Buyer Guide

The Villages, FL: honest pros and cons from a local Realtor

No sales pitch. No retirement fantasy copy. The real advantages and real trade-offs, from someone who works here every day.

The Villages is one of the most genuinely successful retirement communities in the country. It is also a place with real costs, real trade-offs, and a market structure that every buyer should understand before they visit a model home. This page gives you both sides as accurately as I can. See the full ownership cost breakdown for detailed numbers on bond, amenity fee, and taxes by area.

The Case For

What The Villages does well

These are real advantages — not marketing copy. Each one is verifiable and each one genuinely distinguishes The Villages from most alternatives.

No state income tax

Florida has no state income tax. For retirement income — Social Security, pensions, IRA distributions, investment income — that matters. A household drawing $80,000 per year in retirement income saves $0 in Florida vs. $3,000–$5,000+ per year in many northern states, depending on the state. This is a real, calculable advantage, and it is one of the main reasons financially-oriented retirees specifically target Florida.

Golf cart paths cover the entire community

The golf cart path network connects every village to every town square, recreation center, and most shopping areas in The Villages. This is not a marketing feature — it functions. Most residents genuinely use a golf cart as their primary transportation for daily errands and social trips within the community. The network spans hundreds of miles and is continuously maintained. For buyers who want to reduce car dependence in retirement, it works.

46 executive + 12+ championship courses, including 46 free-to-walk executive courses

The amenity fee includes walking play on all executive (9-hole) golf courses — 46 of them. Trail fees apply if you ride a golf cart (approximately $22/month). Championship courses (18-hole) require greens fees ($15–$45+ at resident rates) or club memberships. For golfers who walk and play executive courses several times a week, the included access alone makes the amenity fee straightforward to justify. No comparable community in the country matches this course density at this access level.

Free nightly entertainment at all 5 town squares

Spanish Springs, Lake Sumter Landing, Brownwood Paddock, Sawgrass Grove, and Eastport all host free live entertainment nightly — generally 5–9 PM, no cover charge. Live bands are the standard, not the exception. It is a genuine anchor for the social calendar. Unlike resort amenities that exist on paper but get used rarely, the town square entertainment sees heavy daily use by actual residents.

2,500+ clubs and organized activities

The number is accurate. The Villages has more than 2,500 resident-run clubs and organized groups — from woodworking and ceramics to language learning, cycling, pickleball, political discussion, and every sport imaginable. New residents with no prior social connections consistently report making friends quickly because the entry points are everywhere and the culture actively welcomes newcomers.

100+ recreation centers and pools

The community has more than 100 recreation centers, each with pools, fitness equipment, and scheduled activity spaces. The density — roughly one recreation center per village neighborhood — means you rarely travel far to exercise or attend a scheduled class. For buyers comparing this to their current gym membership and activity costs, the math often works in The Villages' favor.

Consistently low crime rates

The Villages consistently posts some of the lowest crime rates of any community its size in Florida. Gated village entrances, a resident-run Community Watch program, and a dedicated Villages Public Safety department all contribute. For buyers relocating from higher-crime urban or suburban areas, the difference in day-to-day security is noticeable.

Multiple hospital systems within 20–30 minutes

UF Health The Villages Hospital is within the community. AdventHealth Waterman (Tavares) and HCA Florida Ocala Hospital are within 20–30 minutes. Villages-area providers are experienced with the demographic. For buyers who need ongoing medical care or who anticipate health needs as they age, the proximity and range of providers is a genuine quality-of-life advantage — and a meaningful point of comparison against more rural retirement alternatives.

The Case Against

What buyers need to know before they commit

These are the things the developer's marketing does not lead with — and the things that sometimes surprise buyers after they have already made a decision. Better to read them now.

Bond payments on newer homes add significant carrying cost

CDD bond payments on homes built in the Southern Area — south of SR 44 — typically run $3,000–$6,000+ per year. That is $250–$500+ per month in additional carrying cost that does not appear in the purchase price, the amenity fee, or the developer's standard cost estimates. It shows up as a non-ad-valorem line item on the annual property tax bill. The bond balance transfers with the property unless paid off at closing. Always request the exact remaining balance and annual payment in writing for any specific home before you make an offer. See the full bond and CDD explainer for the complete picture.

Three-county complexity — verify your county before you buy

The Villages spans three counties: Sumter, Marion, and Lake. Property tax rates differ by county. Sumter is typically the lowest (~1.0–1.3% effective rate); Marion is typically higher (~1.3–1.6%); Lake varies (~1.2–1.7% depending on the section). On a $450,000 home, the annual difference between a Sumter and a Marion address is roughly $1,350–$2,700. Some buyers assume all of The Villages has the same low Sumter County rate — it does not. Verify the county before making an offer. The area comparison guide covers which counties apply to which parts of The Villages.

The developer controls a large share of the market

New homes are sold exclusively through The Villages developer's own sales representatives. You cannot bring a buyer's agent. Roughly 60% of resale inventory also flows through the developer's own resale division, whose agents represent the seller's interest — not yours. This is a different market structure than traditional real estate in most of the country. Buyers who enter the model homes without understanding it can find themselves in transactions with no independent representation. See how the developer controls the market for a full breakdown.

Traffic and growth in some corridors

The Villages is one of the fastest-growing communities in the country, and some corridors show it. The SR 44 / US 27 intersection and parts of the southern growth area experience real congestion during peak hours. The golf cart path network alleviates much of the daily burden for residents, but leaving the community by car — especially heading toward Orlando or Tampa — involves road infrastructure that has not kept pace with the community's expansion.

Florida homeowner's insurance is variable and can be expensive

This is not specific to The Villages, but it affects every buyer here. Florida's homeowner's insurance market has been turbulent. Roof age is the primary pricing driver — carriers are strict about roofs older than 15–20 years. Insurance on a home needing a roof can run $3,000–$6,000+/year, and some homes are difficult to insure at a reasonable cost without a replacement first. Always get insurance quotes and a roof inspection before committing to any specific home. Do not assume the current owner's insurance rate will transfer.

Major airports are about an hour away

Orlando International Airport (MCO) is approximately 60 minutes by car. Tampa International Airport is approximately 90 minutes. For buyers who travel rarely, this is a minor inconvenience. For buyers who fly frequently or who have family flying in regularly, the drive adds up. There are no commercial airports closer. Factor it in honestly before you commit.

Comparing Your Options

How The Villages compares to other Florida 55+ communities

The Villages is considerably larger than any competing 55+ community in Florida — over 100 villages and approximately 130,000+ residents, compared to On Top of the World (Ocala) at roughly 30,000 residents, or Latitude Margaritaville communities (Daytona Beach and Hilton Head) that are newer and smaller. Del Webb communities throughout Central Florida offer the active-adult concept with lower price points, smaller amenity packages, and less developer market control.

The Villages' advantages — path network, golf course density, town square entertainment, club infrastructure — are genuinely unmatched at scale. No other Florida community comes close on those dimensions. The trade-offs are also real: bond costs on newer homes, three-county tax complexity, and the developer's unusual market position are not typical features of 55+ real estate elsewhere in the country.

For buyers seriously comparing The Villages against other retirement locations — on climate, healthcare, cost of living, and what the actual transition looks like — the broader relocation guide covers that full picture.

FAQ

The Villages pros and cons — common questions

The main ones that consistently catch buyers by surprise are the CDD bond on newer Southern Area homes — which adds $3,000–$6,000+ per year to carrying costs — and the three-county property tax structure, where your rate depends on which county your specific address is in. Florida homeowner's insurance is also more variable than buyers expect, with roof age being the primary cost driver.

For buyers who use the amenities actively — golf, clubs, recreation centers, evening entertainment — the ~$204/month amenity fee covers a genuine range of included access. The bigger question is lifestyle fit: buyers who live in The Villages tend to use the community heavily and find the value clear. Buyers who prefer a quieter lifestyle with fewer structured activities often find the fixed costs harder to justify.

The Villages is considerably larger than any competitor — 100+ villages and 130,000+ residents, compared to On Top of the World (Ocala) at roughly 30,000 or Latitude Margaritaville communities that are newer and smaller. The amenity density and social infrastructure are unmatched at that scale. The trade-offs are bond costs on newer homes and the developer's market control — neither of which smaller communities have in the same way.

Yes. The Villages consistently posts some of the lowest crime rates of any community its size in Florida. Gated village entrances, a resident-run Community Watch program, and a dedicated Villages Public Safety department all contribute. It is an unusually safe environment for a community of its size.

The most commonly reported reasons are wanting to be closer to family, finding the annual CDD bond costs on newer homes higher than expected after running the full numbers, and missing urban amenities — dining variety, cultural venues, and the walkable city feel that The Villages does not replicate. Very few people leave because the community failed to deliver what was promised. Most departures are lifestyle- or family-driven, not dissatisfaction with The Villages itself.

Want a Straight Answer on Whether This Is Right for You?

I work with buyers at every stage — from first-time research to final decision. I'll give you my honest read on whether The Villages fits your situation.