Slip Marina: Slip Economics
The marina is the reason this community exists, and it is genuinely rare hardware: 209 slips on concrete floating docks at ICW mile marker 803, in a protected basin off the Intracoastal, with slip sizes of 30, 40, and 60 feet, dockage for larger vessels, and capacity for boats up to roughly 100 feet LOA with about a 26-foot beam and 8-foot draft. Power runs 30, 50, and 100 amp, there is pump-out, fuel access nearby, 24-hour security, a captain's lounge, showers and laundry, and a shuttle to the resort. It is one of only a handful of true deep-water marina communities built on Florida's east coast in the last two decades.
Now the part that matters to your money: the slips are not deeded to the homes. The marina is operated by Grove Point Marinas as Hammock Beach Marina, and slips are leased, monthly or annual, priced by slip size, with transient dockage for visitors. That cuts both ways. The upside: you pay for exactly the slip you need, only while you need it, with no slip taxes, dock insurance, or seawall-reserve obligations of your own, and you can size up or down as your boat changes. The downside: a lease is not equity, rates can change at renewal, and availability in your size is not contractually guaranteed the way a deeded slip is. If a guaranteed, deeded slip is non-negotiable for you, that is a different product, and we will tell you honestly where to find it.
By water, you are on the protected Intracoastal with no fixed bridge between you and miles of cruising in either direction; for offshore runs, the practical inlets are Matanzas to the north and Ponce de Leon to the south, so talk to us, and the dockmaster, about real transit times for the boating you actually do. Get current rates, availability in your slip size, and the lease terms in writing from the marina office before you write an offer on any home here, because the slip math is half the reason to buy.
The Club at Hammock Beach
Owning in Yacht Harbor Village does not include resort amenities, and that surprises more buyers than anything else here. The pools, spa, fitness centers, and dining are owned by the Club at Hammock Beach, a Troon-managed private club, and membership is entirely optional. What membership unlocks is substantial: three properties, the oceanfront resort itself (the multi-pool Fantasy Pool complex with lazy river and waterslide, the spa, the fitness center, member dining, and the two famous courses, the Jack Nicklaus Ocean Course and the Tom Watson Conservatory), Yacht Harbor Village's own pool, fitness center, and tennis center, and the Conservatory club grounds.
Reported figures put the Beach Club membership around $15,000 to join with annual dues in the mid-four figures, and Full Golf around $40,000 with annual dues in the low five figures, with an annual food-and-beverage minimum and a dues increase each January, but the club does not hold these numbers still, so we confirm current tiers, dues, and any property-owner pricing directly with the membership office for every buyer who wants them. Two more facts worth knowing: the club's rental program accepts condos only in Yacht Harbor Village, which matters if income is part of your plan, and some resales convey a membership at closing, a negotiable item worth real money that buyers routinely fail to ask about.
Condos vs. Homesites
The 88 condominiums sit over the marina in low-rise buildings with three floor plans, roughly 1,587 sq ft 2-bed/2-bath, 1,822 sq ft 2-bed/2-bath, and 2,363 sq ft 3-bed/3-bath, and they carry one of the Hammock's quiet geographic perks: because the community sits on the east bank of the Intracoastal, the condos face west over the water, so you get true sunset views from a barrier-island address with the beach a few blocks behind you. They are the lock-and-leave entry, the product the club's rental program accepts, and the tier where the fee inclusions and the association's reserves and insurance picture deserve the closest read.
The homesites are the other half of the story, and the part that makes Yacht Harbor Village unusual: roughly 205 platted lots on the marina basin, the protected saltwater canals, and direct Intracoastal frontage, many with seawalls and utilities already in, and the community is still not fully built out. You can buy a canal lot in the $200s, hold it, and build with a custom builder on your timeline (the community has historically imposed no build deadline, and uses an architectural review process; confirm current rules), or pay up for direct-ICW frontage and build the big-dock house. Built resales range from canal homes in the $800s-$900s to Intracoastal homes well past $1.5M, with recent home sales averaging around $1.0M. The right way to shop here is water position first, the marina, a canal, or the Intracoastal each lives differently, then the house.
Schools
Yacht Harbor Village is served by Flagler County Schools, typically Old Kings Elementary, Indian Trails Middle, and Matanzas High. The honest read: the ratings are mid-tier (3 to 6 out of 10), and that deserves real homework from relocating families, including a look at programs and trajectory rather than one composite number.
Context matters, though. This is a boater-and-second-home community first; school ratings are irrelevant to most of the demand pool but still relevant to resale, because family buyers are part of who buys your home later. If schools are central to your decision, weigh the Hammock honestly against communities in stronger districts, and confirm the exact zoning for any address with the district, since Flagler rezones periodically.
More on Living in Yacht Harbor Village
The depth without the wall of text. Open what matters to you.
Location and commute
Life on the water
All-ages, mixed-use rhythm
Insurance and flood
5 Mistakes Buyers Make in Yacht Harbor Village
In a marina community with leased slips, a separate club, and three different products behind one gate, the same five mistakes cost buyers the most. Each is avoidable with the right read before you tour.
Assuming the slip comes with the house
Slips are leased from the marina operator, monthly or annual, by size. Nothing in your deed guarantees one. Confirm current rates and availability for your boat's size, in writing, before you offer, not after you close.
Assuming the pool and fitness are included
The on-site pool, fitness center, and tennis belong to the Club at Hammock Beach, not the HOA. Without a membership, you own near them, not in them. Price the club tier you would actually use first.
Comparing fee labels instead of inclusions
A condo fee here can bundle building insurance, security, and utilities; a cheaper-looking fee elsewhere may include nothing. Stack the totals, fee, slip, club, insurance, before judging which home is expensive.
Paying Intracoastal money for a canal or interior position
Direct-ICW frontage, marina-front, canal, and interior near-marina lots carry very different durable premiums. The most common overpay here is a view price on a position that does not hold it.
Skipping the flood, wind, and seawall read
AE flood zones, coastal wind, and seawall condition vary parcel by parcel. An address-specific FEMA check, a real insurance quote, and on lots a seawall inspection belong in your offer math, not after closing.
Which Lots & Views Hold Value Best
In a marina community, water position is the resale insurance
The houses can be updated, but the water position cannot. Marina-front and direct-Intracoastal positions consistently command the strongest premiums and resell fastest, with protected canal lots close behind; positions toward A1A without water trade as the value tier.
The mistake is paying a water price for a near-water lot. We help buyers spot which homesites carry real, durable premiums, so your money lands where the market will give it back.
What to Check Before You Offer
Before you write an offer on any Yacht Harbor Village property, run this list. Missing any one of them is how buyers overpay or inherit a problem.
- Slip rates, terms, and availability for your boat's size, in writing from the marina office
- The full fee stack: HOA or condo fee, its cadence, and exactly what it includes
- Club status: current tiers and dues, and whether a membership conveys with this sale
- True closed comps by water position and product, not a Zestimate
- Flood zone and insurance quotes (flood + wind) for the specific parcel; condo master policy and reserves on units
- Seawall and dock condition on canal and ICW lots, and who maintains them
- ARB rules and build requirements if you are buying a lot to build on
- Rental rules and history: the club program accepts condos only, and usage patterns vary by building
Yacht Harbor Village is a slip-economics game wrapped in a fee-structure game. The marina is priced into every listing, but the slip is a lease, the amenities belong to an optional club, and the fee stack swings hundreds of dollars a month between two doors in the same community. Buyers who stack it correctly, slip for the boat they actually own, the club tier they would actually use, the fee with its real inclusions, and an honest insurance quote, routinely find this is the strongest marina-lifestyle value between St. Augustine and Daytona. Buyers who do not are the ones who discover after closing that the pool requires a membership and the slip waitlist does not fit their boat.
Our advice is to cross-shop it honestly: against Hammock Dunes if oceanfront prestige outranks the dock, against Grand Haven if you want included amenities over a marina, and against Camachee Island if St. Augustine's inlet access matters more than the Hammock's beach. For the buyer whose boat is the point, Yacht Harbor Village is the one built around it.
Yacht Harbor Village vs. Comparable Communities
The honest way to place Yacht Harbor Village is against the other communities a Hammock or marina buyer is realistically weighing. Each trades something different.
| Community | How it compares to Yacht Harbor Village |
|---|---|
| Hammock Dunes | Oceanfront and more exclusive, with 2.5 miles of private beach, two courses, and a ~$90K equity club, but far costlier to carry and no marina of this scale. Yacht Harbor trades the private beach for the dock and a lower total stack. |
| Ocean Hammock | The gated oceanfront resort neighborhood around the Nicklaus Ocean Course, same club ecosystem, rental-friendly. Ocean Hammock is the beach-and-golf side of Hammock Beach; Yacht Harbor is the marina side, often at a lower entry for comparable square footage. |
| Cinnamon Beach | Oceanfront condos built for rental income inside Ocean Hammock. Choose Cinnamon for beachfront cash flow; choose Yacht Harbor's condos for the marina, sunset exposure, and a quieter, less turnover-heavy rhythm. |
| Grand Haven | Palm Coast's mainland flagship: guard gates, Nicklaus golf, two amenity centers every resident gets via a ~$3,153/yr CDD, but no marina. Grand Haven includes the amenities; Yacht Harbor includes the water and makes the amenities optional. |
| Palm Coast Plantation | Gated on the mainland Intracoastal around the 120-acre Emerald Lake, HOA-run amenities, and some boat access at a lower entry, but nothing like a 209-slip deep-water marina. The value alternative when the dock is a want, not the point. |
| Camachee Island | St. Augustine's marina alternative: the 230-slip Camachee Cove Yacht Harbor minutes from the St. Augustine Inlet, with on-site yacht services and dining. Better offshore access and city proximity; Yacht Harbor counters with the gated Hammock setting, beach blocks away, and the resort club option. |
Yacht Harbor Village's case against this field is singular: it is the only gated community on this stretch built around its own 209-slip deep-water marina, with no CDD, a take-it-or-leave-it resort club, and buildable waterfront lots still available. The case against it is that the slips are leased rather than deeded, the amenities require the club, offshore access means a run to an inlet, and the schools are mid-tier.
The Honest Trade-offs
Pros
- A true 209-slip deep-water marina at your doorstep, to ~100 ft LOA.
- Gated Intracoastal living with the Atlantic a short walk east.
- No amenity CDD; carrying costs live in a verifiable HOA/condo stack.
- Optional Hammock Beach club: resort amenities without tower pricing.
- West-facing condos with genuine sunset water views.
- Buildable waterfront lots still available, with no build-time pressure.
Cons
- Slips are leased, not deeded; rates and availability can change.
- On-site pool, fitness, and tennis require club membership.
- Condo fees can run high; inclusions demand a careful read.
- AE flood zones and coastal wind make insurance a real line item.
- Offshore access requires a run to the Matanzas or Ponce inlet.
- Mid-tier Flagler school ratings (3-6/10) for relocating families.
The Yacht Harbor Village Playbook
If we were buying in Yacht Harbor Village, this is the order of operations we would run, and the one we run for our clients.
- Start at the dock. Confirm slip rates, terms, and availability for your boat, in writing, before you tour a single home.
- Stack the fees second. HOA or condo fee with cadence and inclusions, plus the club tier you would actually use, plus insurance quotes.
- Pick the water position. Marina-front, canal, Intracoastal, or condo, each lives and resells differently; choose the position before the house.
- Run flood, wind, and seawall diligence early. Parcel-level FEMA zone, real quotes, and seawall condition before the inspection clock burns.
- Use the market. Few sales, longer listings, and a deep lot bench mean leverage; negotiate from closed comps and ask whether a club membership conveys.
Questions We'd Ask Before Buying Here Ourselves
The questions a local who knows Yacht Harbor Village asks are different from the ones a portal answers. On any specific property, we want to know:
- What are current slip rates and availability for our boat's size, and what do the lease terms allow at renewal?
- What does the HOA or condo fee actually include, on what cadence, and what do the reserves and master insurance look like?
- Does a club membership convey with this sale, and what would the tier we would use cost this year?
- What is the water position, marina, canal, direct ICW, or near-water, and what have same-position comps closed at?
- What do flood and wind quotes come back at for this parcel, and what is the seawall's condition and ownership?
- How long has it sat, and what does the lot inventory nearby say about our negotiating leverage?
Yacht Harbor Village May Not Be Right For You If
We would rather tell you the truth than sell you the wrong community. Yacht Harbor Village may not be the right fit if any of these are deal-breakers, and that is a property question, not a personal one.
Consider elsewhere if you want
- A deeded slip you own outright, with guaranteed tenure.
- Amenities included with ownership, no club required.
- Direct oceanfront living rather than Intracoastal-front.
- Instant offshore access without an inlet run.
- Top-rated public schools as the deciding factor.
Yacht Harbor Village fits if you want
- A real deep-water marina as the center of daily life.
- Gated Hammock living with the beach a short walk east.
- No CDD and a club you can take or leave.
- Sunset water views from a barrier-island address.
- A buildable waterfront lot on your own timeline.
