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Broward County · Florida
Coral Springs is a master-planned city known for its top-rated schools, beautiful parks, and family-friendly neighborhoods. One of Broward County's most popular suburban communities.
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Communities in Coral Springs
Lakewood Village
Community
Cypress Run
Community
Cypress Glen
Waterfront Community
Edgewater Condo
Community
El-Ad Poinciana Condo
Community
Ramblewood East Condo
Community
Visconti Condo
Community
Coral Springs Country Club
Community
Eagle Trace
Community
Napoli Gardens At Coral S
Community
Royal Land Amended
Community
Villas At Coral Springs
Community
Coral Springs Sub No 1
Community
Cypress Trace Condo
Community
Kensington
Community
Pine Ridge
Waterfront Community
Citation Way Condo
Community
Coral Springs Country Clu
Community
Coral Springs Lakes
Waterfront Community
Coral Springs Tower Club
Community
Country Club Tower Of Coral
Community
Cypress Pointe At Coral Springs
Gated Community
Forest Hills South
Community
Maplewood
Waterfront Community
Browse by Zip Code in Coral Springs
About Coral Springs Real Estate
Browse Coral Springs homes for sale across every neighborhood and price point in Broward. Available homes span single-family, townhome, and condo segments throughout the city. Coral Springs includes gated golf communities, 55+ active adult neighborhoods, waterfront estates, and newer master-planned subdivisions. HOA fees vary by community type, from modest maintenance fees in non-gated subdivisions to higher dues in full-amenity country clubs. The city sits within Broward, offering access to South Florida beaches, major employment centers, and healthcare hubs. For current Broward market data, see Florida Realtors' monthly statistics. Browse the latest Coral Springs listings below. Then connect with a Pure Equity Realty agent to schedule a private showing.
Coral Springs offers a range of housing options across Broward County. Pure Equity Realty lists homes in Coral Springs for 1% commission and represents buyers at no cost.
There are 606 active listings for sale in Coral Springs right now. The median list price is $300,000, or about $256 per square foot. Listings span $80,000 to $14,950,000, so there is inventory across most budgets. Homes are averaging 101 days on market. These figures update from the MLS as the market moves.
Coral Springs is a master-planned northwest Broward city known for orderly development, strong schools, and a family-oriented housing market. The city was built largely from the 1970s onward under strict planning and architectural standards, which gives its neighborhoods a consistent, well-kept character. Single-family homes dominate, ranging from modest three-bedroom houses to larger pool homes and executive properties in gated communities, and a substantial supply of townhomes and condos provides entry-level and move-down options. Many homes back onto the lakes and canals that thread through the city, and a lakefront or canal-front lot carries a premium even though there is no ocean access. New construction is limited because the city is essentially built out, so the market is overwhelmingly resale, and buyers often factor in updates to homes from the 1980s and 1990s. The 55-plus segment exists but is secondary to the family demand that defines Coral Springs.
Coral Springs is organized into numerous named communities, and buyers shop by them. Eagle Trace and Heron Bay (the latter straddling the Parkland line) are among the upper-tier gated golf communities, offering larger homes, country-club amenities, and higher price points. The Cypress Run, Maplewood, Ramblewood, and Coral Springs Country Club areas provide established single-family neighborhoods, some around golf, at a range of prices. Whispering Woods, Forest Hills, and the communities along Riverside Drive and Wiles Road give families a wide selection of conventional homes. Townhome and condo communities cluster near University Drive and Sample Road for buyers seeking lower-maintenance options. The city's tidy aesthetic comes partly from active HOAs and strict code enforcement, so buyers should expect community design rules and confirm fee structures, which vary from modest in older neighborhoods to substantial in the gated golf communities. Knowing whether a home is in a gated club community, a standard HOA neighborhood, or an older non-HOA pocket is essential to understanding its value.
Lifestyle in Coral Springs is family-centered, with parks, sports, and schools at its core. The city is widely recognized for its parks system, athletic programs, the Coral Springs Center for the Arts, and a strong slate of community events, and its public schools are a major driver of demand from families relocating within and into Broward. Day-to-day shopping and dining concentrate along University Drive and at the Coral Square mall area, and the Sawgrass Expressway gives residents fast access to the rest of the county, the airport, and the beaches farther east, though Coral Springs itself is an inland city without a beach. For buyers, the practical considerations center on the age of the housing stock and Florida's insurance climate: 1980s and 1990s homes may need roof, window, and system updates that affect insurability and premiums, and flood zone status should be checked, particularly near the canals and lakes. Pure Equity helps families target the right Coral Springs community for their school and budget priorities, and assess which homes carry deferred maintenance versus turnkey value.
Coral Springs Market Stats
Live MLSCoral Springs at a Glance
Frequently Asked Questions
Buying in Coral Springs
The buying process in Coral Springs is the one used across Broward County. Getting a mortgage pre-approval first tells you your real budget and lets you move quickly when the right home comes up. Property taxes factor into the monthly payment: the median annual property tax in Broward County is about $3,610. Florida's homestead exemption lowers the taxable value of a primary residence, and the Save Our Homes cap limits how fast that assessed value can rise from year to year. Budget for homeowners insurance as well. Rates in Florida reflect wind and flood exposure, so gather quotes early and check whether a specific address sits in a FEMA flood zone. Once you are under contract, plan for a home inspection and, if you are financing, a lender appraisal, both of which fall inside the inspection period. Working with an agent who knows Coral Springs means you see new listings here the day they reach the market.
Selling in Coral Springs
Selling a home in Coral Springs starts with pricing it correctly for current conditions. List prices in Coral Springs currently center around $300,000, which is a starting reference for where a comparable home might be positioned. Homes that are decluttered, professionally photographed, and priced to recent comparable sales tend to draw the most interest in the first two weeks, when a listing is newest and gets the most views. Florida sellers usually pay the documentary stamp tax on the deed, currently $0.70 per $100 of the sale price in most counties, along with prorated property taxes and, by local custom in many areas, the owner's title insurance policy. We provide a no-obligation home valuation for Coral Springs owners, so you can see what your property could sell for before you commit to listing.
More Broward County Cities
Related Reading
Home Buying Tips · July 15, 2026
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.
Home Selling Tips · June 22, 2026
Selling in Coral Springs? Compare cash buyer options, iBuyer programs, and a traditional listing to see which path puts the most money in your pocket.