
What the Lakewood Ranch Builder Websites Don’t Tell You
What the Lakewood Ranch builder websites don’t show you: actual closed prices, real incentive ranges, fees you can compare. Here’s what’s missing before you tour.
THE VILLAGE GURU™ COMMUNITY COMPARISON
If you’ve been searching for homes in the Sarasota area, you’ve noticed the same three names keep coming up. Parrish. Lakewood Ranch. Wellen Park.
On a listings website they look almost identical. New construction. Master-planned layouts. Resort-style amenities. HOA fees. Nice photos of people at pools.
They are not the same place, and they don’t create the same life.
The difference doesn’t show up when you tour a model home. It shows up three months after you move in, in your commute, your grocery run, how often you actually go out, and how connected you feel to everything around you.
I’ve had buyers come down already set on one of these and leave choosing something completely different once we mapped out how their actual day would play out. So before you book a flight to tour model homes, read this.
Most content comparing these communities reads like it was pulled from a builder’s website. This article is different. It covers the day-to-day tradeoffs buyers don’t find until after they move in: commutes, CDD fees, what “still building out” actually means to live through, and a five-question framework to match yourself to the right area before you ever tour a model home.
| Parrish North River Ranch & surrounding communities | Lakewood Ranch Manatee & Sarasota counties | Wellen Park North Port / Venice area | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Best for | Value buyers, Tampa commuters, growth-stage buyers Value play |
Families, convenience seekers, established lifestyle Most built out |
Downsizers, pre-retirees, beach proximity buyers Lifestyle pick |
| Lifestyle feel | Growing suburb, spread out, still filling in | Full-service master-planned, everything accessible | Outdoor, walkable downtown, slower local pace |
| Price / value | Best price-per-sq-ft of the three | Highest prices, broadest range of options | Mid-range, newer inventory |
| Convenience | Still developing outside community gates | Everything here right now | Strong inside the gates, thinner outside |
| Commute | Best access to Tampa / St. Pete via I-75 | ~20 min to downtown Sarasota | ~30 min to downtown Sarasota via US-41 |
| Growth stage | Active development, surrounding area filling in | Fully established | Community established; downtown still growing |
| Reconsider if… | You want everything built out now, or plan to be in Sarasota regularly | CDD + HOA + mortgage creates real budget pressure | You need regular access to Sarasota or Tampa |
Note on CDD fees: Master-planned communities across all three areas commonly carry CDD fees. These are separate from your HOA and show up as an annual assessment on your property tax bill. Get the exact figure for any specific community before you make an offer.
Parrish sits north of Sarasota in Manatee County, closer to Bradenton, with direct I-75 access toward Tampa and St. Pete. Of the three areas here, it offers the best price-per-square-foot, and in many cases more space and a larger lot.
Before you fall in love with that price, you need to understand what you’re getting in exchange for it.
Parrish is still building. North River Ranch is the area’s signature master-planned community, and it’s structured differently than Lakewood Ranch or Wellen Park. Rather than one community with one amenity center, it’s made up of multiple neighborhoods that share amenities across the development. You might live in one section and drive a few minutes to use the resort pool in another. That flexibility doesn’t exist in the other two.
Outside those community gates, though, the surrounding area is still filling in. Commercial corridors along US-301 are actively developing. That means the restaurant you want, the urgent care you need, the grocery run that should take ten minutes — all of that involves more planning than most buyers expect. Not a dealbreaker if you go in knowing it. A real frustration if you don’t.
Traffic is starting to build in Parrish, too. It’s manageable now, but anyone who watched what happened in Lakewood Ranch over the past decade can see where things are headed as the population grows.
What Parrish has that the other two don’t: if you need to get to Tampa regularly, whether for work, family, or travel, this is the only one of the three where that commute makes practical sense.
Lakewood Ranch has ranked among the top-selling master-planned communities in the country for multiple years. Once you spend a full day there, it’s obvious why.
This is the most complete version of the concept. Waterside Place, Main Street, UTC, golf courses, parks, miles of trails, and consistently well-rated schools across both Sarasota and Manatee counties. There’s a polo club. A town center with events most weekends. Hundreds of businesses operating inside and around the community. If you want a place where everything is genuinely accessible right now, this is it.
The range of housing here is also broader than the other two. Entry-level in communities like Star Farms. Move-up homes in Mallory Park, Lorraine Lakes, and Sapphire Point. Gated luxury in The Lake Club and Country Club East. Active adult in Del Webb and Cresswind. Almost any budget can find something in Lakewood Ranch, though the floor has moved up considerably over the past few years.
Homes cost more than in Parrish, and many communities carry CDD fees on top of HOA fees. CDDs (Community Development Districts) are not the same as HOA fees. They’re a separate annual assessment on your property tax bill that funds the infrastructure built when the community was developed. They don’t go away when construction is finished. Depending on the community, the annual amount ranges from a few hundred to a few thousand dollars. Get the exact figure for any community you’re considering before you make an offer. Don’t rely on an estimate.
The area is also busy. That’s the other side of everything being there. More people living there, going to the same places. Buyers coming from dense metros usually adjust quickly. Buyers expecting a quiet suburban lifestyle sometimes find the main corridors more active than they pictured.
Downtown Sarasota is about 20 minutes from most of Lakewood Ranch, traffic depending. That connection matters for buyers who care about the arts scene, the bayfront, or just not feeling cut off from the city.
Wellen Park surprises buyers who haven’t been there. It has a completely different feel from the other two, and that’s the point.
The community is built around water and outdoor living. Lakes, trails, open gathering spaces, and Downtown Wellen, a newer walkable district that’s still growing but functions as an actual destination. CoolToday Park, the Atlanta Braves spring training facility, is here. Gulf beaches in Venice are roughly ten to fifteen minutes away.
The pace is slower. More golf carts. More people staying close to home. Less of the drive-everywhere-for-everything pattern that defines most of the Sarasota market. Buyers who choose Wellen Park are usually making a deliberate lifestyle choice. They want the community to feel like somewhere to be, not just somewhere to sleep.
It’s also more compact than Lakewood Ranch. Depending on what you want, that’s either a feature or a constraint.
The constraint shows up if you need to get to Sarasota regularly. Downtown is roughly 30 minutes from most of Wellen Park, and that drive goes through Venice on US-41, a surface road with traffic lights. Fine for occasional trips. If you’re planning to be in Sarasota two or three times a week, it starts to feel further than it looks on a map.
Outside the community, the surrounding commercial area is less developed than what surrounds Lakewood Ranch. North Port is nearby and growing, but for dining above basic chains or anything more specific, you’re driving to Venice or further.
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Your top Lakewood Ranch communities
Based on your answers, here are the communities worth a closer look.
This quiz is meant to be a helpful starting point. Lakewood Ranch has 40+ communities with different price points, builders, HOA structures, and lifestyle options. Information is believed to be accurate, but pricing, fees, and availability can change. Contact me for the most up-to-date detail.
This quiz is a starting point. If you want the most up-to-date options and a clear breakdown of which communities actually fit your situation, let’s talk.
Get Help Choosing
Most buyers who end up in the wrong community chose the home before they chose the location. They found a floor plan they loved, a price that worked, and figured out six months later that the surrounding area doesn’t fit how they actually live.
Run through these five questions honestly before you schedule a single tour.
Several times a week? Lakewood Ranch is your strongest option for Sarasota access; Parrish is the only practical option for Tampa. Occasional trips? Wellen Park can work. Rarely? Any of the three functions.
Not the maximum you can qualify for. The number where mortgage, HOA, CDD fees, insurance, and taxes all fit without monthly stress. Lakewood Ranch asks for more across the board. Parrish gives you the most room. Wellen Park lands in between.
If unfinished commercial strips, construction traffic, and “coming soon” signage nearby would frustrate you within six months, Parrish is probably not your answer right now. Lakewood Ranch is established. Wellen Park’s immediate community is well developed even if Downtown Wellen is still growing.
If you want to get coffee or run an errand without getting in a car, Wellen Park’s downtown setup is the closest of the three to that. Lakewood Ranch has Main Street and Waterside Place, but you’re usually still driving to them. Parrish has the least of this right now.
Not the ideal version. The actual one. Open Google Maps and run through your morning coffee, gym or trail, grocery run, and evening plans from the front door of each community. How far is each stop? How does that feel at 7:30 a.m. versus a relaxed Saturday? That exercise has changed more buyer decisions than any model home visit.
A few things that don’t show up in price per square foot.
They’re an annual assessment on your property tax bill tied to bonds used to fund community infrastructure. The exact amount varies by community. Get the specific number before you make an offer, not a ballpark from the model home.
The area will develop. When, and what the driving experience looks like during the buildout, is harder to call. Buyers who need a certain level of surrounding development before they’re comfortable should revisit Parrish in a couple of years.
Caspersen Beach and Nokomis Beach are nearby. If walkable Gulf access is a genuine requirement, that’s a different category of purchase.
If you’re buying to-be-built rather than quick move-in, get current delivery estimates directly from the builder, not from the listing or the model home rep.
I put together a free guide covering how new construction works in this market. It walks you through builder contracts, lot premiums, design center decisions, and what to ask before you sign anything. No email pitch. Just the framework.
Generally, yes. On a price-per-square-foot basis, Parrish typically offers more house for the money than comparable new construction in Lakewood Ranch. The gap varies by builder and community, but it’s real. Part of what creates that value is that the surrounding area is still developing, which is the trade-off worth understanding before you commit.
For the right buyer, yes. The premium in Lakewood Ranch isn’t really for the house. It’s for the infrastructure around it — everything built, everything accessible, strong school options, and a direct connection to Sarasota. If those factors matter to your daily life and your budget can absorb it, the premium makes sense. If you’re going there because it feels familiar or safe, that’s worth examining.
It depends on how often you need to go. Thirty minutes for an occasional trip is fine. If you’re planning to be in Sarasota two or three times a week, the drive on US-41 will start to feel like a commitment. It’s not a highway.
All three areas have school options worth knowing about, and all three are actively adding capacity. Lakewood Ranch has the most mature and varied school infrastructure right now, with access to well-rated schools across both Sarasota and Manatee counties and a broader range of options at every level. Wellen Park sits in the Sarasota County School District, which consistently earns an A grade, and has both an on-site K-8 charter school and a new high school built specifically to serve the community’s growth. Parrish has Parrish Community High School, the newly converted Barbara A. Harvey K-8 at North River Ranch, and a new STEAM-focused charter school that opened in 2025. If school access is a deciding factor, dig into the specific schools zoned for the community you’re considering rather than assuming one area is categorically better than the others.
All three have active adult options, but the lifestyle fit differs. Wellen Park attracts buyers who want a slower pace and coastal proximity. Lakewood Ranch has Del Webb and Cresswind with strong amenity programs and access to everything. Parrish has Del Webb Bayview. The decision comes down less to age and more to how you want to spend your days and how much you need to be connected to a city.
A Community Development District is a government-authorized entity that finances and manages infrastructure in planned communities: roads, utilities, landscaping, amenity centers. When a community is developed, bonds are issued to pay for that infrastructure. Residents pay down those bonds through annual assessments on their property tax bill. In Lakewood Ranch, CDDs are common and can add hundreds to several thousand dollars to your annual costs depending on the community. They continue until the bonds are retired, which can take decades. Factor them in alongside your mortgage, HOA, insurance, and property taxes when you run your budget.
Wellen Park, by a meaningful margin. Downtown Wellen is designed for foot traffic and golf carts. Lakewood Ranch has trail systems throughout, but daily errands still require a car. Parrish is the least walkable of the three right now.
Parrish offers the best price-per-square-foot across most builders and communities. If you’re prioritizing space and value and can work with the growth-stage trade-offs, your money goes furthest there. If convenience and access matter more than price, that calculation shifts toward Lakewood Ranch or Wellen Park.
Most buyers frame this as “which area is best?” That’s the wrong question.
All three are solid areas with well-built communities and real buyer demand. None is objectively better.
The right question is which one fits your life. Your commute, your budget, your pace, your proximity needs, and how you actually want to spend an ordinary Tuesday.
If you’re still working through that decision and want to map it out against your specific situation, that’s the conversation I have with buyers every day. Use the form below to send me a specific question, or reach out directly before you commit to a tour schedule.
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I help buyers and sellers in Sarasota, Lakewood Ranch, and Manatee County make informed real estate decisions. No hype, no pressure, no guesswork.
No pressure. Just a clear conversation about your options.

What the Lakewood Ranch builder websites don’t show you: actual closed prices, real incentive ranges, fees you can compare. Here’s what’s missing before you tour.

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