Palm Coast

Seminole Woods

Wooded privacy on Palm Coast's south side — larger lots, quiet streets, and quick US-1 access in the U-section.

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Live Market Data

Seminole Woods — Market Pulse

Seminole Woods Market Report
16
For Sale
Median Sold
1-Yr Change
Avg. Days on Mkt
Sold-to-List
Months Supply

Active listings + recent-sold aggregates from the Stellar MLS, 32164 area · aggregate statistics only, no addresses or individual listings published.

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Background

A brief history

Seminole Woods is Palm Coast's far-south frontier — the S and U sections, where, true to ITT's alphabetized master plan, the streets begin with the letters S or U. When ITT assembled roughly 68,000 acres beginning in December 1968 and platted the city into lettered sections, Seminole Woods was laid out at the southern reach of the plan, along the spine of Seminole Woods Boulevard, which runs from State Road 100 just west of I-95 down to U.S. 1 south of downtown Bunnell. It was always intended as a lower-density, wooded section rather than a dense residential core.

That original intent largely held. Much of Seminole Woods remains undeveloped to this day, leaving a lush, private, heavily-wooded character with single-family homes interspersed among standing forest and buildable lots. After ITT withdrew in 1995 and Palm Coast incorporated in 1999, the section saw steady but unhurried infill rather than the rapid buildout of the city's center — and that pace is why Seminole Woods still reads as Palm Coast's quiet, spacious, tree-screened south side. Recent years have brought new development pressure to the corridor, including approvals along Seminole Woods Boulevard for additional housing and supporting commercial, signaling that the section's frontier era is gradually giving way to growth.

The section's defining geographic advantage is proximity to the coast and to U.S. 1: the entrance to Seminole Woods is only about four miles from Flagler Beach, the closest beach access of any Palm Coast section, and Seminole Woods Boulevard gives quick reach to both I-95 (via SR-100) and U.S. 1 south toward Bunnell. For buyers who want privacy and trees without sacrificing a fast run to the sand, that combination is the U-section's calling card.

The feel

What it's like to live here

Seminole Woods feels like the wooded, private south edge of Palm Coast: standing forest between homes, large lots, quiet streets, and a real sense of space that the city's denser central sections can't offer. Many lots are still vacant or tree-screened, so the section reads as semi-rural in places even though it's within the city, and the buyer mix skews toward people who specifically want privacy, room, and a quick shot to Flagler Beach four miles away. It's an open city section in character, with the spacious original-ITT footprint intact.

The honest tradeoffs come with that frontier feel. Infrastructure and services are thinner than in the city center, some streets are bordered by undeveloped land or wetlands, and not every lot has the same utility availability — older or more remote homesites may still rely on well and septic rather than full municipal service, so that's a critical thing to verify. The section is also seeing new development pressure, which means change is coming to a corridor prized for its quiet. Buyers wanting amenities, walkability, or fully built-out streets should look elsewhere; buyers who want privacy, trees, and acreage-style space close to the beach will find Seminole Woods distinctive.

The details

What to expect

Well/Septic vs. City Utilities

Because Seminole Woods is a lower-density, partially-developed section on Palm Coast's south frontier, utility availability varies by location — newer and more central homes are typically on municipal water and sewer, but older or more remote homesites may rely on private well and septic. That distinction matters: it affects maintenance responsibility, financing, and long-term cost, and a septic system has its own inspection and eventual replacement considerations. Confirm exactly what serves the specific address, and if it's well and septic, budget for a separate well-water test and septic inspection. Never assume city service in this section — verify it in writing.

Privacy, Trees & Vacant Land

Seminole Woods' defining feature is space — large lots, standing forest, and many still-vacant parcels give the section a private, semi-rural feel within the city. That's a genuine draw, but it also means a neighboring vacant lot could be built on later, and tree-screened privacy can change as development continues. Verify lot lines, tree-removal rules, and what's zoned for the adjacent parcels if privacy is central to your decision. The wooded setting also means more attention to defensible space and tree maintenance near structures than in a manicured subdivision.

Coastal Proximity & Access

The section's signature advantage is location: the entrance to Seminole Woods is roughly four miles from Flagler Beach — the closest beach access of any Palm Coast section — and Seminole Woods Boulevard connects to SR-100/I-95 to the north and U.S. 1 toward Bunnell to the south. That makes a beach run genuinely quick while keeping the wooded quiet of the south side. The tradeoff is that retail, the hospital, and the city's amenity nodes are a drive north. Test-drive the actual routes you'd use, since the section's spread-out layout means some homes sit well off the main boulevard.

Development Pressure & Growth

Long Palm Coast's quiet frontier, Seminole Woods is now seeing new development pressure along Seminole Woods Boulevard, including approvals for additional housing and supporting commercial uses. That growth can bring services and convenience closer, but it also means the very quiet and openness that draw buyers here will gradually change. If you're buying for the current rural feel, check the city's planning records for approved or pending projects near the property. Conversely, if you want the area to develop, those same approvals signal where amenities may eventually arrive.

Housing Eras & Lots

Seminole Woods' homes range from older originals to recent custom and infill construction on large, tree-screened lots — frequently 10,000 square feet or more, with some duplex-zoned and acreage-style parcels mixed in. That variety means condition and systems vary widely, so prioritize roof age, plumbing, HVAC, and — given the section — the utility setup on any older home. Custom builds on wooded sites can command a premium for their setting. Verify zoning (single-family vs. duplex), lot dimensions, and any wetland or conservation overlay on the specific parcel before committing.

Community

Amenities

  • Roughly four miles to Flagler Beach — the closest beach access of any Palm Coast section
  • Large, heavily-wooded lots with standing forest and a private, semi-rural feel
  • Seminole Woods Boulevard connecting SR-100/I-95 to the north and U.S. 1 to the south
  • Quiet, low-density streets at the city's southern edge
  • Buildable wooded homesites for custom construction
  • Quick I-95 access via SR-100 for regional commuting
  • Near U.S. 1 and downtown Bunnell to the south
  • Proximity to conservation and wetland areas surrounding the section

Education

School assignments

  • Flagler County Public Schools (Flagler Schools)
  • Bunnell Elementary School (verify zoning)
  • Buddy Taylor Middle School (verify zoning)
  • Flagler-Palm Coast High School (verify zoning)

School zone assignments change. Verify with Orange County Public Schools before purchase.

Market Commentary

What the market is doing

Seminole Woods is a thinner, more individual market than Palm Coast's center, and the last 12 months of MLS sales reflect that: 33 closings with a median of $367K, the bottom tenth at $294K, and the top tenth at $441K. The median sitting above several central sections speaks to the larger lots and privacy buyers pay up for here, while the moderate spread reflects a mix of older homes and newer custom builds on wooded sites. Thirty-three sales is a smaller, less liquid sample, so individual property characteristics — lot size, tree cover, and crucially whether the home is on municipal utilities or well-and-septic — swing value more than in a high-volume section. I always tell buyers here to confirm utility service and lot specifics before anchoring on a comp, because two homes at the same price can be very different underneath. — Ryan Solberg

— Ryan Solberg, Broker · MaxLife Realty · License #BK3354351

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MLS GRID

Listings courtesy of Stellar MLS as distributed by MLS GRID

IDX information is provided exclusively for consumers’ personal, non-commercial use and may not be used for any purpose other than to identify prospective properties consumers may be interested in purchasing.

Based on information submitted to the MLS GRID as of July 1, 2026. All data is obtained from various sources and may not have been verified by broker or MLS GRID. Supplied Open House Information is subject to change without notice. All information should be independently reviewed and verified for accuracy. Properties may or may not be listed by the office/agent presenting the information.

All or a portion of the multiple listing information is provided by Stellar MLS, from a copyrighted compilation of listings. The compilation of listings and each individual listing are © 2026 Stellar MLS. All rights reserved.

Ryan Solberg, Broker · MaxLife Realty LLC · FL License #BK3354351 · Equal Housing Opportunity · Full disclaimer · DMCA