Lake Keowee Waterfront Living: The Ultimate Boater's Paradise for Out-of-State Buyers
Why South Carolina''s Premier Lake is Attracting Boating Enthusiasts from Florida, the Northeast, and Beyond
If you''re reading this from Naples, Sarasota, Connecticut, or Chicago, you already know: the boat life you''ve enjoyed for years doesn''t have to end when you relocate to the Upstate. In fact, for many discerning buyers making the move to South Carolina, Lake Keowee represents an upgrade to their boating lifestyle—pristine mountain lake waters, fewer crowds, year-round access, and a waterfront market that rewards quality over quantity.
The data tells a compelling story. While South Carolina offers two major lakefront markets—Lake Keowee and Lake Hartwell—the difference in waterfront value and boating lifestyle is stark. For buyers who prioritize water quality, dock infrastructure, and a refined lakefront community, Lake Keowee isn''t just the better choice. It''s the only choice.
The Numbers Don''t Lie: Lake Keowee Commands a 306% Waterfront Premium
Our analysis of current MLS data reveals something remarkable: waterfront location on Lake Keowee adds an average 306% premium to property value, compared to just 152% on neighboring Lake Hartwell. Translation? The market recognizes Lake Keowee waterfront as exponentially more valuable—not just more expensive, but fundamentally scarcer and more desirable.
Current Lake Keowee Waterfront Market Snapshot:
- 72 waterfront homes currently available
- Median price: $2,492,000
- Average price: $2,891,373
- Price range: $269,000 - $9,499,000
- Average home size: 4,455 sqft
- Average bedrooms: 4.1 | Average bathrooms: 3.7
- Average waterfront lot size: 1.55 acres (67,579 sqft)
Compare this to Lake Hartwell''s waterfront market, where the median waterfront home sells for $595,000—a full $1.9 million less. While Hartwell certainly offers more affordable entry points, savvy boaters understand: you''re not just buying a house. You''re buying water quality, boating infrastructure, and lifestyle.
What Makes Lake Keowee Superior for Boating? Let''s Talk Water Quality and Usability
Crystal-Clear Waters: The Duke Energy Advantage
Lake Keowee is a Duke Energy reservoir created for nuclear power plant cooling, which means two critical advantages for boaters:
-
Exceptional water clarity: The lake maintains some of the cleanest, clearest water in the Southeast. Visibility often exceeds 10-15 feet—a dramatic contrast to the murkier, sediment-heavy waters common in larger recreational lakes.
-
Consistent water levels: Unlike flood-control lakes that fluctuate dramatically with seasonal drawdowns, Keowee maintains stable water levels year-round. Your dock remains usable in October, not sitting high and dry while you wait for spring rains.
For boaters coming from Florida''s saltwater or the Northeast''s seasonal lakes, this is a revelation. Imagine pulling your boat up to your dock in February for an afternoon cruise—in shirtsleeves—with water levels identical to July. That''s Lake Keowee.
Size Matters: 18,500 Acres of Navigable Perfection
At 18,500 acres with 300 miles of shoreline, Lake Keowee offers the Goldilocks solution: large enough for serious boating (water skiing, wakeboarding, cruising), yet intimate enough that you''re not navigating a maritime highway.
Compare to Lake Hartwell''s 56,000 acres: more water, yes, but also more jet skis, more fishing tournaments, more congestion. Keowee attracts a different caliber of boater—one who values serene mornings on the water over weekend party coves.
What you can do on Lake Keowee:
- Water skiing and wakeboarding (designated ski zones)
- Wakesurfing (premium smooth water conditions)
- Sunset cruises with Blue Ridge Mountain views
- Kayaking and paddleboarding in quiet coves
- Bass fishing (renowned fishery, less pressure than Hartwell)
- Swimming in clean, clear water (not just theoretical)
The Scenery: Mountain Lake Aesthetic vs. Piedmont Flatlands
Here''s something the data doesn''t capture but every visitor feels: Lake Keowee sits in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains. Your boat ride isn''t just functional transportation—it''s a scenic experience. Forested ridgelines, rocky bluffs, and elevation changes create visual drama absent from Hartwell''s flatter, more agricultural surroundings.
For buyers relocating from the Adirondacks, Vermont, or mountain regions, this matters. Keowee delivers that alpine lake aesthetic without sacrificing the Southern climate and tax advantages.
The South Carolina Advantage: Why Out-of-State Buyers Are Choosing Upstate Over Florida, the Northeast, and Midwest
Before we dive deeper into Keowee''s boating communities, let''s address the elephant in the room: Why leave your current state?
The Tax Arbitrage
Compared to Northeastern states:
- No state income tax on Social Security benefits
- Property tax rates 60-70% lower than New York, New Jersey, Connecticut
- No estate tax (critical for wealth preservation)
- Coastal-equivalent lifestyle without coastal property taxes
Compared to Florida:
- Significantly lower property costs (even at Keowee''s premium)
- Four seasons (real fall colors, mild winters, spring blooms)
- Elevation and topography (no pancake-flat monotony)
- Access to mountains, not just beaches
Compared to Midwest states:
- Year-round outdoor activity (average winter high: 50-55°F)
- 45+ minute drive to Greenville (Michelin restaurants, arts, airport)
- 2 hours to Asheville, 2.5 hours to Charlotte, 2 hours to Atlanta
- World-class healthcare (Prisma Health, Greenville Memorial)
The Boating Season: Nearly Year-Round
For buyers accustomed to Memorial Day-to-Labor Day boating windows, Lake Keowee''s climate is transformative. Our data shows strong sales velocity from May through October, but here''s the secret locals know: boating season runs March through November, with die-hards out in December and February on 60-degree afternoons.
The lake doesn''t freeze. Your boat doesn''t require winterization and indoor storage. You''ll dock it in November and take it out for New Year''s Day if you want.
Lake Keowee''s Premier Waterfront Communities: Where Boaters Are Buying
Our MLS analysis identified the top waterfront communities based on inventory, waterfront concentration, and pricing. Here''s where serious boaters should focus their search:
1. Cliffs at Keowee Springs — The Pinnacle of Luxury Waterfront
- Waterfront Listings: 13 currently available
- Average Waterfront Price: $5,367,838
- Median Waterfront Price: $5,495,000
- Community Profile: Golf + waterfront ultra-luxury community with world-class amenities
Why boaters love it: Private boat slips, proximity to on-site marina, golf course views combined with water access, concierge services for boat maintenance and slip management.
Ideal for: Ultra-high-net-worth buyers seeking the Ritz-Carlton experience on the water. Many residents are former Florida waterfront owners upgrading to a more exclusive, less congested environment.
2. The Reserve at Lake Keowee — Boater''s Enclave with Community Infrastructure
- Waterfront Listings: 21 currently available (largest waterfront inventory)
- Average Waterfront Price: $3,517,827
- Median Waterfront Price: $3,350,000
- Community Profile: Gated waterfront community with deep-water access and community marina
Why boaters love it: Purpose-built for waterfront living with dedicated marina facilities, boat storage options, and a community centered around lake activities. Many lots offer private docks with deep-water channels.
Ideal for: Boating enthusiasts who want turn-key waterfront infrastructure without compromise. Strong sense of community among residents who use their boats, not just own them.
3. Cliffs at Keowee Falls South — Golf & Water Lifestyle Blend
- Waterfront Listings: 12 currently available
- Average Waterfront Price: $1,976,492
- Median Waterfront Price: $1,722,000
- Community Profile: Established Cliffs community with Jack Nicklaus golf and waterfront options
Why boaters love it: More accessible price point than Keowee Springs while maintaining Cliffs amenities (wellness center, multiple golf courses, social clubs). Mix of waterfront and water-view properties.
Ideal for: Buyers who want golf AND boating without choosing one over the other. Popular with retirees transitioning from Northern golf/lake communities.
4. Cliffs at Keowee Vineyards — The Winery Meets the Water
- Waterfront Listings: 8 currently available
- Average Waterfront Price: $2,252,239
- Median Waterfront Price: $1,974,500
- Community Profile: Unique community featuring on-site winery, vineyard, mountain, and waterfront properties
Why boaters love it: Cultural sophistication rare in lake communities—wine tastings, culinary events, art programs—combined with serious boating access. Appeals to intellectually curious buyers.
Ideal for: Napa/Sonoma transplants, cultural sophisticates who want more than just boats and golf. Strong Northeast/Mid-Atlantic buyer demographic.
5. Keowee Key — Accessible Waterfront with Boating Tradition
- Waterfront Listings: 11 currently available
- Average Waterfront Price: $916,518
- Median Waterfront Price: $789,000
- Community Profile: Established community (est. 1972) with deep boating heritage and strong owner association
Why boaters love it: True waterfront entry point under $1M (rare on Keowee). Community marina, boat launch, and decades of dock infrastructure already in place. Active boating social scene.
Ideal for: Budget-conscious buyers still demanding water access, younger families, or buyers seeking established community with less formality than Cliffs developments.
6. Peninsula Pointe South — Intimate Waterfront Enclave
- Waterfront Listings: 6 currently available (85.7% of community is waterfront)
- Average Waterfront Price: $1,436,007
- Median Waterfront Price: $761,250
- Community Profile: Small, waterfront-focused community with high percentage of water access
Why boaters love it: Nearly every property has water access—this is a boating community first, everything else second. Lower density, more privacy.
Ideal for: Buyers who want waterfront without the resort amenities overhead. Perfect for serious boaters who''d rather invest in their boat than a golf membership.
Dock Considerations: Regulations, Permits, and What You Need to Know
One of the most common questions from out-of-state buyers: "What are the rules around docks and boat lifts?"
Good news: South Carolina—and Lake Keowee specifically—offers some of the most owner-friendly dock regulations in the country.
What You Can Build (Generally):
- Private docks: Allowed on most waterfront lots (subject to FERC and Duke Energy permits)
- Covered boat slips: Common and permitted (important for protecting boats year-round)
- Multiple slip configurations: Single, double, and multi-slip docks available depending on lot size and water depth
- Jet ski lifts and PWC docks: Permitted as accessory structures
The Permitting Process:
Lake Keowee is a FERC-regulated reservoir (Federal Energy Regulatory Commission), which sounds bureaucratic but is actually quite streamlined:
- Shoreline Management Plan: Duke Energy and FERC maintain consistent standards
- Permit coordination: Your builder/dock company typically handles permitting
- Typical timeline: 60-90 days from application to approval (faster than many coastal areas)
- Setbacks and environmental rules: Designed to protect water quality while allowing reasonable use
Critical tip for buyers: Work with a local dock builder before purchasing a lot. Not all waterfront lots offer equal dock potential—water depth, lake bottom composition, setback requirements, and channel access vary significantly. A lot that looks perfect from land may have shallow water or rocky bottom limiting dock configuration.
Deep Water vs. Shallow Coves: Know Before You Buy
Deep Water Access (ideal for larger boats, pontoons 20''+, cruisers):
- Look for lots with 15+ feet of water depth at the dock end
- Confirm year-round navigability (not just summer pool levels)
- Communities like The Reserve and Cliffs Springs prioritize deep-water lots
Shallow/Protected Coves (ideal for jet skis, kayaks, fishing boats):
- More affordable waterfront lots (often $400k-$700k vs. $1M+ deep water)
- Calmer water, better for families with young children
- May limit boat size to 18-20 feet or require extended docks
Your agent should provide bathymetric maps showing underwater contours—this is standard practice for serious waterfront buyers.
Building Your Dream: Waterfront Lots for Custom Boater''s Estates
Not ready to buy an existing home? Lake Keowee offers 47 active waterfront lots ranging from $32,000 to $6.5 million.
Waterfront Lot Market Overview:
- Median waterfront lot price: $565,000
- Average waterfront lot price: $1,145,854
- Average lot size: 13.6 acres (593,954 sqft)
- Price per square foot: $16.10/sqft (land only)
Why buyers are building custom:
- Dock customization: Design your slip configuration exactly to your boat(s)
- Orientation: Position your home to maximize sunset views from the water
- Boat house integration: Build your boat storage into your home architecture
- Outdoor living: Custom pools, outdoor kitchens, fire pits—all designed around lake access
Budget expectations for custom waterfront build:
- Lot acquisition: $500k - $2M (depending on location, size, water depth)
- Custom home construction: $400-$700/sqft (high-end finishes typical in this market)
- Dock and boat lift: $50k - $150k (depending on configuration and water depth)
- Landscaping and site work: $100k - $300k (waterfront lots often require significant grading)
Total investment range: $1.5M - $5M+ for a true custom waterfront estate.
Many buyers from Florida and the Northeast find this shocking: "I can build a custom waterfront estate for what I''d pay for a dated condo in Naples?"
Yes. Welcome to South Carolina.
The Investment Case: Waterfront Scarcity and Long-Term Value
Let''s talk numbers that matter to sophisticated buyers: appreciation potential and market fundamentals.
Our 12-month sales data reveals:
- 542 Lake Keowee properties sold in the past year
- 279 were waterfront (51.5% of all sales)
- Average waterfront sale price: $1,682,658
- Average sale-to-list ratio: 97.2% (sellers getting close to ask)
What this tells us:
- Waterfront sells: Even at $1.7M average, waterfront properties moved at the same velocity as non-waterfront
- Pricing power: 97% sale-to-list ratio indicates strong demand and limited negotiation
- Scarcity premium sustains: The 306% waterfront premium isn''t speculative—it''s structural
Why waterfront scarcity is permanent:
- Lake Keowee has 300 miles of shoreline (fixed, can''t create more)
- Significant portions owned by Duke Energy, Clemson University, and conservation easements
- Many waterfront owners are long-term holders (not flippers)
- New construction on existing waterfront lots often removes inventory (tearing down small cabins to build estates)
For buyers relocating from appreciating markets (Northeast, West Coast, South Florida), the investment thesis is clear: limited supply + growing Upstate demand + tax migration trends = durable waterfront value.
What Type of Boat is Ideal for Lake Keowee?
Practical question for buyers who already own boats or plan to purchase: What runs best on Keowee?
Optimal Boat Types:
Pontoon Boats (20-28 feet):
- Verdict: Excellent choice, extremely popular
- Why: Stable platforms for entertaining, easy docking, comfortable cruising, ideal for families
- Recommendation: Tritoon models with higher horsepower for better handling on open water
Bowriders and Deck Boats (18-24 feet):
- Verdict: Perfect for active water sports
- Why: Great for skiing, tubing, wakeboarding. Keowee''s designated ski zones accommodate this use.
- Recommendation: Models from Chaparral, Sea Ray, Bayliner perform well
Wake Boats (20-24 feet):
- Verdict: Increasingly popular, but choose your cove wisely
- Why: Wakesurfing has exploded on Keowee. However, wake boats require deeper water and consideration for neighbors.
- Recommendation: Malibu, Nautique, MasterCraft—but confirm your cove has space and depth
Cruisers and Cabin Boats (24-32 feet):
- Verdict: Viable in deep-water areas, but less common
- Why: Keowee''s size works for day cruising, but overnight boating is rare (most go home to their waterfront estates)
- Recommendation: Only practical with deep-water slips; many areas too shallow for 30+ foot drafts
Personal Watercraft (Jet Skis, Sea-Doos):
- Verdict: Very popular, especially with families
- Why: Quick morning rides, easy storage, great for exploring coves
- Recommendation: Floating jet ski docks are common additions to main boat slips
What DOESN''T work well:
- Large sailboats (limited fetch for sailing, no real sailing community)
- High-performance offshore boats (overkill for lake environment, wasted capability)
- Houseboats (no overnight anchoring culture, most communities prohibit)
Pro tip: Many Keowee owners run two boats—a larger pontoon or cruiser for entertaining and sunset trips, plus jet skis or a small wake boat for active mornings. If you''re planning this, make sure your dock configuration supports multiple slips.
The Lifestyle Beyond the Boat: What Else Lake Keowee Offers
For buyers accustomed to full-service resort communities in Florida, Scottsdale, or coastal Carolina, Lake Keowee delivers:
Golf
- The Cliffs communities alone offer 7 championship golf courses designed by legends (Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player, Tom Fazio)
- Keowee Key features its own course
- Nearby: The Reserve Club, private equity clubs in Greenville
Dining and Culture (Greenville, 30-45 minutes)
- Downtown Greenville: Walkable downtown with 120+ restaurants, including Michelin-recognized establishments (Jianna, Soby''s, Halls Chophouse)
- Peace Center: Broadway touring shows, symphony, concerts
- Art galleries and boutiques: Main Street rivals Charleston for Lowcountry sophistication in an Upstate setting
Healthcare (Critical for retirees)
- Prisma Health System: Level 1 Trauma Center, comprehensive cardiac care, cancer treatment
- Oconee Memorial Hospital: 20 minutes from most Keowee communities
- Greenville Memorial: 40 minutes, nationally ranked specialties
Airport Access
- Greenville-Spartanburg International (GSP): 60 minutes, direct flights to major hubs
- Asheville Regional (AVL): 75 minutes, seasonal direct flights
- Charlotte Douglas (CLT): 2 hours, major international hub
Mountain Access
- Brevard, NC: 45 minutes (waterfalls, hiking, Pisgah National Forest)
- Cashiers/Highlands, NC: 90 minutes (upscale mountain towns, summer escapes)
- Asheville, NC: 90 minutes (arts, breweries, Biltmore Estate)
This is the value proposition for sophisticated buyers: lake lifestyle Monday-Friday, mountains on the weekend, city culture when you want it, and your boat ready whenever the mood strikes.
You''re not sacrificing urban amenities. You''re adding a lake.
Common Questions from Out-of-State Buyers
"How does the homeowners'' association/dock maintenance work?"
Answer: It varies by community. Cliffs communities typically include dock maintenance and boat slip management in HOA fees ($500-$1,500/month depending on amenity level). Private waterfront lots outside gated communities have no HOA but require you to manage your own dock upkeep (annual pressure washing, slip inspection, covered slip maintenance typically runs $1,000-$2,000/year if you hire out).
"What about boat storage in winter?"
Answer: Most Keowee owners keep boats in covered slips year-round (no winterization needed in this climate). Some opt for off-season dry storage at local marinas ($50-$100/month), but it''s not required like in Northern states.
"Can I rent my waterfront property when I''m not using it?"
Answer: Depends on community. Many Cliffs communities restrict short-term rentals (designed as primary/second homes, not investment properties). Non-HOA waterfront lots and some communities (Keowee Key, others) allow rentals. Clarify before purchasing if rental income is part of your strategy.
"What''s the property tax situation on a $3M waterfront home?"
Answer: Roughly 0.5-0.7% of assessed value in Oconee County (where most Lake Keowee waterfront sits). A $3M home would run approximately $15,000-$21,000/year in property taxes—dramatically lower than comparable Northeast or coastal properties.
Critical for retirees: South Carolina offers additional breaks for age 65+ (homestead exemption) and disabled veterans.
"Do I need to hire a dock builder, or will my general contractor handle it?"
Answer: Always use a specialized dock builder. Lake-specific knowledge (water depth, lake bottom composition, Duke Energy regs, FERC permitting) is critical. Most waterfront real estate agents can recommend 2-3 preferred dock builders. Expect to spend $50k-$150k depending on configuration.
"What happens if I buy a lot and water levels drop?"
Answer: Duke Energy maintains consistent pool elevations for power plant operations. Unlike TVA or Corps of Engineers flood-control lakes, Keowee doesn''t have seasonal drawdowns. Your dock remains functional year-round (barring extreme drought, which is rare and temporary).
Market Timing: Is Now the Right Time to Buy?
Here''s what current inventory data tells us:
Months of Supply (Inventory):
- Overall Lake Keowee: 5.8 months of inventory
- Homes only: 4.3 months of inventory
- Interpretation: Balanced-to-seller''s market (6 months = equilibrium)
What this means for buyers:
- Inventory is tighter than national averages (especially for waterfront)
- Homes are selling at 97% of list price (limited negotiation)
- Waterfront properties under $1.5M tend to move within 60-90 days
- Ultra-luxury ($3M+) sits longer but maintains pricing power
For out-of-state buyers contemplating the move:
The market isn''t "crashed" with desperate sellers, nor is it a feeding frenzy with bidding wars (like 2021-2022). It''s rational, data-driven, and favors buyers who know exactly what they want and act decisively when they find it.
If your plan is to relocate in the next 12-24 months, starting your search now allows you to:
- Understand community differences (visit multiple neighborhoods)
- Educate yourself on dock configurations and water depth
- Build relationships with local builders (if going custom)
- Time your sale in your current state to align with Keowee purchase
Trying to time the market perfectly ("I''ll wait for a crash") means risking the exact waterfront lot or home you want selling to someone else. We''ve seen this repeatedly with out-of-state buyers who "wait and see"—then find themselves in multiple-offer situations six months later.
The best time to buy Lake Keowee waterfront is when you find the right property. The second-best time is now, while inventory remains near historic lows.
Next Steps: How to Begin Your Lake Keowee Waterfront Search
1. Define Your Priorities (Before You Visit)
Answer these questions honestly:
- Primary or secondary home? (Affects community choice, rental restrictions)
- What boats do you currently own or plan to buy? (Determines dock requirements)
- Golf important, or just water? (Cliffs vs. non-golf communities)
- Build custom or buy existing? (Lot vs. home search)
- Budget range (all-in, including dock)? (Realistic for $1.5M? $3M? $5M+?)
2. Schedule an Exploratory Visit (2-3 Days Minimum)
You need time to:
- Tour 3-4 different communities (feel the vibe, not just the houses)
- Ride the lake by boat (see properties from water perspective)
- Meet with 2-3 dock builders (if building or customizing)
- Drive the Greenville loop (confirm proximity/culture fit)
- Eat at local restaurants, talk to residents
Do NOT try to "see everything in one day." Lake Keowee is not a drive-by decision. Serious buyers spend a long weekend (or multiple trips) before committing.
3. Work with a Local Agent Who KNOWS Waterfront
This isn''t the time for your nephew''s girlfriend who just got her license. You need:
- Familiarity with dock permitting and water depth analysis
- Relationships with local dock builders, custom home builders
- Deep knowledge of community personalities (Cliffs Springs vs. Keowee Key = very different cultures)
- Negotiation experience in the $1M+ waterfront segment
Red flag question to ask any agent: "Can you show me a bathymetric map of this lot and explain the dock permitting process?"
If they look confused, find a different agent.
4. Understand Financing (Especially for Out-of-State Buyers)
Second home financing (if not making Keowee your primary residence immediately):
- Expect 20-25% down minimum
- Interest rates typically 0.25-0.5% higher than primary residence
- Lenders may require 6-12 months reserves (PITI) in liquid assets
Jumbo financing (loans over ~$750k):
- Rates and terms vary significantly by lender
- Out-of-state buyers often need to establish banking relationships before making offers
- Cash buyers have significant negotiating advantage (but don''t tie up liquidity unnecessarily)
Pro tip: Get pre-approved (not just pre-qualified) before touring properties. Sellers of $3M waterfront estates take offers from approved buyers seriously; they ignore "subject to financing" offers from unknowns.
5. Plan Your Boat (Even Before You Close)
Seriously. If you''re buying waterfront for boating, start researching boats now:
- Visit boat shows in your current city (Miami, Fort Lauderdale, Chicago, etc.)
- Talk to Keowee-area dealers (they''ll tell you what runs well on the lake)
- Join Lake Keowee online forums/Facebook groups (residents share real experiences)
- Budget for the boat when calculating total investment
Nothing worse than closing on a $3M waterfront estate and realizing you can''t afford the boat you actually want. Plan the whole picture upfront.
Final Thoughts: The Lake Keowee Difference
Here''s what the data doesn''t capture, but every waterfront owner knows:
Lake Keowee isn''t just a place—it''s a pace.
It''s Saturday morning, coffee on your dock, watching mist rise off glassy water while the Blue Ridge glows in the distance. It''s your grandkids learning to kneeboard in water so clear you can see the bottom at 12 feet. It''s sunset cruises in October (in short sleeves) with zero other boats in sight.
It''s the realization that you''re paying 1/3 the property tax you paid in Westchester, with 10x the living space and your boat 50 feet from your back door instead of a 30-minute drive to a crowded marina.
It''s watching friends and family visit and whisper: "Why didn''t we do this years ago?"
For out-of-state buyers who''ve spent decades climbing corporate ladders, managing businesses, or building wealth in high-tax, high-stress markets, Lake Keowee represents something rare in American real estate: the opportunity to upgrade your lifestyle while lowering your cost of living.
The boating isn''t just a hobby—it''s the daily reminder that you made it. You earned this.
And unlike the coastal markets or Northern lake properties you''re leaving behind, Lake Keowee''s waterfront scarcity ensures that your investment isn''t just a lifestyle choice—it''s a legacy asset your family will treasure for generations.
Ready to Explore Lake Keowee Waterfront?
We specialize in working with out-of-state buyers navigating the Lake Keowee market for the first time. Our team understands the unique questions Florida, Northeast, and Midwest buyers bring to the table—because we''ve answered them hundreds of times.
Next step: Schedule a no-pressure consultation to discuss your timeline, priorities, and budget. We''ll create a customized property tour based on your boating needs and lifestyle preferences.
Contact Palmetto Park Realty:
- Phone: [Your Phone Number]
- Email: [Your Email]
- Website: www.palmettopark.com
The waterfront property you''re picturing? It exists. Let''s find it together.
About This Data: All statistics derived from current MLS listings and 12-month sales history as of February 2026. Market conditions subject to change. Buyers should conduct independent due diligence and consult with qualified real estate, legal, and financial professionals before making purchase decisions.
