
Home Buying Tips
Is Coral Springs a Good Place to Live? A Broward County Local's Take
July 15, 2026 · 8 min read · By Pure Equity Realty
Coral Springs built its reputation on safe streets, strong schools, and a planned, family-friendly layout. Here is an honest look at whether it is a good place to live.
Is Coral Springs a good place to live? For families who want safe streets, a planned layout, and solid schools within reach of the coast, Coral Springs is one of Broward County's most dependable choices. This inland northwest Broward city of roughly 140,000 people was designed from the ground up in the 1960s, and that planning still shows in its wide roads, uniform signage, and green space. Here is the honest picture, both the strengths and the tradeoffs.
Key Takeaways
- Coral Springs is a planned northwest Broward suburb of about 140,000 residents, known for order and family living.
- Crime runs well below national averages, and the city ranks safer than most Florida cities.
- The median home price sits near $625,000, up sharply in recent years.
- Schools are part of Broward County Public Schools, with several well-rated public options.
- The main tradeoff is an inland location, so the beach is a 30-to-40-minute drive.
Safety and the planned-city feel
Coral Springs built its brand on safety and order, and the data backs it up. Total crime runs well below the national average, and violent crime is lower still, placing the city safer than roughly three-quarters of U.S. cities in one commonly cited index. Strict property and signage codes keep the look consistent across neighborhoods. For buyers coming from busier parts of South Florida, the calm can be a genuine selling point. If safety and a settled feel top your list, this is where Coral Springs shines.
Schools and family life
Coral Springs sits within Broward County Public Schools, and the city is zoned to public high schools including Coral Springs High, Coral Glades High, and J.P. Taravella High. Several campuses carry strong ratings, and the city's dense network of parks, sports complexes, and youth programs rounds out the family appeal. As always, verify current school ratings and boundaries for a specific address before you buy, since zoning lines shift. Families comparing options may also want our take on whether Boynton Beach is a good place to live up in Palm Beach County.
Home prices and cost
Coral Springs is not the bargain it once was. The median home price recently sat near $625,000, after double-digit gains over the past year. Household incomes are high for the region, in the low $90,000s, which reflects the city's professional, family-heavy population. Renters have options too, though like the rest of Broward, monthly costs have climbed. If you are weighing renting first, our guide to the average rent in Fort Lauderdale gives a useful county benchmark. For lower entry points, compare Coral Springs against the wider Miami versus Fort Lauderdale cost picture.
The tradeoffs to weigh
No city is perfect, and Coral Springs has real tradeoffs. It sits inland in northwest Broward, so the beach is a 30-to-40-minute drive rather than a quick hop, and downtown Fort Lauderdale is a similar distance. The very planning that keeps it tidy can feel uniform to buyers who want older character or a walkable downtown core. Traffic on the main arteries builds during rush hour, and the master-planned layout leans suburban, not urban. None of these are dealbreakers, but they are worth naming before you commit.
So, is Coral Springs a good place to live?
For families and professionals who prize safety, schools, and a well-run suburb, Coral Springs is a strong yes. For buyers who want oceanfront proximity, nightlife, or a historic feel, other South Florida cities fit better. Match the city to how you actually live day to day, and the answer becomes clear. To see how the surrounding area stacks up, our overview of the cities in Broward County is a good next read.
Frequently asked questions
Is Coral Springs a safe city?
Yes. Coral Springs consistently reports crime rates below national averages, and safety indexes rank it safer than most U.S. and Florida cities. It has long marketed itself around public safety and planned design.
How much does a house cost in Coral Springs?
The median home price recently sat near $625,000, after strong year-over-year gains. Prices vary by neighborhood and change monthly, so check current listings for an accurate figure.
Is Coral Springs close to the beach?
Not directly. Coral Springs is inland in northwest Broward County, so the nearest Atlantic beaches are roughly a 30-to-40-minute drive east, depending on traffic.
What school district serves Coral Springs?
Coral Springs is served by Broward County Public Schools. Zoned high schools include Coral Springs High, Coral Glades High, and J.P. Taravella High. Confirm the exact zoning for any specific address.
Thinking about a move to Coral Springs? We can walk you through neighborhoods, school zones, and current pricing so you buy with confidence. Contact Pure Equity Realty to get started.
Sources
- World Population Review, Coral Springs
- CrimeGrade, Coral Springs Safety Data
- Niche, Living in Coral Springs
- U.S. Census QuickFacts, Coral Springs
Population, income, crime, and price figures are drawn from public data sources and change over time. This article is general information, not financial or real estate advice. Confirm current numbers and school zoning for a specific address before you buy.
