Palm Beach Gardens is built on golf. PGA National Resort, home to the PGA Tour’s Cognizant Classic and former headquarters of the PGA of America, anchors a city of approximately 60,000 residents with more than a dozen golf communities. Founded in 1959 by insurance magnate John D. MacArthur, it offers Palm Beach County’s prestige without the density or price premiums of coastal communities.
At the top of the market, Old Palm (Raymond Floyd design, fewer than 90 homesites, $3M–$20M) and Old Marsh (Pete Dye, ~140 members, $2M–$8M) are among the most private golf communities in South Florida. Mirasol (two Tom Fazio courses, $800K–$8M) and Frenchman’s Reserve (Arnold Palmer Signature, $1M–$5M) offer scale and breadth at the $2M+ tier. BallenIsles (three courses) and PGA National (five courses, resort model) round out the roster, with additional options in Frenchman’s Creek, Eastpointe, and Ibis.
Beyond the Fairways
The Gardens Mall is anchored by Nordstrom and Saks Fifth Avenue with 150+ retailers. Riverhouse offers waterfront seating on the Intracoastal, The Capital Grille draws a business crowd, and Carmine’s fills the high-volume Italian niche. Downtown at the Gardens and Legacy Place round out the options with walkable casual dining and entertainment.
Palm Beach Gardens is served by the A-rated Palm Beach County School District, with The Benjamin School as the leading private K–12 option. Juno Beach and Jupiter Beach are fifteen minutes east via PGA Boulevard. The overall market median is approximately $650,000 per BeachesMLS closed data, but the luxury segment ($2M+) is where supply is most constrained and buyer competition most acute, with estates in Old Palm trading above $15 million.