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Palm Beach County · Florida
Delray Beach blends a vibrant downtown arts scene with beautiful beaches and top-ranked schools. Atlantic Avenue is lined with restaurants and boutiques, while western communities offer luxury golf estates and active adult living.
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Communities in Delray Beach
Kings Point
55+ Community
Delray Villas
55+ Community
Huntington Pointe
55+ Community
Pines Of Delray Condo
55+ Community
Villages Of Oriole Bonaire
55+ Community
Palm Greens At Villa Del Ray Condo Ii
55+ Community
Pines Of Delray North Condo
55+ Community
High Point Of Delray West Condo Sec 1&2
55+ Community
Boca Delray I-Iii Condo S Filed In Or3857p483,4
55+ Community
Lavers Delray Racquet Club Condo
Community
Lakes Of Delray
55+ Community
Murano At Delray Beach Condo
Waterfront Community
Villages Of Oriole Abbey Condo
55+ Community
High Point Of Delray West
55+ Community
Huntington Lakes Sec One Condos
55+ Community
Snow Hill
Community
Villages Of Oriole Deauville Condo
55+ Community
Vizcaya
Community
Bahia At Delray Condo
Waterfront Community
Bridgeview Condo
55+ Community
Huntington Lakes
55+ Community
Sabal Pine Condo
55+ Community
Dell Park
Luxury Enclave
Delray Oaks Condo
Waterfront Community
Browse by Zip Code in Delray Beach
About Delray Beach Real Estate
Delray Beach homes for sale run from $225K downtown condos to $10,000,000+ oceanfront estates. Atlantic Avenue condos start at $225K; oceanfront estates on the barrier island start at $2,500,000. Tropic Isle and Rainberry Bay sit in the $400K–$700K range. Valencia Cove and Saturnia Isles, west of Lyons Road, make up about 35% of resale volume. Atlantic Avenue itself is three blocks from the beach. The city has won the All-America City award three times. Delray Beach covers 16 square miles, with Boynton Beach to the north and Boca Raton directly south.
Delray Beach offers a range of housing options across Palm Beach County. Pure Equity Realty lists homes in Delray Beach for 1% commission and represents buyers at no cost.
There are 1,471 active listings for sale in Delray Beach right now. The median list price is $274,900, or about $234 per square foot. Listings span $25,000 to $85,000,000, so there is inventory across most budgets. Homes are averaging 99 days on market. These figures update from the MLS as the market moves.
Delray Beach real estate pairs a walkable, characterful downtown with a deep mix of housing that runs from historic cottages to oceanfront estates. The city is known for Atlantic Avenue, a lively dining and gallery corridor that gives downtown a village feel rare in South Florida, and the surrounding neighborhoods hold everything from 1920s bungalows to new luxury construction. East of the Intracoastal, the beachfront and the streets near the ocean hold the priciest single-family homes and condos, while the central historic districts offer charming smaller homes close to the action. Gated golf and country-club communities spread through the west, and large 55-plus developments make Delray a long-standing retirement destination. Entry-level buyers find condos and villas in the older communities and West Delray outside the city limits, and new construction includes downtown townhomes and teardown-rebuild moderns near the beach. The market draws second-home buyers, retirees, and professionals who want a downtown lifestyle without a high-rise.
The neighborhoods give Delray its texture. Downtown along Atlantic Avenue, including Pineapple Grove and the area around Old School Square, is the cultural and dining heart, walkable to the beach. The historic districts of Marina, Old School Square, and Del-Ida Park hold protected early-century homes on tree-lined streets. East of the Intracoastal, beachside neighborhoods and the area near the Seagate hold luxury homes and oceanfront condos. To the west, the gated communities of Mizner Country Club, the Polo Club, Addison Reserve, and Delaire offer country-club living, while the large active-adult developments of Kings Point and the Villages of Oriole anchor the 55-plus market. Lake Ida and the neighborhoods around the lake provide sought-after single-family homes near downtown, and West Delray adds more attainable family and retirement communities outside the municipal limits.
Buyers in Delray Beach should weigh several practical realities. Country-club communities west of town often carry mandatory memberships and significant dues on top of HOA fees and taxes, so total carrying costs deserve close review. Eastern beachfront and Intracoastal properties sit in flood zones requiring insurance and elevation certificates, while the western communities are generally drier but may include CDD or club obligations. Windstorm premiums and roof age affect costs across the city, and historic-district homes carry preservation oversight on exterior changes. The location is convenient, with I-95 and the Turnpike nearby, a Tri-Rail station, and easy reach to both Palm Beach and Fort Lauderdale airports. Lifestyle is the headline: the beach, the walkable Atlantic Avenue dining and arts scene, the tennis center that hosts professional events, and parks and the Wakodahatchee wetlands nearby. Schools include solid public and private options. A local agent helps buyers balance downtown walkability, beachside luxury, and the western gated and active-adult communities.
Delray Beach Market Stats
Live MLSDelray Beach at a Glance
Frequently Asked Questions
Buying in Delray Beach
Buying in Delray Beach follows the same path as the rest of Palm Beach 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 Palm Beach County is about $3,600. 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 Delray Beach means you see new listings here the day they reach the market.
Selling in Delray Beach
A successful sale in Delray Beach comes down to pricing, presentation, and marketing. List prices in Delray Beach currently center around $274,900, 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 Delray Beach owners, so you can see what your property could sell for before you commit to listing.
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Related Reading
Home Buying Tips · July 2, 2026
Is Delray Beach a good place to live? This walkable, arts-driven beach town transformed itself from a sleepy stretch of coast into one of Palm Beach County's most desirable addresses. Here is the honest look at cost and lifestyle.
Home Selling Tips · June 22, 2026
Need to sell your Delray Beach home fast? Cash buyers are active across the city, from Atlantic Avenue bungalows to west-side gated communities, and many can close in about a week.