Delray Beach<br>Homes for Sale

Florida’s Village by the Sea

Delray Beach
Homes for Sale

Walkable Atlantic Avenue, two miles of public beach, and a range of property types from oceanfront estates to Intracoastal waterfront homes. One of the few South Florida markets where downtown energy and beach access overlap.

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814

Active

$1.4M

Median Price

105

Avg Days on Market

1,254

Sold YTD

814 properties

16191 Quiet Vista Circle, Delray Beach, FL 33446

16191 Quiet Vista Circle

Delray Beach, 33446

410 N Ocean Boulevard, Delray Beach, FL 33483

410 N Ocean Boulevard

Delray Beach, 33483

900 E Atlantic Avenue 22, Delray Beach, FL 33483

900 E Atlantic Avenue 22

Delray Beach, 33483

733 N Ocean Boulevard, Delray Beach, FL 33483

733 N Ocean Boulevard

Delray Beach, 33483

230 George Bush Boulevard, Delray Beach, FL 33444

230 George Bush Boulevard

Delray Beach, 33444

230 George Bush Boulevard, Delray Beach, FL 33444

230 George Bush Boulevard

Delray Beach, 33444

1002 Seasage Drive, Delray Beach, FL 33483

1002 Seasage Drive

Delray Beach, 33483

1117 Beach Drive, Delray Beach, FL 33483

1117 Beach Drive

Delray Beach, 33483

217 E Atlantic Avenue, Delray Beach, FL 33444

217 E Atlantic Avenue

Delray Beach, 33444

963 Eve Street, Delray Beach, FL 33483

963 Eve Street

Delray Beach, 33483

201 Palm Trail, Delray Beach, FL 33483

201 Palm Trail

Delray Beach, 33483

202 NW 7th Street, Delray Beach, FL 33444

202 NW 7th Street

Delray Beach, 33444

616 Seasage Drive, Delray Beach, FL 33483

616 Seasage Drive

Delray Beach, 33483

121 George Bush Boulevard, Delray Beach, FL 33444

121 George Bush Boulevard

Delray Beach, 33444

10527 El Paraiso Place, Delray Beach, FL 33446

10527 El Paraiso Place

Delray Beach, 33446

1 Fisher Lane, Delray Beach, FL 33483

1 Fisher Lane

Delray Beach, 33483

518 Harbor Court, Delray Beach, FL 33483

518 Harbor Court

Delray Beach, 33483

1033 Seasage Drive, Delray Beach, FL 33483

1033 Seasage Drive

Delray Beach, 33483

Delray Beach

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Delray Beach: Walkable Downtown, Atlantic Oceanfront, Intracoastal Access

Delray Beach is a city of roughly 70,000 on the southeast Palm Beach County coast, centered on the commercial stretch of Atlantic Avenue, which runs roughly one mile from Swinton Avenue east to the beach. The avenue’s concentration of restaurants, galleries, and retail creates a walkable downtown core that is functionally rare in South Florida, where most coastal communities are car-dependent. Two miles of public beach sit at the avenue’s eastern terminus.

The city stretches west from the beach through downtown, across the Intracoastal Waterway, and into suburban communities west of I-95. The city spans both waterfronts: oceanfront properties line the Atlantic side, while Intracoastal homes on the western shore offer deep-water dockage. The Boynton Beach Inlet and Boca Raton Inlet provide ocean access from Intracoastal properties in either direction.

Living in Delray Beach

Dining, beach access, arts, and the Atlantic Avenue corridor.

Atlantic Avenue Dining

Atlantic Avenue Dining

James Beard-nominated chefs, waterfront Intracoastal dining, and a walkable restaurant district stretching from Swinton Avenue to the beach.

Public Beach

Public Beach

Two miles of wide Atlantic beach with lifeguard service, public parking, and direct access from Atlantic Avenue.

Arts District

Arts District

Pineapple Grove Arts District, Cornell Art Museum, public installations, and a gallery scene concentrated within walking distance of downtown.

Events

Events

Year-round calendar including Delray Affair, First Friday Art Walks, and seasonal street festivals on Atlantic Avenue.

Delray Beach Market Dynamics

A broad market with distinct segments, shaped by walkability, beach access, and limited waterfront supply.

Delray Beach is one of the larger residential markets in southern Palm Beach County, with enough inventory depth that supply varies meaningfully by segment. Western communities and older condos trade below $500,000; downtown townhomes and beach-area homes range from $800,000 to $3 million; Intracoastal waterfront properties range from $1 million to $10 million+; and direct oceanfront estates command $3 million to $20 million+ based on closed transaction data.

The market’s structural advantage is the overlap of walkable downtown, beach proximity, and Intracoastal access within a relatively compact footprint. Comparable walkability and beach access in South Florida typically require moving to Fort Lauderdale’s Las Olas corridor or Miami Beach, both of which carry higher density and different tax structures. Delray’s southern Palm Beach County location keeps it within the PBC tax jurisdiction while offering the walkable downtown and beach access that define its premium segments.

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know about buying and living in Delray Beach.

Delray Beach home prices range from roughly $300,000 for entry-level condos to over $20 million for direct oceanfront estates, based on closed transaction data. The market segments into several tiers: direct oceanfront ($3 million to $20 million+), Intracoastal waterfront ($1 million to $10 million+), beach area and downtown ($800,000 to $3 million), and western communities and older condos (below $500,000). The citywide median closed price is roughly $550,000.

At $2 million, expect a three-bedroom home within walking distance of Atlantic Avenue or the beach with 2,000 to 2,500 square feet. At $3 million to $5 million, Intracoastal waterfront properties deliver private docks and boat lifts with proximity to the Boynton Beach Inlet and Boca Raton Inlet. Above $5 million, direct oceanfront estates north or south of Atlantic Avenue offer 4,000+ square feet, private beach frontage, and unobstructed Atlantic views. Browse by property type on our waterfront and oceanfront pages.

For buyers above $2 million, the primary areas are the oceanfront corridor (north and south of Atlantic Avenue), Intracoastal waterfront estates, the Seagate neighborhood (a low-density enclave south of Atlantic Avenue with ocean access), and Lake Ida (lakefront properties with boating access). Each offers a different lifestyle: oceanfront is about the beach, Intracoastal is about docking, Seagate combines privacy with Atlantic Avenue proximity, and Lake Ida offers freshwater recreation in a quieter setting.

Downtown and Pineapple Grove offer walkable urban living at the $800,000 to $2 million range based on closed transaction data, with townhomes and newer condos positioned within blocks of Atlantic Avenue. Historic neighborhoods like Del-Ida Park provide architectural character on tree-lined streets. For buyers who prioritize golf community living, Delaire Country Club and other communities west of I-95 offer that format at lower price points, as mapped on our neighborhoods page.

Delray Beach and Boca Raton are adjacent cities with different characters. Delray’s advantage is its walkable downtown and Atlantic Avenue corridor; Boca offers more gated communities, a larger retail base (Mizner Park, Town Center Mall, Royal Palm Place), and a broader inventory of newer construction. Boca is a larger city than Delray (roughly 100,000 residents within city limits), and its market extends further west with more master-planned communities.

For waterfront buyers, both cities offer oceanfront and Intracoastal properties. Delray’s premium is the proximity to Atlantic Avenue and the cultural density of its downtown, which Boca’s Mizner Park area approaches but at lower commercial density. Buyers who prioritize walkability and dining choose Delray; buyers who want newer construction, gated communities, or more retail choose Boca. For a broader comparison, see our neighborhoods page.

Yes. The core of Delray Beach, from the beach west to Swinton Avenue (roughly one mile), is walkable, with over 100 restaurants, shops, galleries, and services along Atlantic Avenue and the surrounding blocks. This level of pedestrian commercial density is unusual in South Florida, where most coastal communities are car-dependent. Residents in the beach area, downtown, and Pineapple Grove can handle most daily errands without a car.

Outside the downtown core, the city is car-dependent like most of Palm Beach County. Western neighborhoods, Lake Ida, and communities west of I-95 require driving for groceries, dining, and services. For buyers who prioritize walkability as a core requirement, properties east of Swinton Avenue and within a few blocks of Atlantic Avenue deliver the most pedestrian-friendly experience. These properties typically start at $800,000 for condos and reach $5 million+ for single-family homes based on closed transaction data.

Yes. Delray Beach has Intracoastal waterfront properties with private docks and boat lifts along the length of the city. The Boca Raton Inlet is roughly 10 minutes south by water and the Boynton Beach Inlet is roughly 10 minutes north, providing ocean access in either direction. Intracoastal waterfront homes with dockage range from $1 million to $10 million+ based on closed sales.

Delray Beach Municipal Marina on the Intracoastal also offers transient and seasonal slips for boats that need temporary dockage. For buyers whose primary requirement is deep-water access, Delray’s Intracoastal inventory is competitive with options in Boynton Beach and Boca Raton, while also being within walking distance of Atlantic Avenue and the beach. See our waterfront page for Intracoastal options across the county.

Yes. Delray Beach’s population of roughly 70,000 supports a full infrastructure of medical facilities, schools, and services that smaller barrier island communities lack. The livability question for most buyers comes down to seasonal traffic on Atlantic Avenue (higher from November through April and on weekends) and whether the energy and density tradeoff is worth the walkability and cultural access.

Parking in the downtown core can be difficult during peak times, and Atlantic Avenue’s popularity means the area does not feel like a quiet residential retreat during season. Buyers who want a quieter environment with similar beach access may prefer adjacent Gulf Stream or Highland Beach, both residential-only barrier island towns within minutes of Delray’s amenities. PBI Airport is 25 minutes north via I-95.

Delray Beach property owners pay Palm Beach County ad valorem taxes plus the City of Delray Beach municipal millage. Florida has no state income tax and no state estate tax, though federal estate tax still applies. Primary residents qualify for Florida’s homestead exemption, which reduces the taxable value by up to $50,000, and the Save Our Homes cap limits annual increases in assessed value to the lower of 3% or the Consumer Price Index.

Non-homesteaded properties (second homes, investment properties) are assessed at full market value without the SOH cap. Buyers relocating from states with income tax often find that the overall tax picture in Florida is favorable even accounting for property tax rates. Full assessment details for specific properties are available through the Palm Beach County Property Appraiser.

Flood zones in Delray Beach vary by location. Properties east of the Intracoastal, including the beach area and barrier island, are generally in FEMA flood zone AE or VE (high-risk coastal areas). Downtown properties between the Intracoastal and I-95 are mixed, with some in AE and others in zone X (moderate to low risk). Western communities are predominantly zone X.

Flood insurance is required for federally backed mortgages in AE and VE zones and can range from $3,000 to $15,000+ annually for waterfront properties depending on elevation, construction, and coverage. Wind insurance is purchased separately through private carriers or Citizens Property Insurance. We coordinate insurance specialists as part of the transaction to ensure accurate pre-closing cost estimates. Verify your specific flood zone through the FEMA Flood Map Service Center.

Delray Beach is served by the Palm Beach County School District, with multiple elementary, middle, and high school options depending on address. Zoned schools vary by location within the city; confirm specific school assignments through the district’s boundary lookup tool before purchasing.

Private school options include Gulf Stream School (K-8) in neighboring Gulf Stream, Saint Andrew’s School in Boca Raton, and American Heritage School in Delray Beach (pre-K through 12). The city’s central location provides access to private institutions across southern Palm Beach County and northern Broward County. For families evaluating school options alongside a relocation, our neighborhoods page provides community-level context.

Delray Beach’s investment case varies by segment. The premium tiers (oceanfront, Intracoastal, and beach-area properties above $2 million) are constrained by finite waterfront supply and the difficulty of replicating Delray’s downtown-to-beach corridor elsewhere in the county. These structural factors tend to support pricing in the upper segments even when broader market activity slows. Western communities and older condos track more closely with regional trends and carry different risk profiles. Citywide appreciation figures are less useful here than segment-specific data; the waterfront and beach-area segments have outperformed western communities over the past five years based on closed transaction data.

For buyers evaluating long-term positioning, Delray’s oceanfront and waterfront properties pair well with holdings in less commercially developed barrier island communities like Gulf Stream or Ocean Ridge. The combination of scarcity-driven waterfront with Delray’s cultural and commercial infrastructure offers a different profile than residential-only barrier island communities. These observations reflect general market trends and should not be construed as investment advice.

Atlantic Avenue is Delray Beach’s commercial spine, running roughly one mile from Swinton Avenue east to the beach. The avenue and surrounding blocks contain over 100 restaurants, a range of retail from local boutiques to national brands, galleries, the Cornell Art Museum, and the Pineapple Grove Arts District. Street-level activity is consistent year-round, with higher density from November through April and on weekends.

For real estate purposes, proximity to Atlantic Avenue is the primary price driver in the eastern half of the city. Properties within a few blocks of the avenue command a premium over comparable homes further west. The avenue’s commercial zoning is managed by the city and the Delray Beach Community Redevelopment Agency, which controls density and character.

Delray Beach’s daily options center on the beach, Atlantic Avenue, and the Intracoastal. Two miles of public beach provide swimming, surfing, and paddleboarding. Atlantic Avenue offers dining, shopping, and gallery browsing within walking distance. The Intracoastal supports boating, kayaking, and waterfront dining at several restaurants with dock access. The Pineapple Grove Arts District, First Friday Art Walks, the Delray Affair festival, and seasonal street events round out the cultural calendar.

Boca Raton is 15 minutes south with Mizner Park, Town Center Mall, and Red Reef Park. Boynton Beach is immediately north. Multiple golf courses are within 20 minutes, and PBI Airport is 25 minutes north via I-95. Fort Lauderdale is 35 minutes south. The location provides the convenience of a mid-size South Florida city without the density of Miami or Fort Lauderdale.

Considering Delray Beach?

Delray Beach’s waterfront and beach-area properties move quickly in the premium segments. We track this market daily and can connect you with opportunities that match your criteria.

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