About Orlando Real Estate
Orlando proper is a huge city with very distinct neighborhoods. Average pricing, days-on-market, and buyer pools vary wildly from one sub-market to the next. A median "Orlando home price" number is nearly useless without knowing which Orlando. That's why buyers and sellers who treat Orlando as a single market get burned — overpay in one neighborhood, underprice in another, or chase the wrong comps.
I primarily work Orlando sub-markets close to Seminole County (Baldwin Park, College Park, Audubon Park, Winter Park-adjacent) plus the relocating-executive zones (Lake Nona, Dr. Phillips). For each, pricing strategy and buyer targeting are different. I'll tell you up front which sub-markets I know deeply and which I'd refer out.
Orlando Sub-Markets I Work
Lake Nona / Medical City
Master-planned, high-tech, medical-campus-driven. Relocating executives, physicians, and USTA-adjacent buyers. $450K-$1.5M. New construction still active.
Baldwin Park
Walkable, new-urbanist, beautiful streetscapes. Popular with young families and downtown professionals. $625K-$1.5M.
College Park
Historic bungalows, walkable Edgewater Drive corridor, strong rental demand. $400K-$1.2M.
Dr. Phillips
Executive West Orlando. Gated communities, Restaurant Row, upscale retail. $600K-$2M+.
Downtown Orlando / Thornton Park / Lake Eola
Condos, lofts, historic bungalows. $275K-$900K. Urban lifestyle buyers.
Audubon Park / Delaney Park / SoDo
Quieter urban neighborhoods, character homes, strong walkability. $425K-$850K.
Selling a Home in Orlando
Orlando's sub-market variety means pricing strategy is hyper-local. I pull comps from your specific neighborhood — not an Orlando-wide average. Marketing varies too: a Baldwin Park listing is sold to walkable-urban buyers and needs drone + streetscape emphasis; a Lake Nona listing is sold to relocating physicians and needs Medical-City-proximity messaging. Same city, completely different playbooks.
Buying a Home in Orlando
The biggest Orlando buyer mistake is falling in love with a neighborhood before testing whether the commute, schools, and lifestyle match. I build a short list based on your actual requirements — work location, school priorities, HOA tolerance, and budget — and we tour two or three sub-markets before narrowing. Orlando relocation buyers save the most time with this approach.
Free Orlando Home Report
Which sub-market? Baldwin Park? Lake Nona? Dr. Phillips? Tell me and I'll pull the right comps.
You're All Set!
I'll reach out with your Orlando report shortly.
Orlando FAQ
Which Orlando neighborhood is best for families?
Depends on your priorities. Baldwin Park for walkability and playgrounds. Lake Nona for new-construction and medical-campus access. Audubon Park for character homes and strong public schools. I walk through the trade-offs by your actual use case.
Is Orlando a good rental investment?
Parts of it, yes. College Park, SoDo, and downtown condos historically rent well. Short-term-rental markets are regulated — ask before assuming. I'll pull actual rent comps before you write an offer.
How does Orlando compare to Seminole County?
Orlando is denser, more urban, and has stronger walkability in select sub-markets. Seminole has better public schools on average, more green space, and lower traffic. Many buyers end up loving Seminole once they commute from Baldwin Park for a week.