Altamonte Springs

Spring Valley

Spring Lake frontage, private docks, and I-4 access — Altamonte's best-kept secret.

Live the MaxLife.

$520K

Median Price

$350K$800K

1,400

Homes

$100–$200

Monthly HOA

1972

Established

Forest City Elementary School or Spring Lake Elementary School (Seminole County, zone-dependent by address)

School Zone

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Background

A brief history

Spring Valley is one of Altamonte Springs' original established neighborhoods, developed primarily from the mid-1960s through the late 1980s as Seminole County's suburban expansion south of Maitland began in earnest. The community sits in the southwest quadrant of Altamonte Springs, anchored by 84-acre Spring Lake at its center and bounded by Wymore Road on the east. Unlike the master-planned communities that dominate today's Central Florida market, Spring Valley grew organically through multiple builders over several decades, which accounts for the architectural variety that characterizes it today — ranch homes from the 1960s and 1970s sit beside later Colonial, Spanish Mediterranean, and contemporary builds from the 1980s and 1990s on lots ranging from a quarter to half an acre.

The neighborhood's development coincided with the buildout of the Altamonte Mall corridor, which opened in 1974 and transformed SR 436 into one of the most commercially active arterials in Seminole County. Spring Valley residents gained walkable (or easily bikeable) access to major retail, dining, and services without being inside the commercial zone itself — a suburban sweet spot that has kept the neighborhood desirable across multiple real estate cycles.

Spring Lake itself has been the community's defining natural amenity since the neighborhood's inception. The lake is accessible to residents and provides the open-space relief that many older Central Florida neighborhoods lack. Homes closest to the lake — particularly those with water access or views — have consistently commanded premiums within an already-premium neighborhood and have been the subject of periodic renovation and teardown-rebuild activity as buyers pay for the location and bring the structures up to contemporary standards.

The feel

What it's like to live here

Spring Valley has the feel of an established, tree-canopied suburban enclave where people have lived for decades — a rarity in fast-growing Central Florida. Streets are quiet and lined with mature oaks; front yards are larger than what newer construction delivers; and the neighborhood has an organic, settled quality that no amount of master planning can manufacture. Demographically the community is a mix of long-tenure original owners, empty nesters, and professional families who made a deliberate choice to buy in an established neighborhood rather than a new-construction community.

The practical advantages are real: Altamonte Mall, multiple Publix locations, and a dense concentration of restaurants and services are within a short drive on SR 436. The 429 Western Beltway and I-4 are easily accessible, making downtown Orlando, Maitland, and Apopka commutable. The honest tradeoff is that homes are older and buyers should budget for updates — most properties need HVAC, roof, kitchen, or bath work relative to new construction standards, and the ones that have already been updated carry a meaningful price premium.

The details

What to expect

Older Home Condition

The majority of Spring Valley homes were built between 1965 and 1990. Buyers should commission thorough inspections covering roof, HVAC, electrical panels, plumbing, and window systems. Renovation budgets are a routine part of purchasing here, especially for lakefront properties where deferred maintenance is common.

Lot Size and Maturity

Spring Valley lots are meaningfully larger than what contemporary builders offer — quarter-acre to half-acre is typical, with lake parcels occasionally exceeding that. Combined with 40-to-60-year-old oak tree canopies, the neighborhood offers a landscape quality that cannot be replicated in new construction.

Spring Lake Access

The lake is a genuine lifestyle amenity but not a navigable motor-boating lake like East Lake Toho or Lake Eloise. It is best suited for kayaking, paddleboarding, fishing, and passive enjoyment. Lakefront homes are the neighborhood's most coveted addresses and rarely stay on market long.

SR 436 Corridor Convenience

The combination of Altamonte Mall, dense restaurant and retail concentration along SR 436, and Crane's Roost Park's event programming makes Spring Valley one of the most practically convenient neighborhoods in Seminole County for day-to-day living.

Seminole County School Quality

Seminole County Public Schools consistently rank among the top public school districts in Florida. Lake Brantley High School in particular has a strong academic and extracurricular reputation. The school assignment is a meaningful draw for families purchasing in the neighborhood.

Community

Amenities

  • 84-acre Spring Lake with access points for fishing and non-motorized watercraft
  • Proximity to Altamonte Mall and SR 436 commercial corridor
  • Crane's Roost Park in Uptown Altamonte (5-minute drive) with lakefront amphitheater and events
  • Multiple Publix supermarkets within 1–2 miles
  • Quick access to I-4 and SR 429 Western Beltway
  • Wekiva Springs State Park approximately 15 minutes north for swimming and kayaking
  • Strong Seminole County Public School assignment zone

Education

School assignments

  • Forest City Elementary School or Spring Lake Elementary School (Seminole County, zone-dependent by address)
  • Teague Middle School (6–8, Seminole County)
  • Lake Brantley High School (9–12, Seminole County)

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

Market Commentary

What the market is doing

Spring Valley is priced as a premium Altamonte neighborhood, not an entry-level one. Expect $350K on the low end for smaller, unrenovated ranch homes and up to $800K for fully updated lakefront or lake-view properties. The value proposition is location stability and lot size — you get real land and a real tree canopy at prices that would buy you a townhome in some newer Seminole County communities. I advise buyers to inspect carefully: deferred maintenance on older homes can add significantly to true acquisition cost.

— 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 June 4, 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.

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