Tequesta Waterfront Real Estate: Bridges, Canals and Boat Size Considerations

Neighborhood Guides

Tequesta Waterfront Real Estate: Bridges, Canals and Boat Size Considerations

Nikko Karki
Nikko Karki December 12, 2025
Tequesta isn't one waterfront. It's several. Your day-to-day boating life is shaped less by the number of bedrooms and more by three variables: air draft, water draft, and bridge behavior. Get those three right and everything else (insurance, taxes, lift size, resale) falls into place. Get them wrong and you'll spend weekends idling at a bridge or timing every outing around tide.

How Bridges Quietly Set Price Bands

In Tequesta, fixed bridges on the North Fork of the Loxahatchee do more than mark a route; they sort the buyer pool. A property on the west side of a restrictive fixed span draws from a narrower audience than one east of it. That structural difference in demand is priced in, sometimes materially, even when the two homes share similar square footage and water views.

Variable 01
Air Draft
How tall your boat is: mast, tower, antenna, outriggers. The number that determines which fixed bridges you can pass without folding or modifying hardware.
Variable 02
Water Draft
How deep the hull sits at normal load. Controls which canal corners, inside tracks, and dock approaches are navigable, especially at mid-ebb in older platted canals.
Variable 03
Bridge Behavior
What opens, what doesn't, and when. Fixed bridges are permanent constraints. Drawbridges operate on schedules. The FEC railroad bridge is normally open and closes only for trains.
Tequesta Bridge Reference
Bridges listed from innermost canal to open water. Clearances referenced to Mean High Water (MHW). Add a safety margin for antennas, outriggers, and tide before assuming any clearance.
Bridge MHW Clearance Opens / Behavior
Island WayFixed
12 ft
Does not open. Tightest constraint on the North Fork; many boats need fold-downs to pass.
Tequesta DriveFixed
14 ft
Does not open. Limits taller center consoles with towers or hardtops.
FEC RailroadBascule
Normally open
Closes for trains only; signal/horn sequence. Regulated per 33 CFR 117.299.
Cato's / CR-707Bascule
25 ft closed
Opens on request, VHF 9.
Indiantown Rd (SR-706)Bascule
35 ft closed
Opens on the hour and half-hour.
Alternate A1A (SR-811)Fixed
26 ft vertical
47 ft horizontal
Does not open. Lies between some interior routes and the Intracoastal.
US-1 Jupiter FederalTwin Bascule
42 ft closed
125 ft wide
Opens on request. New span designed to reduce opening frequency.

Two similar homes can live very differently: the one east of fixed constraints often trades at a premium because transit to sea is simpler, and the buyer pool is correspondingly wider.

Boat Profiles: What Fits Where

The bridge table above is only useful when read against a specific vessel. The profiles below cover the three size ranges most common in the Tequesta buyer pool, with honest guidance on where each works and where it doesn't.

Profile 01
24–28 ft
Bay boat, low profile
2 ft draft 8–9 ft air draft

Works comfortably behind most North Fork addresses. You'll watch tide on a few tight canal corners, but fixed bridges are rarely an issue. The most versatile profile for the Tequesta waterfront.

Profile 02
33–36 ft
Center console, folding hardware
2.5–3 ft draft 10–12 ft air (folded)

Often clears Tequesta Drive. Island Way can be binding depending on tower or antenna height. East-side or "no fixed bridges" addresses are ideal for frequent offshore runs.

Profile 03
55–65 ft
Sportfish or tall express
4–5 ft draft High air draft

Focus on Intracoastal or near-inlet properties east of the fixed bridges. You'll plan around drawbridge timing and inlet conditions, but daily use is straightforward. The fixed North Fork spans are a no go.

Always verify on site. Gauge boards are referenced to tide, and even a few inches can be the difference between gliding through and turning around.

Jupiter Inlet: Tides and Timing

Jupiter Inlet is powerful and honest. Understanding its behavior is part of owning a boat behind any Tequesta address, not just the ones closest to the inlet itself.

Inlet Operational Facts
Current Velocities
Approximately 2.4 knots on the flood and 3.6 knots on the ebb. New captains favor slack water when learning the line. The flood is forgiving; the ebb concentrates current on the south jetty side. Plan accordingly.
Sand Trap & Bathymetry
The Jupiter Inlet District maintains the sand trap and posts frequent bathymetric surveys. Conditions at the bar change after storms. Check the most recent survey before transiting with a deep-draft vessel; the NOAA chart and reality can diverge meaningfully.
Inside Channels
The South Shoreline Access Channel was dredged to 5 ft NGVD to concentrate boat traffic away from seagrass. If you draw more than 3 to 4 feet, you'll plan around tide on a handful of inside tracks. If your air draft is 12 to 14 feet or higher, the fixed North Fork spans are your gating factor, not the inlet depth.

Canals, Geometry, and Daily Life

The bridge clearances and inlet data above describe the route to open water. Canal geometry describes what happens before you get there, and it is where buyers with larger vessels most commonly encounter surprises that no amount of renovation can fix.

What to Assess Before You Offer

Older platted canals can be tight on turning radius. A 40-foot hull with 13-foot beam and high windage will feel every northerly breeze when backing into a slip. Dead-end canals concentrate wind and current; conditions at the end of the canal are meaningfully different from conditions at the entrance. Walk any candidate canal by boat at slack water and again on a running tide. The two visits will not produce the same experience.

For open-fetch addresses along the Intracoastal (Rolling Hills and Indian Hills edges), lift engineering and fender strategy matter as much as the view. Exposure here is real and daily. The right lift configuration and the right fender geometry are infrastructure decisions, not afterthoughts.

Insurance, Taxes, and Carry

Two cost variables affect carrying costs on Tequesta waterfront more than any other: the insurance underwriting profile of the specific home, and the tax reset that occurs the year after purchase. Both are modelable before you offer.

Insurance: What Underwriters Evaluate
Wind Mitigation
A wind-mit inspection (OIR-B1-1802) documents roof shape, attachment method, opening protection, and other features that directly influence the wind premium. Impact-rated openings and documented roof attachments can materially improve quotes. Order this before contracting, not after.
4-Point Inspection
Covers roof, electrical, plumbing, and HVAC: the four systems most carriers want evaluated on homes over a certain age. Required by most carriers; useful to have in hand during diligence so you understand the bind profile before you are committed.
Elevation & Flood Zone
Flood zone and elevation certificate drive NFIP and private flood underwriting. New county FIRMs took effect in late 2024; several east-county neighborhoods changed zones. Pull the current FIRM and elevation certificate for any candidate property before pricing flood coverage.

These are illustrative ad valorem estimates with no exemptions applied, excluding non-ad valorem items such as solid waste and CDDs. The formula is (Value ÷ 1,000) × total mills = estimated ad valorem tax.

Tequesta
18.68 mills total
(12.22 county/school + 6.46 municipal)
$5M value $93,397
$10M value $186,793
Jupiter
16.42 mills total
(12.22 county/school + 2.47 municipal + fire/inlet)
$5M value $82,078
$10M value $164,156
Town of Palm Beach
14.83 mills total
(12.22 county/school + 2.61 municipal)
$5M value $74,154
$10M value $148,308
West Palm Beach
20.41 mills total
(12.22 county/school + 8.13 operating + 0.06 debt)
$5M value $102,070
$10M value $204,139

These figures exclude non-ad valorem line items (solid waste, stormwater, CDDs) and any parcel-specific districts beyond those noted. Fire and Inlet District components apply to many, not all, Jupiter parcels; confirm for your PCN. Always underwrite the exact parcel and check the latest TRIM notice before offering.

How the Tax Reset Works at Purchase

Homestead Exemption: If the home will be your primary residence, Florida's Homestead Exemption reduces taxable value and activates the Save Our Homes cap, limiting annual increases in assessed value to the lower of 3% or CPI. Over ten or twenty years, that cap is why long-owned homesteaded waterfront can carry a fraction of the taxes of a new build next door.

Year of purchase: You typically prorate the seller's still-active bill at closing, which reflects their exemptions and their SOH savings. That number can look attractive. The reset arrives the following tax year, when your assessment moves to market value at purchase. Model both numbers now (the prorated first year and the reset year) so it isn't a surprise.

Portability: If you're moving within Florida, portability lets you transfer up to $500,000 of your accumulated SOH savings to your new homestead. Timelines apply; coordinate with your attorney and CPA before closing.

A Simple Buy-Side Plan: 90 Days

The variables above (bridges, drafts, insurance, and taxes) are all modelable before you make an offer. The 90-day sequence below organizes the work so that when you do offer, the terms read certain and the diligence period confirms rather than discovers.

0–15
Days 0–15: Define the Brief

Write down air draft (with and without folding hardware) and static draft at normal load. Pull tide data and sketch your route to sea from each short-listed dock. Map every bridge between the dock and open water against your numbers.

15–45
Days 15–45: Verify on the Water

Sea-trial the route at mid-ebb or mid-flood. Read every bridge gauge you'll pass. Order wind-mit and 4-Point. Confirm flood zone and elevation certificate. Price lift capacity with a 20 to 25% safety margin on your current vessel, not just what fits today.

45–75
Days 45–75: Model Carry Costs

Model two tax numbers: the prorated current-year bill at closing and the next-year reset (purchase price × your millage stack). If this will be your primary residence, prep Homestead and Portability filings with your attorney and CPA. Price flood and wind in parallel.

75–90
Days 75–90: Close Clean

Finalize insurance. Verify seawall, batter piles, and shore power capacity. Close. Set calendar alerts for TRIM in August and the November through March tax payment window. The first year is organized. The rest follows.

Bottom Line

Tequesta waterfront is not a single market. It is a series of micro-environments sorted by three variables that no renovation budget can change after the fact: air draft, water draft, and bridge behavior. Two homes on similar water with comparable square footage can live in entirely different worlds depending on which side of a 12-foot fixed span they sit. That difference is priced into the market, and it should be priced into your brief before you evaluate a single floor plan.

For buyers with vessels under 30 ft: Most North Fork addresses work. Document your air draft and water draft, sketch the route, and focus your search on lot geometry, canal depth at mid-ebb, and lift capacity with a margin for your next boat. The bridge constraints are unlikely to bind you, which means the buying decision comes down to canal quality and daily livability rather than access physics.

For buyers with mid-size center consoles (33–36 ft): The brief starts with Island Way and Tequesta Drive clearances. If your tower folds under 12 feet, you have options on both sides. If it doesn't, focus east of the fixed spans. Order the wind-mit, 4-Point, and elevation certificate early enough that the insurance picture is clear before you commit. Model the tax reset, not just the prorated first year.

For sportfish and tall-express owners (55 ft+): Intracoastal or near-inlet addresses east of all fixed bridges. Plan around drawbridge timing and inlet conditions. Lift engineering, fender strategy, and shore power capacity are infrastructure decisions that belong in the offer math, not post-close discovery. The fixed North Fork spans are a permanent no, and no amount of renovation changes that.

Information is general and not legal, tax, or insurance advice. Tax figures are illustrative estimates only; verify the exact parcel (PCN) and current millage rates before contracting. Bridge clearances are approximate and referenced to Mean High Water; verify on site with current tide and gauge boards before relying on any clearance figure. Equal Housing Opportunity.

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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