North Palm Beach Real Estate Market Report 2025

Market Reports

North Palm Beach Real Estate Market Report 2025

Nikko Karki
Nikko Karki February 10, 2026
If you are buying or selling at $5M and above in North Palm Beach, the headline number is $342M across 23 sales. It describes two markets that share a municipal boundary and almost nothing else. Lost Tree and Old Port Village hold 2.7 months of supply and operate as a seller's market. The rest of the city holds 22.3 months and operates as a buyer's market. The data is granular enough to separate the two, identify where negotiation leverage sits in each, and show why the blended municipal median has no pricing relevance for any individual property.

This report covers all 23 closed sales at $5M and above in North Palm Beach (city limits) in calendar year 2025, sourced from BeachesMLS. For each transaction we track sale price, price per square foot, days on market, and list-to-sale ratio versus original ask, then segment by community, waterfront access type, and construction era. Two Lost Tree transactions account for 44.6% of total volume; a sensitivity chart below shows exactly how those two sales distort the headline numbers.

The $97.5M sale at Old Harbour Road and the $6.5M sale at Ascott Road exist in the same municipal dataset. They exist in different markets.

Total Volume
$342M
23 closed sales
Median $/SF
$1,494
Misleading: see split below
Avg List-to-Sale
86.6%
Median: 89.1%
Months of Supply
14.6
28 active listings
Note: CY 2025 closes, $5M+, North Palm Beach city limits. 23 sales; 2 excluded per methodology. Data source: BeachesMLS. See Methodology for definitions, exclusions, and calculations.

How Two Sales Distort the Headline Numbers

All 23 Sales Excl. 2 Lost Tree
Total Volume
$342.0M
$189.5M−44.6%
Mean Price
$14.9M
$9.0M−40%
Median $/SF
$1,494
$1,441−3.6%
Avg DOM
99
109+10.1%

Mean price collapses 40% without the two Lost Tree sales. Median $/SF barely moves (−3.6%), confirming it is outlier-resistant and the correct measure for cross-market comparison. DOM increases because the fast-closing Lost Tree transactions pulled the all-sample average down. All other sections in this report use the full 23-sale dataset.

Market A
Lost Tree Village & Old Port Village
Volume
$240.7M
9 sales • 70% of NPB total
Median $/SF
$2,509
Range: $1,293–$5,458
Median DOM
65
Avg: 95
Months of Supply
2.7
2 active listings
Note: CY 2025 closes, $5M+, Lost Tree Village and Old Port Village only.

Nine sales totaling $240.7M from two gated communities. Lost Tree Village (2 sales, $152.5M, $5,344 median $/SF) operates at a different level than Old Port Village (7 sales, $88.2M, $1,779 median $/SF). Within Old Port, the spread is wide: 11432 Turtle Beach Road commanded $4,078/SF while 926 Village Road cleared at $1,293/SF after 358 days and a 40% reduction.

Market A: All 9 Sales
Lost Tree Village and Old Port Village, 2025 $5M+ closed sales
AddressSold Price$/SFDOML/SYear
11465 Old Harbour Rd (LT)$97,500,000$5,4581100.0%2013
12032 End (LT)$55,000,000$5,231091.7%2022
11432 Turtle Beach Rd (OP)$31,900,000$4,07814488.7%1971
1233 Church Ln (OP)$10,250,000$3,365389.1%1970
11279 Old Harbour Rd (OP)$17,250,000$2,509086.3%2002
11426 Lost Tree Way (OP)$9,050,000$1,77917086.2%2004
12101 Turtle Beach Rd (OP)$7,875,000$1,7546596.6%2001
11837 Turtle Beach Rd (OP)$5,600,000$1,49411786.2%1977
926 Village Rd (OP)$6,300,000$1,29335860.0%1962

LT = Lost Tree Village. OP = Old Port Village. 0 DOM indicates off-market or MLS-recorded 0 DOM; treated as off-market per methodology.

Market A: $/SF by Property
Lost Tree Village and Old Port Village, sorted high to low
11465 Old Harbour RdLT
$5,458/SF$97.5M · 1 DOM · 100% L/S
12032 EndLT
$5,231/SF$55M · off-market · 91.7% L/S
11432 Turtle Beach RdOP
$4,078/SF$31.9M · 144 DOM · 88.7% L/S
1233 Church LnOP
$3,365/SF$10.25M · 3 DOM · 89.1% L/S
11279 Old Harbour RdOP
$2,509/SF$17.25M · off-market · 86.3% L/S
11426 Lost Tree WayOP
$1,779/SF$9.05M · 170 DOM · 86.2% L/S
12101 Turtle Beach RdOP
$1,754/SF$7.875M · 65 DOM · 96.6% L/S
11837 Turtle Beach RdOP
$1,494/SF$5.6M · 117 DOM · 86.2% L/S
926 Village RdDistressed
$1,293/SF$6.3M · 358 DOM · 60% L/S

LT = Lost Tree Village (green bars). OP = Old Port Village (teal bars). Bar length = $/SF relative to $5,458 maximum. Full data in desktop view.

Build-Year Analysis

Build year matters less than location in this tier. Pre-1980 homes averaged $2,557/SF, but the variance is enormous: irreplaceable Intracoastal frontage at Turtle Beach Road and Church Lane commanded $3,300–$4,100/SF, while 926 Village Road sat for nearly a year and sold at 60% of ask.

No homes built between 1980 and 1999 traded at $5M+ in this sample. The 2000–2014 cohort follows the same pattern: prime Old Port waterfront above $2,500/SF, secondary addresses below $1,800. The two 2015+ sales are the Lost Tree mega-transactions, which reflect trophy scarcity more than construction vintage.

Across all cohorts, pre-1980 inventory without updated roof and impact windows faces buyer resistance and insurance eligibility pressure. Seawall, impact windows, roof, and electrical should be underwritten alongside acquisition price.

Buyer and Seller Playbooks
Buyers: 2.7 Months of Supply

On prime parcels, move fast and pay close to ask. The $97.5M Old Harbour Road sale closed in 1 day. 12032 End sold off-market. Hesitation costs you the property. Exception: dated Old Port inventory (pre-1980, unrenovated) offers real negotiation room.

Sellers: Price to Your Actual Comp Set

Lost Tree waterfront: $5,000+/SF. Prime Old Port Intracoastal: $2,500–$4,100/SF. Secondary Old Port: $1,500–$1,800/SF. These are three different markets inside one tier. Using the $97.5M anchor to justify aspirational pricing on a $7M listing produces the 926 Village Road outcome: a year on market and 40% off ask.

Market B
Village, Harbour Isles, Seminole Landing & Other
Volume
$101.3M
14 sales • 30% of NPB total
Median $/SF
$1,262
Range: $888–$1,777
Median DOM
50
Avg: 102 (skewed by outliers)
Months of Supply
22.3
26 active listings
Note: CY 2025 closes, $5M+, North Palm Beach excluding Lost Tree Village and Old Port Village.

Outside Lost Tree and Old Port, the $5M+ market is a buyer's market. The 50-day median DOM is misleading: 835 Country Club Drive closed in 1 day; 2138 Ascott Road took 524.

Micromarket Breakdown
2025 $5M+ sales outside Lost Tree / Old Port. Single-sale micromarkets consolidated.
MicromarketSalesVolumeMedian $/SFAvg DOMAvg L/S
Village / Country Club7$43.9M$1,1873589.8%
Seminole Landing2$23.0M$1,6676495.1%
Harbour Isles1$6.0M$1,0543589.6%
Other (Captains Key, Hidden Key)2$13.9M$1,2194591.5%
Distressed (Juno Isles, Rolling Green)2$14.6M$1,60946357.8%

"Distressed" = properties that sold at below 65% of original ask after 400+ DOM. $/SF appears high because both were recent construction on larger lots; the discount was entirely in the gap between list and sale price.

Micromarket: Median $/SF
Market B communities, 2025 $5M+ closed sales
Seminole Landing
$1,667/SF2 sales · 64 DOM · 95.1% L/S
Distressed400+ DOM
$1,609/SF2 sales · 463 DOM · 57.8% L/S
Other (Captains Key, Hidden Key)
$1,219/SF2 sales · 45 DOM · 91.5% L/S
Village / Country Club
$1,187/SF7 sales · 35 DOM · 89.8% L/S
Harbour Isles
$1,054/SF1 sale · 35 DOM · 89.6% L/S

Note: Distressed $/SF appears high because both properties were recent construction on large lots; the discount was entirely in the gap between list and sale price, not the $/SF figure.

Village / Country Club is the strongest micromarket in the value tier: seven sales, 35-day average DOM, 89.8% L/S. New construction at 835 Country Club Drive and 525 Greenway Drive both traded in a single day at 96–98% of ask. The outlier is 736 Lagoon Drive at $888/SF, the lowest in the dataset, which reflects a size discount: at 7,992 SF it is the largest home in the value tier, and large homes consistently trade at lower per-square-foot prices.

Seminole Landing ($1,667 median $/SF, 95.1% L/S) commands a gated-community premium. The two distressed sales at Ascott Road and Rolling Green (463-day average DOM, 57.8% average L/S) represent pricing errors, not market conditions.

Market B: All 14 Sales
Value-tier communities, 2025 $5M+ closed sales
AddressSold Price$/SFDOML/SYear
835 Country Club Dr$9,025,000$1,564197.8%2025
839 Country Club Dr$5,125,717$1,4124876.5%2000
525 Greenway Dr$5,600,000$1,244196.6%2025
624 Pilot Rd$5,100,000$1,1876882.3%2018
11701 Lake Shore Pl$5,700,000$1,1582595.8%2021
715 Ibis Way$6,400,000$1,1525193.4%2024
564 Anchorage Dr$5,500,000$1,1277093.2%2024
1138 Banyan Estates Dr$7,850,000$1,6974495.2%2016
1162 Banyan Estates Dr$15,100,000$1,6368495.0%2020
12014 Captains Landing$8,200,000$1,2796487.2%2005
736 Lagoon Dr$7,100,000$888988.8%2023
780 Harbour Isles Ct$6,000,000$1,0543589.6%2002
13209 Rolling Green Rd$8,075,000$1,44140164.6%2014
2138 Ascott Rd$6,500,000$1,77752451.0%2018
Market B, Chart 1 of 2: Village / Country Club
7 sales, $/SF sorted high to low
835 Country Club Dr
$1,564/SF$9.025M · 1 DOM · 97.8% L/S
839 Country Club Dr
$1,412/SF$5.126M · 48 DOM · 76.5% L/S
525 Greenway Dr
$1,244/SF$5.6M · 1 DOM · 96.6% L/S
624 Pilot Rd
$1,187/SF$5.1M · 68 DOM · 82.3% L/S
11701 Lake Shore Pl
$1,158/SF$5.7M · 25 DOM · 95.8% L/S
715 Ibis Way
$1,152/SF$6.4M · 51 DOM · 93.4% L/S
564 Anchorage Dr
$1,127/SF$5.5M · 70 DOM · 93.2% L/S

Bar length = $/SF relative to $1,564 maximum in this group. Note the tight $/SF range ($1,127–$1,564) vs the wide DOM range (1–70 days).

Market B, Chart 2 of 2: Other Communities
Seminole Landing, Harbour Isles, Captains Key, and distressed sales
2138 Ascott RdDistressed
$1,777/SF$6.5M · 524 DOM · 51% L/S
1138 Banyan Estates Dr
$1,697/SF$7.85M · 44 DOM · 95.2% L/S
1162 Banyan Estates Dr
$1,636/SF$15.1M · 84 DOM · 95% L/S
13209 Rolling Green RdDistressed
$1,441/SF$8.075M · 401 DOM · 64.6% L/S
12014 Captains Landing
$1,279/SF$8.2M · 64 DOM · 87.2% L/S
780 Harbour Isles Ct
$1,054/SF$6M · 35 DOM · 89.6% L/S
736 Lagoon Dr
$888/SF$7.1M · 9 DOM · 88.8% L/S

Red bars = properties that sold below 65% of original ask after 400+ DOM. Note: high $/SF on distressed properties reflects recent construction on large lots; the discount appeared in the list-to-sale gap, not the $/SF figure.

The Harbour Isles Problem
108 Months of Supply

One closed $5M+ sale in all of 2025. Nine active listings. A commonly cited balanced range is 5–7 months of supply. Harbour Isles has 108. This is not a soft market. It is a market where supply has overwhelmed demand by an order of magnitude. Properties at $994–$1,054/SF are functionally interchangeable. Every new listing that enters without a corresponding sale makes the problem worse for every existing seller in the community.

Waterfront and Dock Hierarchy

All 23 sales were waterfront. Non-waterfront inventory does not reach $5M in North Palm Beach. Within waterfront, pricing separates by access quality: direct Intracoastal ($1,400–$2,500/SF in value tier), canal and wide-water ($1,000–$1,400/SF). Dock utility (draft depth, bridge clearance, wake exposure) and seawall condition are the variables that separate correctly priced listings from stale ones.

Buyer and Seller Playbooks
Buyers: 22.3 Months of Supply

Harbour Isles: open at 85–90% of ask. Nine active listings against one closed sale gives you leverage that does not exist anywhere else in NPB. Properties over 120 DOM anywhere in the value tier: open at 80–85%. The Ascott (51% L/S) and Rolling Green (65% L/S) sales prove the floor.

Sellers: Velocity Over Margin

Harbour Isles: price 5–8% below the lowest active competitor. Eight other listings compete for a buyer pool that absorbed one unit in 2025. Village / Country Club: price within 3% of recent comps and expect a 30–60 day sale. The blended NPB median of $1,494/SF has no pricing relevance for any individual community.

Two Markets, One Decision

Market A
Lost Tree & Old Port Village
ConditionSeller's market
Months of Supply2.7
Median $/SF$2,509
Median DOM65 days
Price Reductions3 of 9 sellers
Market B
Rest of North Palm Beach
ConditionBuyer's market
Months of Supply22.3
Median $/SF$1,262
Median DOM50 days
Price Reductions8 of 14 sellers

Bottom Line

North Palm Beach has one ZIP code and two real estate markets operating inside it simultaneously. Lost Tree and Old Port Village are a seller's market at 2.7 months of supply. The rest of the city is a buyer's market at 22.3 months. Neither can be priced off the other. Every offer, listing price, and negotiation strategy in North Palm Beach should start from the correct peer set, not the municipal aggregate.

For buyers targeting Lost Tree or Old Port Village: At 2.7 months of supply, prime parcels move fast and off-market. The $97.5M Old Harbour Road sale closed in one day. Hesitation costs you the property. The exception is dated Old Port inventory (pre-1980, unrenovated), which offers real negotiation room.

For buyers in the rest of North Palm Beach: At 22.3 months of supply, you have leverage that does not exist in the gated communities. Properties past 120 DOM anywhere in the value tier: open at 80 to 85% of ask. Harbour Isles at 108 months of supply is the most buyer-favorable condition in the dataset.

For all sellers in North Palm Beach: The $342M headline and the $1,494 blended median have no pricing relevance for any individual property. Price to your actual comp set: Lost Tree waterfront at $5,000+/SF, prime Old Port Intracoastal at $2,500 to $4,100/SF, Village/Country Club at $1,100 to $1,600/SF. Using the wrong peer set produces the 926 Village Road outcome: a year on market and 40% off ask.

Scope: North Palm Beach, Florida (city limits). Single-family detached homes only. Closed sales at $5,000,000 or above. Calendar year 2025.

Data Source: BeachesMLS.

Exclusions: Two sales excluded from all metrics: 12058 Turtle Beach Road and 756 Harbour Isles Court (anomalous MLS pricing data). All 23 included sales are single-family detached waterfront properties.

Definitions: "DOM" = cumulative days on market. "L/S ratio" = sold price / original list price (not most-recent ask, so price reductions are reflected in the ratio). "Price reduction" = final list price more than 1% below original list price.

Calculations: Months of supply = active listings / (annual sales / 12). MLS-only volume (excluding two 0-DOM sales): $269.8M across 21 sales.

Off-Market Sales: Two 0-DOM sales included in all metrics: 12032 End ($55M) and 11279 Old Harbour Road ($17.25M), treated as off-market.

Transaction data: BeachesMLS closed sales data, calendar year 2025, North Palm Beach city limits, $5,000,000+.

Active listing inventory: BeachesMLS as of report date.

Nikko Karki
Written by

Nikko Karki

Nikko Karki holds an M.Sc. in economics from Helsinki School of Economics and has been in real estate for nearly two decades. He spent his early career on the developer side at Related Group in West Palm Beach, running the analysis behind the region's largest luxury projects. He has since worked on residential, commercial, and hospitality projects across the U.S., Europe, and Southeast Asia. He built this platform so that buyers and sellers could have better real estate outcomes through better analysis, for free.
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