# Downtown St. Pete Condo vs. Single-Family Home in 2026

> Condo or single-family home in downtown St. Pete in 2026? Luke Salm breaks down prices, HOA fees, flood risk, and resale math for both property types.

**Canonical URL**: https://stpetehomeguide.com/questions/downtown-st-pete-condo-vs-single-family-2026
**Author**: Luke Salm
**Published**: 2026-06-24
**Updated**: 2026-06-24
**Intent**: buyer
**Keywords**: downtown st pete condo vs single family 2026, st pete condo market 2026, buying condo st petersburg, single family home downtown st pete, pinellas county condo vs house, st pete real estate 2026, condo hoa fees st petersburg


Choosing between a downtown St. Pete condo and a single-family home in 2026 comes down to three variables: your tolerance for HOA risk (especially special assessments), your long-term equity goals, and your flood insurance exposure. In a normal market those factors balance each other out — in the current post-Helene, post-Milestone-Inspection environment, single-family homes have a measurable edge for most buyers, though condos still make sense in specific situations.

Here's the full breakdown.

## The Price Gap Is Wider Than It Looks

On the surface, condos look cheaper. According to Stellar MLS data through Q2 2026, the median sale price for a condo in the 33701 ZIP code (downtown St. Pete) sits around **$425,000**, while a single-family home in the same ZIP runs a **median of $580,000**. That $155,000 gap sounds decisive.

But the total monthly cost picture is different:

| Cost Category | Downtown Condo (median) | Single-Family (nearby) |
|---|---|---|
| Median purchase price | $425,000 | $540,000 |
| Estimated PITI (7.1% rate, 20% down) | ~$2,900/mo | ~$3,680/mo |
| Typical HOA / month | $650 | $0–$150 |
| Flood insurance / month | $50–$150 (HO-6 rider) | $250–$500 (own policy) |
| **Estimated all-in monthly** | **~$3,600–$3,700** | **~$3,930–$4,330** |

*Note: Single-family estimates use the 33704 (Old Northeast / Shore Acres perimeter) median, which runs slightly below the 33701 core. Rates and insurance figures reflect Q2 2026 market conditions.*

The gap narrows significantly once HOA dues enter the picture. And it swings hard against the condo if the building carries a special assessment or has underfunded reserves.

## The Milestone Inspection Law Is Reshaping the Condo Market

This is the biggest story in Pinellas County condo real estate right now, and it's not going away.

Florida's Structural Integrity Reserve Study (SIRS) and Milestone Inspection requirements — accelerated by the 2021 Surfside collapse — have put enormous financial pressure on older downtown condo towers. Buildings three stories or taller, 30 years or older must complete Phase 1 structural inspections. If issues are flagged, Phase 2 kicks in and repairs must be funded.

What this means for buyers in 2026:

- **Pre-1995 towers** along Beach Drive, 4th Street N, and the Central Avenue corridor are most exposed. Several buildings have already issued special assessments ranging from **$15,000 to $40,000 per unit**.
- **Post-2005 buildings** (like those near the Pier District and newer construction near Tropicana Field's redevelopment zone) are in better shape structurally and have more current reserve studies.
- A condo's **reserve funding percentage** matters enormously. Florida law now requires associations to be fully funded by 2025 — but enforcement varies. Ask your agent to pull the most recent reserve study and meeting minutes before making any offer.

I always request the last 12 months of HOA board minutes for my condo buyers. You can find out more about a building's financial health in those minutes than anywhere else. Per the [Pinellas County condo market mid-2026 update](/questions/pinellas-county-condo-market-mid-2026), inventory is up roughly 22% YoY for condo units under $500K in Pinellas — in large part because owners are listing ahead of looming assessments.

## Flood Risk: It's More Nuanced Than You Think

Post-Hurricane Helene (September 2024), flood insurance costs and underwriting behavior changed across the Bay. Here's how that plays out differently for condos vs. single-family:

**Condos:** Most high-rise towers downtown are at elevation — floors 4 and up have essentially zero direct flood risk from storm surge. The building's master policy covers the structure. Unit owners need an **HO-6 policy** (covering interior improvements and personal property) and may add a flood rider, typically **$600–$1,800/year** for a unit. However, if the building itself sits in an AE zone and the master flood policy premiums spike, those costs get baked into your monthly HOA dues — often invisibly.

**Single-family:** A bungalow or craftsman in the Old Northeast on a low-lying block, or anything near the waterfront edges of downtown 33701, can carry **$3,500 to $6,000 per year in flood insurance** under NFIP Risk Rating 2.0. Some blocks in the 33704 and 33705 ZIPs around the Booker Creek drainage basin sit in AE zones that genuinely need coverage. A few blocks north or higher in elevation, and you may be in Zone X — no mandatory flood insurance, dramatically lower optional premiums.

For single-family buyers, I always pull the elevation certificate before we run numbers. It's the single document that can swing your annual cost by $3,000 or more. See our [flood insurance cost guide for St. Petersburg](/questions/flood-insurance-cost-st-petersburg) for the full breakdown.

## Appreciation: Single-Family Has the Edge in 2026

Per Stellar MLS and Pinellas County Property Appraiser records, single-family home values in the 33701, 33703, and 33704 ZIP codes are up roughly **3.2% YoY** as of Q2 2026. Condos in the same geography are up **0.4% YoY** on average — and that average masks a two-tier market: newer luxury units holding value, older mid-tier inventory declining 3–8%.

Why the gap?

1. **Supply dynamics.** Condo inventory in Pinellas is up 22% YoY; single-family inventory is up a more modest 9%. More supply = more pricing pressure.
2. **Buyer hesitation around assessments.** Informed buyers are discounting older condo buildings, and that discount is showing up in sale prices.
3. **Insurance costs.** For buildings where the master flood policy has repriced post-Helene, the monthly cost of ownership has risen enough to suppress what buyers will pay.

Single-family homes in walkable areas just north and east of downtown — the [Old Northeast](/neighborhoods/old-northeast) bungalows on coffee-table streets like Snell Isle Boulevard, or the Craftsmans in [Historic Kenwood](/neighborhoods/historic-kenwood) off 22nd Street N — have held value better than almost any other property segment in St. Pete this cycle.

## When a Condo Still Makes Sense

I don't want to oversell the single-family angle here. Condos are the right call in specific situations:

- **You want the downtown walkability with zero yard maintenance.** If you're going to walk to Locale Market, MEI restaurant on Central Avenue, the St. Pete Pier, or catch a Rays game, a condo at the right building puts you in the middle of all of it.
- **The building is post-2005 with documented healthy reserves.** Newer towers near the Pier District or the emerging Tropicana Field redevelopment zone carry dramatically less Milestone risk.
- **You're buying primarily for personal use, not as an investment.** The lifestyle premium is real. If the math works and you plan to stay 5+ years, a well-chosen condo in a sound building delivers.
- **Your budget is firm around $350K–$450K.** In that range, the condo inventory in downtown 33701 is deeper than single-family options, though you'll want to be selective about the building.

Key due diligence for any condo purchase in 2026:
1. Request the Milestone Inspection report (Phase 1 and Phase 2 if triggered)
2. Pull the current reserve study — look for funding percentage above 80%
3. Review 12 months of board meeting minutes
4. Confirm STR policy if rental income is part of your plan (see [St. Pete Airbnb rules](/questions/st-pete-airbnb-rules-and-regulations))
5. Verify master flood policy coverage limits and last renewal premium

## The Bottom Line: How to Choose

**Buy a condo if:** You want walkable downtown living, the building is post-2000 with healthy reserves, your all-in monthly (PITI + HOA + insurance) fits your budget, and you're comfortable with shared governance.

**Buy single-family if:** You want cleaner long-term equity, no special assessment risk, more control over your property, and you're willing to be 5–15 minutes from downtown's core. The Old Northeast and Historic Kenwood give you most of the St. Pete lifestyle at a better risk-adjusted price point.

**Neither is wrong.** What's wrong is buying a condo without pulling the reserve study, or buying a single-family home in an AE flood zone without pricing out the insurance first.

---

If you want a real MLS-based valuation — whether you're looking at a specific condo building, comparing it to single-family comps in the 33701 or 33704, or just trying to understand what your current property is worth before you make a move — [drop me your address and I'll text you 3 real comps within 24 hours](/contact). Free, no pressure, no algorithm.

## Frequently asked questions

**Q: Are condos or single-family homes appreciating faster in St. Pete in 2026?**

Single-family homes in the 33701 and 33704 ZIP codes are outpacing condo appreciation in 2026, averaging roughly 3.2% YoY price growth versus near-flat or slightly negative for mid-tier condo towers downtown, according to Stellar MLS data through Q2 2026. The post-Helene insurance correction and Florida's Milestone Inspection Law have compressed condo values, especially in buildings completed before 1990.

**Q: What are typical HOA fees for downtown St. Pete condos in 2026?**

HOA fees for downtown St. Pete condos range from roughly $450 to $1,200 per month depending on the building's age, amenity package, and reserve fund status. Older buildings facing Milestone Inspection requirements are passing special assessments on top of regular dues — some owners in pre-2000 towers have received one-time assessments of $15,000 to $40,000 in 2025–2026.

**Q: Is flood insurance cheaper for a downtown St. Pete condo vs. a single-family home?**

It depends on the building's elevation and FEMA flood zone designation. Most high-rise condo towers downtown sit in AE or X zones, and the master policy often covers flood for the structure — but unit owners still need contents coverage and sometimes HO-6 flood riders. A single-family bungalow in a low-elevation AE zone near downtown can run $3,500–$6,000 per year for flood insurance, while a condo unit's individual flood exposure is typically lower if the building's master policy is comprehensive.

**Q: What does the Florida Milestone Inspection Law mean for condo buyers in St. Pete?**

Florida's Milestone Inspection Law, passed after the Surfside collapse and effective statewide, requires structural inspections for condo buildings three stories or taller that are 30 years old or older. If an engineer finds substantial structural deterioration, the building must complete Phase 2 inspections and fund repairs — costs that flow back to unit owners via special assessments. Any downtown St. Pete condo buyer should request the building's most recent Milestone Inspection report and current reserve study before making an offer.

**Q: Can I rent out a downtown St. Pete condo short-term on Airbnb?**

Most downtown St. Pete condo associations restrict or outright prohibit short-term rentals under 30 days. Pinellas County and the City of St. Petersburg also layer on their own STR licensing requirements. Always review the condo's Declaration of Condominium and the city's STR ordinance before buying with rental income in mind — see our guide to St. Pete Airbnb rules for full detail.

**Q: Which property type is better for a first-time buyer in downtown St. Pete?**

For a first-time buyer prioritizing lower upfront cost and walkable downtown access, a condo can make sense if the building is post-2000, has healthy reserves, and has a fixed HOA under $600/month. For buyers who want a cleaner long-term cost picture, more control over the asset, and no special assessment risk, a single-family bungalow in the Old Northeast or Historic Kenwood — both walkable to downtown — is usually the stronger financial position in 2026.


---

*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.*
