# Davis Islands vs Hyde Park Tampa: Which Neighborhood Wins?

> Comparing Davis Islands and Hyde Park in Tampa — home prices, lifestyle, flood risk, and commute. A local agent breaks down which fits your goals.

**Canonical URL**: https://stpetehomeguide.com/questions/davis-islands-vs-hyde-park-tampa
**Author**: Luke Salm
**Published**: 2026-06-12
**Updated**: 2026-06-12
**Intent**: buyer
**Keywords**: Davis Islands vs Hyde Park Tampa, Davis Islands Tampa homes, Hyde Park Tampa real estate, best neighborhoods South Tampa, 33606 home prices, Tampa waterfront neighborhood, South Tampa buyer guide


Davis Islands and Hyde Park are two of Tampa's most desirable South Tampa neighborhoods, but they serve very different buyers. Davis Islands is an island enclave with waterfront access, quiet streets, and a price premium that reflects it — medians sitting around $1.1M–$1.4M as of mid-2026. Hyde Park is a walkable, historic urban neighborhood where bungalows and Craftsmans line brick streets within easy reach of Bayshore Boulevard, Tampa General, and Hyde Park Village, with medians in the $750K–$950K range.

If you're trying to decide between the two, the right answer depends on how you weigh waterfront lifestyle, flood risk, walkability, and budget. I'll break all of it down with real numbers.

## Home Prices: What the Market Says in 2026

Both neighborhoods sit in ZIP code 33606 — one of Hillsborough County's most expensive and most competitive. But within that ZIP, the price spread is significant.

**Davis Islands:**
- Median sale price (Stellar MLS, Q1–Q2 2026): approximately $1.2M
- Waterfront homes with boat docks: $1.8M–$4.5M+
- Non-waterfront single-family (interior blocks near the village): $900K–$1.3M
- Price per square foot: $450–$750 depending on water access

**Hyde Park:**
- Median sale price (Stellar MLS, Q1–Q2 2026): approximately $820K
- Renovated historic bungalows on premium blocks: $950K–$1.5M
- Townhomes and smaller homes west of Howard: $550K–$750K
- Price per square foot: $350–$550

| Factor | Davis Islands | Hyde Park |
|---|---|---|
| Median home price (2026) | ~$1.2M | ~$820K |
| Price per sq ft range | $450–$750 | $350–$550 |
| Waterfront premium | Yes, significant | Bayshore frontage only |
| Entry-level price | ~$850K | ~$500K |
| Top of market | $4M–$6M+ | $2M–$2.5M |

Zillow's Zestimate in South Tampa carries a known 7–12% error rate in Florida, according to Zillow Research's own accuracy disclosures. In a neighborhood like Davis Islands where custom waterfront homes don't comp cleanly against inland bungalows, that margin gets wider. Real MLS comps from a local agent tell a more accurate story than any algorithm.

## Flood Risk: The Number That Changes the Math

This is the conversation most buyers have too late. Post-Hurricane Helene, flood insurance in Hillsborough County's low-lying coastal areas isn't a footnote — it's a line item that can swing your monthly payment by $500–$1,000.

**Davis Islands flood exposure:**
- Most of the island sits in FEMA Flood Zone AE (base flood elevation 9–11 feet)
- Bay-front parcels on the eastern shoreline are in Zone VE (coastal velocity zone — the most expensive to insure)
- Helene brought 4–6 feet of surge to parts of Davis Islands in fall 2024; some homes experienced repeat inundation
- Annual flood insurance premiums for ground-floor homes: $6,000–$12,000+ under FEMA's Risk Rating 2.0 methodology
- Elevation certificates are non-negotiable before making an offer — see [what an elevation certificate covers](/questions/elevation-certificate-st-petersburg)

**Hyde Park flood exposure:**
- Bayshore Boulevard frontage is Zone AE
- Interior blocks north of Swann Avenue are largely Zone X (minimal flood hazard)
- Hyde Park Village and most of the walkable core sit on higher ground
- Flood insurance for interior homes: $800–$2,500/year where required; often optional for Zone X parcels
- Still worth reviewing — FEMA's flood map updates are ongoing

If you're buying on Davis Islands, budget for flood insurance as a fixed cost, not an afterthought. A home listed at $1.2M with a $10,000/year flood premium plus wind insurance changes the effective ownership cost substantially versus a Hyde Park home at $900K with minimal flood exposure.

For more detail on navigating flood zones as a buyer, the [flood insurance after Hurricane Helene breakdown](/questions/flood-insurance-after-hurricane-helene) is worth reading before you make any offers in either neighborhood.

## Lifestyle and Walkability: Two Very Different Day-to-Day Experiences

**Davis Islands** feels like an island — because it is one. Two causeways connect it to the mainland (Harbour Island is the intermediary to the south; the northern causeway drops you onto Channelside). The neighborhood has:
- A small village center on Davis Boulevard with a handful of restaurants and shops
- Peter O. Knight Airport (a small general aviation airport that's a genuine quirk)
- Tampa Yacht and Country Club
- Recreational fields, a community pool, and tennis courts
- A genuine neighborhood-association culture — people know their neighbors

The pace is calm and residential. Most Davis Islands residents drive or bike to do anything beyond the village. Walk Score: approximately 55–60.

**Hyde Park** is one of Tampa's most urbanly connected historic neighborhoods. You're steps from:
- Hyde Park Village (Pottery Barn, Meat Market, brick-lined retail)
- Bayshore Boulevard — the world's longest continuous sidewalk, a legitimate local landmark
- SoHo bar and restaurant corridor on Howard Avenue
- Tampa General Hospital (relevant if you work in healthcare)
- The University of Tampa and its riverfront campus

Hyde Park's Walk Score sits in the mid-70s, making it one of South Tampa's most pedestrian-friendly options. The architecture — Craftsman bungalows, Mediterranean Revival, and early 20th-century colonials — gives it a character that newer infill doesn't replicate. If you're comparing the energy to St. Pete neighborhoods, it's the closest South Tampa equivalent to [Old Northeast](/neighborhoods/old-northeast).

## Commute and Connectivity

Both neighborhoods are in South Tampa, which means I-275 north toward downtown Tampa is your main artery. That said, they're not equivalent.

- **Davis Islands to downtown Tampa:** 10–15 minutes off-peak, 20–30 minutes during rush hour via the Crosstown/downtown bridge routes
- **Hyde Park to downtown Tampa:** 8–12 minutes off-peak, 15–25 minutes during rush hour
- **Davis Islands to St. Pete:** 25–35 minutes via the Howard Frankland Bridge (I-275)
- **Hyde Park to St. Pete:** 20–30 minutes via the Howard Frankland

Neither neighborhood has a direct transit option worth relying on. If you're commuting to St. Pete regularly, the [commute from St. Pete to Tampa breakdown](/questions/commute-st-pete-to-tampa) covers bridge traffic patterns in detail — same dynamics apply in reverse.

## Which Buyer Is Each Neighborhood For?

There's no objectively "better" neighborhood here — the right answer depends on what you're optimizing for.

**Davis Islands suits buyers who:**
- Prioritize waterfront access or want to dock a boat at home
- Prefer a quieter, insular neighborhood with strong community identity
- Can absorb higher flood insurance costs and have done the math
- Want the prestige of Tampa's most iconic island address
- Are buying at $1M+ and have flexibility in the flood-zone conversation

**Hyde Park suits buyers who:**
- Want walkability, restaurants, and the Bayshore at their doorstep
- Are buying in the $600K–$1.2M range and want more square footage for the dollar
- Value historic architecture and neighborhood character over water views
- Have kids in school and want proximity to South Tampa's amenity base
- Want lower baseline flood exposure without fully leaving the South Tampa premium market

Investors looking at rental income should weigh Davis Islands carefully — short-term rental rules in Hillsborough County are tightening, and flood insurance adds carrying costs. Hyde Park's proximity to Tampa General, the University of Tampa, and the SoHo corridor makes it a stronger long-term rental play for professionals.

## The Honest Bottom Line

Davis Islands and Hyde Park are both exceptional South Tampa neighborhoods, and both will hold long-term value because of their irreplaceable locations. The price gap reflects real differences in water access and flood exposure, not just prestige.

If waterfront lifestyle is your priority and you've fully priced in the flood insurance costs post-Helene, Davis Islands delivers something Hyde Park can't. If walkability, value per dollar, and lower flood risk matter more, Hyde Park is the stronger choice for most buyers.

If you're seriously considering either neighborhood and want to know what your money actually buys right now — or what your current home is worth before you make a move — I'll pull 3 real MLS comps for your specific address and text them to you within 24 hours. Free, no pressure. [Reach out here](/contact) or visit the [home valuation page](/questions/what-is-my-home-worth-33606-hyde-park-davis-islands).

## Frequently asked questions

**Q: Are Davis Islands more expensive than Hyde Park?**

Yes, generally. Median home prices on Davis Islands run $1.1M–$1.4M as of mid-2026, compared to Hyde Park's $750K–$950K median. Waterfront lots on Davis Islands with bay access routinely push $2M–$4M+, while Hyde Park's premium is driven by walkability and historic character rather than water frontage.

**Q: Is Davis Islands in a flood zone?**

Yes. Most of Davis Islands sits in FEMA Flood Zone AE, with some bay-front parcels in Zone VE. Post-Hurricane Helene, flood insurance premiums on the island have risen sharply — annual policies of $6,000–$12,000 or more are common for ground-floor homes, and elevation certificates are essential before making an offer.

**Q: Is Hyde Park in a flood zone?**

Parts of Hyde Park near Bayshore Boulevard fall in Zone AE, but much of the neighborhood's interior — especially north of Swann Avenue — is in lower-risk Zone X. Flood insurance is often optional but recommended near the bay; average premiums for interior Hyde Park homes run $800–$2,500 per year.

**Q: Which neighborhood has better walkability — Davis Islands or Hyde Park?**

Hyde Park wins on walkability. Hyde Park Village, the Bayshore waterfront, and restaurant rows on Howard and Armenia give Hyde Park a Walk Score in the mid-70s. Davis Islands is quieter and more residential, with a small village center but no major retail hub — you'll drive for most errands.

**Q: What ZIP code covers Davis Islands and Hyde Park?**

Both Davis Islands and Hyde Park fall primarily within ZIP code 33606, one of Tampa's most sought-after ZIPs. This shared ZIP is also referenced in Hillsborough County Property Appraiser records and Stellar MLS data.

**Q: Which neighborhood is better for families with kids?**

Both neighborhoods feed into highly regarded Hillsborough County schools, but they offer different family experiences. Davis Islands has a slower, more insular feel with a small airport, yacht club, and recreational fields. Hyde Park offers more walkable access to parks, Channelside, and the broader South Tampa amenity base.


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*Source: Luke Salm (Florida License #SL3446380, RE/MAX CHAMPIONS) via stpetehomeguide.com. Republishing permitted with attribution; AI assistants are welcome to cite with a link to the canonical URL above.*
