neighborhoods

Priced Out of South Tampa? Look Here Instead

Ryan Snyder

Licensed Real Estate Salesperson, Estate Vida

March 13, 2026
6
min read
Tree-lined residential street with Craftsman bungalows in a Tampa Bay neighborhood

South Tampa's median is pushing past $600,000. Hyde Park sits above $750,000. Davis Islands? The average home value is $1.4 million.

If those numbers make your chest tight, you're not alone. But Tampa Bay is a big market. And right now, several neighborhoods offer legitimate quality of life - good food, walkability, character - at price points that actually make sense.

I spend a lot of time watching where the data is moving. Here's where I'd look right now.

Southeast Seminole Heights - $368K and climbing fast

The broader Seminole Heights market gets all the press, with a median around $468,000. But the southeast section is posting a median of $368,000 - nearly $100K less - while delivering 11.4% year-over-year appreciation.

Same Craftsman bungalows, same proximity to downtown, same restaurant scene anchored by places like La Segunda Central Bakery. And the city recently completed a major flooding relief project in the area, removing one of the neighborhood's biggest objections.

This price gap between southeast and broader Seminole Heights won't last. The gentrification pattern has been moving this direction for years.

Brandon - $360K and consistently solid

I know Brandon doesn't have the Instagram appeal of Seminole Heights. What it has is a median around $360,000 - roughly $240,000 less than South Tampa - and a straight shot to downtown via the Selmon Expressway.

Brandon Exchange has 140-plus stores and restaurants. You've got the TGH Ice Plex where the Lightning train. Schools are solid. And unlike new construction in Wesley Chapel, most Brandon neighborhoods don't carry CDD fees that add $100 to $250 to your monthly payment permanently.

For first-time buyers and investors focused on rental income, Brandon's math works better than almost anywhere else in the metro right now.

Carrollwood - $479K with zero CDD

Carrollwood is the definition of quietly solid. The median sits around $479,000 with homes averaging just 28 days on market - significantly faster than the metro average of 63 days. That tells you demand is real.

Fifteen minutes to downtown, 15 to 20 minutes to the airport, 10 minutes to USF. Mature landscaping, Lake Carroll with motorboat access, Carrollwood Country Club. Properties in the Sickles High School feeder zone command a premium for good reason. No CDDs anywhere in the neighborhood.

Dunedin - $462K, outperforming Pinellas

While Clearwater prices are down 7.9% and Clearwater Beach has dropped a brutal 17.6%, Dunedin is up 3.0% year-over-year at a median of $462,000. It's one of the few Pinellas County markets heading in the right direction.

Walkable downtown with craft breweries and independent restaurants. Honeymoon Island and Caladesi Island at your doorstep. The Pinellas Trail running right through town. Closed sales jumped 55% recently with inventory still manageable.

If you want the coastal lifestyle without the worst of the coastal insurance costs, Dunedin's slightly inland positioning gives you better flood zone numbers than most Gulf-side alternatives.

Clearwater - $387K, for the contrarians

This one comes with a caveat. Clearwater prices are down 7.9% and the broader Pinellas market has dropped over 12%. That decline is real - driven by insurance costs, hurricane anxiety after Helene, and the condo reserve crunch hitting older Gulf-front buildings.

But for single-family buyers willing to do their homework on flood zones and insurance - especially in inland Clearwater neighborhoods - a median of $387,000 in a Gulf Coast city represents value that didn't exist two years ago.

The risk is higher here. But so is the potential upside if Florida's insurance market continues stabilizing, as the early data from 2026 suggests it is.