The analysis covers 53 closed MLS sales of single-family homes on the North End of the Town of Palm Beach (33480, north of Royal Poinciana Bridge) from January 2025 through February 2026, sourced from Beaches MLS. For each transaction, we track sale price, original and final list price, price per square foot, days on market, construction year, and water access classification, then segment by four access tiers: direct oceanfront, lakefront, deeded ocean access, and interior estate.
Three Markets Inside One ZIP Code
That $782M resolves into four access tiers with fundamentally different pricing logic. Direct oceanfront trades at a median $5,309/SF with 95-day closes. Lakefront on the Intracoastal reaches comparable $/SF but with dramatically longer campaigns. Deeded ocean access without direct frontage forms a third category. Interior estate (39 of 53 sales, $425.9M in volume) is where most of the market actually operates. The single most common valuation error on the North End is pricing an interior estate listing against oceanfront comps.
Closed volume in $M (bars) and median $/SF (gold line, right axis). 53 sales, Jan 2025–Feb 2026. Sample sizes shown on x-axis; small-n tiers are directional only.
Sample size note: Oceanfront (n=5), Lakefront (n=3), and Ocean Access (n=6) figures reflect what traded in this 14-month window, not statistically representative market averages. Treat as directional benchmarks.
* Lakefront avg DOM is 405 days across 3 sales, dominated by one outlier: 1050 Lake Way at 693 DOM. Median DOM of 306 days is more representative. † Ocean Access median $/SF drops to $2,683 excluding the highest outlier (110 Wells Road, $4,038/SF); range reflects meaningful product differentiation within the tier.
The lakefront tier presents a real paradox: comparable $/SF to oceanfront ($4,945 vs $5,309 median) with more than four times the DOM (405 vs 95 days). This is not a quality story. The three closings (1350 Lake Way at $66.1M, 1221 Lake Way at $19.2M, and 1050 Lake Way at $23.75M) are among the most significant assets on the island. The extended marketing reflects a narrow buyer pool at this price level and a consistent pattern of sellers opening at prices the market then corrects over months or years. 1050 Lake Way listed at $40.5M, spent 693 days on market, and closed at $23.75M (58.6% of the original ask).
The 8 new-construction sales (2015+) within interior estate carry a median $/SF of $2,970. The 31 pre-2015 sales sit at $2,720/SF. The $250 gap (9.2%) is real but modest, and with pre-2015 inventory representing nearly 80% of the cohort, the overall median of $2,802/SF is a reliable benchmark for the tier.
The Defining Transactions
In a 53-sale market, individual transactions are not anecdotes. They are the data. The table below spans the full range: from 10-day closes above ask to 764-day campaigns at 83.8% of original list. The pattern is consistent. Pricing discipline determined outcome before any other variable.
1160 Ocean Boulevard closed at $31M ($5,089/SF) in March 2025 and at $36.25M ($5,950/SF) in January 2026, a 16.9% gain on the same asset in under a year. Both transactions closed at approximately 90% of respective list prices. This is a location-specific signal, not a market-wide one: the North Ocean Boulevard block between the bridges is among the most sought-after addresses on the island, and the re-sale confirms conviction buyers are present and active. Extrapolating this rate to interior estate or lakefront inventory would be a serious analytical error. For oceanfront buyers underwriting 2026 acquisitions, it is the most current calibration point available.
Interior Estate: Where 74% of Sales Occur
Interior estate is the functional market. At 39 of 53 sales and $425.9M in volume, it accounts for 74% of transactions and represents the realistic universe for most North End buyers and sellers. The median DOM of 107 days and 88.8% list-to-sale ratio describe a market with clear rules: price to your tier's closed comps and you close within 90 days at or near ask. Price to an adjacent tier or to aspiration and you wait, reduce, and close at a discount that often exceeds the original overpricing. The data on this is not ambiguous.
Each bubble = one sale. Size proportional to sale price. DOM on x-axis; $/SF on y-axis. Interior estate only (n=39).
The 2015+ cohort carries the second-slowest average DOM of any era (192 days) despite representing the newest construction. Two properties drive that number: 216 Southland Road (2024, 764 DOM) and 239 Monterey Road (2021, 213 DOM), both cases where contemporary finishes could not overcome a location priced beyond what the address would bear. Against that sits 167 Everglade (2016, 10 DOM, 102.5% of ask) in the same cohort. The lesson is the same one the full dataset teaches: address determines outcome before any other variable.
What the Market Is Actually Telling Sellers
Forty-five percent of sellers mispriced at launch. That is the central finding of this dataset, and the 88.1% median list-to-sale ratio is its consequence. The correction took a median of 109 days, with the worst cases running to two years. The sellers who avoided this outcome shared one characteristic: they priced to closed comps from their own micromarket, not to oceanfront or new-construction values from adjacent tiers.
Average DOM per street cluster, interior estate only. Reveals which pockets reward pricing discipline vs. where buyer leverage is highest.
For buyers in the Atlantic/Orange Grove and Merrain/Jamaica corridors: the 170–200+ day average DOM and 45% price-reduction rate represent genuine leverage. Opening at 85–88% of current list is not an aggressive position; it is where this tier has been clearing. For properties above 180 DOM with documented price reductions, 80–85% of current list is supported by the data.
For sellers: each price reduction extends the campaign by resetting buyer expectations, and the market reads every reduction as confirmation of original mispricing. The three fastest-closing interior estate sales (167 Everglade at 10 DOM, 266 Southland at 11 DOM, 244 Orange Grove at 12 DOM) had no common address, era, or price point. They shared accurate first pricing.
2026 Market Condition Scenarios
The three scenario frameworks below model what observed metrics would likely reflect if each set of market conditions materializes. These are not price forecasts or investment recommendations. They are conditional frameworks for planning based on the 2025 dataset and current observable conditions.
Rates hold near current levels, migration into Palm Beach County sustains, and interior estate DOM normalizes toward 90 days as sellers adjust to 2025 clearing prices. Lakefront price discovery continues with elevated marketing periods.
Rate reductions materialize, wealth-effect from equity markets amplifies buyer activity, and the oceanfront scarcity premium is more widely recognized. Interior absorption accelerates; lakefront DOM compresses as buyer pool deepens at that price tier.
Insurance cost escalation accelerates, equity correction reduces discretionary buyer pool, and additional interior inventory reaches the market ahead of price resets. Buyers gain leverage across all tiers; extended DOM and additional reductions in the $10–18M interior range.
Scenario ranges model potential market outcomes under each set of conditions. They are not forecasts, investment recommendations, or representations of predicted results. Real estate performance depends on local, regional, and macroeconomic variables outside the scope of this analysis.
The 1160 Ocean Blvd re-sale at $36.25M in January 2026 is the clearest current signal: direct oceanfront on the North End is appreciating and conviction buyers are transacting quickly. That signal does not propagate uniformly across tiers. Interior estate enters 2026 with 45% of 2025 sellers having required price reductions and median DOM still above 100 days. The correction that Atlantic Avenue and similar corridors need has not fully cleared.
Insurance remains the primary risk variable. Pre-1960 inventory faces increasing carrier scrutiny as roof age requirements, impact protection mandates, and seawall documentation standards tighten. Any escalation disproportionately compresses the buyer pool for unimproved historic properties regardless of address quality. The leading indicator to watch in Q1: does Seagate Road and beach-cabana-access inventory under $15M absorb? Absorption there signals healthy interior demand. If it stalls, expect further price adjustment in the $10–18M interior range through mid-year.
Bottom Line
The North End is four markets operating under one address. Pricing to the wrong tier is the single most expensive mistake a seller can make here, and nearly half of 2025 sellers made it. The data is unambiguous on one point: the sellers who priced to closed comps from their own micromarket closed quickly and near ask, regardless of era or condition. The sellers who priced to aspiration or to an adjacent tier waited months, reduced multiple times, and closed at discounts that exceeded the original overpricing. Oceanfront is appreciating, with the 1160 Ocean Boulevard re-sale providing the most current calibration. Interior estate is still correcting, with the longest-DOM corridors offering genuine buyer leverage heading into 2026.
For interior estate sellers ($8M to $18M): Price to interior estate comps on day one. The three fastest closes in this dataset shared no common address, era, or price point. They shared accurate first pricing. If your listing references oceanfront or lakefront comps to justify its number, you are building in a 6-to-12-month correction that the market will extract in concessions and carrying costs.
For buyers targeting Atlantic, Merrain, or similar corridors: Open at 85-88% of current list on any property with 120+ DOM or a documented reduction. On extended campaigns above 180 days, 80-85% of current list is where this tier has been clearing. The leverage is structural, not seasonal, and backed by a 45% price-reduction rate across the full 2025 dataset.
For oceanfront buyers: The 1160 Ocean Boulevard re-sale confirms that conviction capital is active and direct oceanfront is appreciating in the near term. Do not extrapolate that signal to interior estate or lakefront. It is address-specific. For 2026 oceanfront underwriting, 1160's second close at $5,950/SF is the most current calibration point available.
Dataset: 54 raw MLS records, single-family residential, Town of Palm Beach (33480), north of Royal Poinciana Bridge (the geographic North End). One confirmed duplicate (302 Via Linda) was removed, yielding 53 unique closed transactions. Period: January 1, 2025 through February 21, 2026. Off-market transactions are not captured and may represent a material portion of volume at the top of the market.
DOM: Cumulative days on market from first listing activation to contract date as recorded in MLS. List-to-sale ratio: final sale price as percentage of most recent list price at time of contract. Orig-to-sale: final sale price as percentage of original list price. $/SF: based on MLS-reported above-grade living area.
Tier classification: Oceanfront = MLS Waterfront: Yes + "Ocean" or "Inlet" in street name. Lakefront = MLS Waterfront: Yes + "Lake" in street name. Ocean Access = MLS Waterfront: No + "Ocean Access" in Features field. Interior Estate = all remaining. Buyer and broker should independently verify waterfront status for any specific transaction.
1160 Ocean Blvd double sale: appears twice at $31.0M (March 2025) and $36.25M (January 2026). Both are included; the January 2026 close falls within the 14-month window and is treated as a distinct transaction. Small sample advisory: tier-level statistics for Oceanfront (n=5), Lakefront (n=3), and Ocean Access (n=6) reflect what traded in this window, not statistically representative market averages. All tier-level conclusions are directional.
MLS sales data: Beaches MLS, Town of Palm Beach (33480), single-family residential, closed transactions, January 1, 2025 through February 21, 2026. 54 raw records; one confirmed duplicate removed. Scenario analysis: editorial assessment based on 2025 closed dataset and publicly available macroeconomic conditions as of Q1 2026. Not a forecast or investment recommendation.
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