# Shore Acres vs Snell Isle vs Old Northeast St. Pete

> Comparing Shore Acres, Snell Isle, and Old Northeast in St. Pete? Get real 2026 price data, flood risk, lifestyle, and neighborhood breakdowns from a local agent.

**Canonical URL**: https://stpetehomeguide.com/questions/shore-acres-vs-snell-isle-vs-old-northeast-st-pete
**Author**: Luke Salm
**Published**: 2026-06-26
**Updated**: 2026-06-26
**Intent**: buyer
**Keywords**: Shore Acres vs Snell Isle vs Old Northeast, best St. Pete neighborhood 2026, St. Petersburg neighborhood comparison, Snell Isle real estate, Shore Acres flood zone, Old Northeast St. Pete homes, buy a home in St. Petersburg, St. Pete waterfront neighborhoods


Shore Acres, Snell Isle, and Old Northeast are three of St. Pete's most sought-after residential neighborhoods — all within a 3-mile radius of downtown, all on or near Tampa Bay, and all priced well above the city median. The short answer: Snell Isle is the luxury waterfront play, Old Northeast is the historic walkable gem, and Shore Acres is the boater-friendly middle ground that carries meaningful flood risk you have to underwrite carefully.

Here's the full breakdown, with 2026 pricing, flood exposure, school context, and lifestyle trade-offs — so you can figure out which one actually fits your life.

## How These Three Neighborhoods Stack Up at a Glance

| | Shore Acres | Snell Isle | Old Northeast |
|---|---|---|---|
| ZIP Code | 33703 | 33703 | 33704 |
| Median Home Price (mid-2026) | ~$560,000 | ~$1,050,000 | ~$710,000 |
| Flood Zone Exposure | High (mostly AE) | Moderate–High (AE/X) | Low–Moderate (X/AE fringe) |
| Avg. Flood Insurance | $3,500–$6,000/yr | $4,000–$8,000/yr | $800–$2,500/yr |
| Private Boat Docks | Common | Common | Rare |
| Walkability | Moderate | Low | High |
| HOA | None (most) | None (most) | None |
| Primary Architecture | Ranch, CBS, 1960s–80s | Custom, Mediterranean, estate | Craftsman, bungalow, Mediterranean revival |

Data reflects Stellar MLS sales and Pinellas County Property Appraiser records through Q2 2026.

## Shore Acres: The Canal Neighborhood with Real Flood Math

Shore Acres is a grid of streets running off 54th Avenue NE, northeast of downtown St. Pete — the kind of neighborhood where half the driveways have a boat trailer and kids are fishing off backyard docks before dinner. It's legitimately charming, and it's genuinely affordable relative to Snell Isle for what you get: 3-bedroom CBS homes on canal lots routinely trade in the $490,000–$650,000 range.

But you have to do the flood math before you fall in love with a specific address.

A large portion of Shore Acres sits in FEMA Flood Zone AE, and Hurricane Helene's 2024 storm surge hit parts of the neighborhood hard. Post-Helene, the private flood insurance market tightened significantly in Pinellas County, and NFIP premiums are not the cap they once were. On a non-elevated home with a finished ground floor, I've seen quotes come back at $6,000–$9,000 annually. On a home elevated to or above base flood elevation (BFE) with a clean elevation certificate, that same property might run $1,800–$3,500. The elevation certificate is everything — don't skip it.

If flood resilience and dock access are both on your list, focus your Shore Acres search on homes built post-1978 on elevated foundations or homes that have been raised. The rec center on Shore Acres Boulevard, the neighborhood's own elementary school, and the easy shot to 4th Street N for coffee and groceries make daily life genuinely comfortable here.

→ See also: [Is Shore Acres in a Flood Zone?](/questions/is-shore-acres-in-a-flood-zone) and [Shore Acres St. Pete Neighborhood Guide](/questions/shore-acres-st-pete-neighborhood-guide)

## Snell Isle: St. Pete's Prestige Address

Snell Isle sits on a man-made peninsula between Coffee Pot Bayou and Tampa Bay, connected to the mainland via the Snell Isle Bridge on 4th Avenue NE. It was developed in the 1920s as a planned residential community — the Vinoy Resort's original footprint was part of that same era — and the bones show: wide curving streets, mature royal palms lining Snell Isle Boulevard, and estate lots that are simply not reproducible anywhere else in the city.

Price-per-square-foot here is the highest of the three neighborhoods. Waterfront sales regularly clear $1.5M–$3M. Non-waterfront interior lots — still on a peninsula, still prestige address — transact in the $800,000–$1.2M range per Stellar MLS Q2 2026 data. These are large custom homes, Mediterranean and contemporary builds, with 3,000–5,000 sq ft common.

The flood exposure is real but more manageable than Shore Acres because a higher proportion of Snell Isle homes were built or renovated to modern standards, with elevated slabs and proper flood openings. Still, waterfront and canal-front properties will carry $4,000–$8,000+ annually in flood insurance, and the post-Helene environment means private carriers are pricing Florida coastal risk aggressively. Factor that into your debt-to-income calculations.

Lifestyle on Snell Isle is quiet and residential — there's no walkable commercial strip. You drive to Trader Joe's on 4th Street N, you drive downtown (5 minutes), you drive to Whole Foods on Central Avenue. If you want a neighborhood where you can walk to a coffee shop, Snell Isle isn't it. If you want the most prestigious address on the peninsula, sweeping bay views, and a private dock for your center console, nothing in St. Pete touches it.

→ [Is Snell Isle Worth It?](/questions/is-snell-isle-worth-it) goes deeper on the value proposition.

## Old Northeast: Walkability, History, and the Best Bones in St. Pete

Old Northeast is where St. Pete's original character lives. Roughly bounded by 1st Avenue NE to the south, 30th Avenue NE to the north, Tampa Bay to the east, and 4th Street N to the west, it's a genuine walkable historic district — think brick streets on some blocks, 1920s craftsman bungalows, Mediterranean revival homes, and Spanish-moss-draped oaks over wide sidewalks. North Shore Park and its athletic fields anchor the waterfront, and Coffee Pot Bayou runs along the southern edge.

Flood exposure in Old Northeast is lower than the other two. Much of the neighborhood is in FEMA Flood Zone X (minimal hazard), though bayou-adjacent and low-lying blocks do carry AE designations. Per Pinellas County Property Appraiser records, the interior streets see average flood insurance costs in the $800–$2,000/year range — a meaningful difference from Shore Acres or Snell Isle.

Pricing reflects the demand: the median sale in 33704 (Old Northeast's primary ZIP) ran approximately $710,000 in Q2 2026, per Stellar MLS. You'll find well-restored 3/2 bungalows trading in the $625,000–$800,000 range, and fully renovated larger homes or bayfront properties pushing past $1.2M. The historic designation matters — if you want to do significant exterior changes, you'll interface with the city's historic preservation process, which can slow timelines.

What you get in return is irreplaceable: walkable to the Saturday Morning Market, 15 minutes on foot to the St. Pete Pier, close to 4th Street's restaurant corridor, and a neighborhood that feels like a real community in a way that purely residential enclaves sometimes don't. Young families, remote workers, retirees, and longtime St. Pete residents all coexist here. The public school feeder pattern runs through North Shore Elementary — one of the stronger elementary schools in the city per Florida Department of Education 2025–26 school grades.

→ Related: [Old Northeast St. Pete Neighborhood Guide](/questions/old-northeast-st-pete-neighborhood-guide) and [Best St. Pete Neighborhood for Families](/questions/best-st-pete-neighborhood-for-families)

## Flood Insurance Is the Variable That Changes Everything

This is the comparison most buyers underestimate. The gap in annual flood insurance costs between a non-elevated Shore Acres ranch and a Zone X Old Northeast bungalow can be $5,000–$7,000 per year. Over a 10-year hold, that's $50,000–$70,000 in additional carrying cost — on top of your mortgage, taxes, and insurance.

Post-Hurricane Helene, that math has gotten more brutal. Private carriers pulled back from Pinellas County coastal coverage in late 2024 and early 2025. NFIP (National Flood Insurance Program) rates are risk-adjusted now under Risk Rating 2.0, meaning legacy low-rated policies no longer transfer to buyers on the same terms they were written. I've had buyers in Shore Acres receive flood insurance quotes that were 40% higher than what the seller had been paying — because the seller's policy predated Risk Rating 2.0 phase-in.

Before making an offer in any of these three neighborhoods, get a flood insurance quote in your name. Pull an elevation certificate if the property doesn't have one. And look up the address in FEMA's Flood Map Service Center — the specific flood zone designation for a given parcel can differ from the neighborhood average.

→ [Flood Insurance Cost in St. Pete and Pinellas County](/questions/flood-insurance-cost-st-pete-pinellas-county) has the full breakdown.

## Which Neighborhood Should You Choose?

There's no universal answer, but here's how I frame it for buyers I work with:

**Choose Shore Acres if:** you want a boat dock, a neighborhood feel, and you're comfortable with flood risk you've properly underwritten. Budget $500,000–$700,000 and price in $5,000–$7,000/year for flood insurance on a non-elevated home.

**Choose Snell Isle if:** you want the highest-prestige St. Pete address, you have budget above $900,000, and you want waterfront or near-waterfront living with estate-scale homes. The flood costs are real but manageable on properly-built homes.

**Choose Old Northeast if:** walkability, historic character, and lower flood exposure matter most. You want to be able to walk to the Pier and the Saturday Morning Market, you love original architecture, and you're buying in the $600,000–$1.1M range.

All three are strong long-term markets. St. Petersburg home prices are up approximately 3.2% year-over-year as of Q2 2026, and all three neighborhoods outperform the citywide average in terms of days on market — well-priced homes here still move in under 30 days when they're priced right.

## Get a Real Valuation for the Specific Address You're Considering

Zillow's Zestimate carries a 7–12% error rate in Pinellas County — and that error rate balloons on waterfront, historic, and flood-zone properties. The algorithm doesn't know whether a Shore Acres home has an elevation certificate, whether a Snell Isle property was renovated post-2015, or whether an Old Northeast bungalow has original heart pine floors versus a flipped-and-flipped-again interior.

If you're seriously considering a specific address in Shore Acres, Snell Isle, or Old Northeast, drop it to me and I'll pull 3 real MLS comps within 24 hours — free, no pressure. Real comps from a local agent who's walked these neighborhoods, not a national algorithm that's never been to St. Pete.

[Request your free home valuation →](/contact)

## Frequently asked questions

**Q: Which neighborhood is most expensive — Shore Acres, Snell Isle, or Old Northeast?**

Snell Isle is the priciest of the three, with median sale prices running $900,000–$1.4M+ for waterfront homes as of mid-2026. Old Northeast follows at roughly $625,000–$850,000 for classic brick bungalows, and Shore Acres lands in the $480,000–$700,000 range depending heavily on flood elevation and canal access.

**Q: Does Shore Acres flood?**

Yes — a significant portion of Shore Acres sits in FEMA Flood Zone AE, and parts of the neighborhood experienced flooding during Hurricane Helene in 2024. Flood insurance is essentially mandatory and averages $3,500–$6,000+ annually on properties without significant elevation. Elevation certificates are critical before making an offer here.

**Q: Is Snell Isle in a flood zone?**

Snell Isle is predominantly in FEMA Flood Zone AE, though some interior lots are Zone X (minimal risk). Waterfront and canal-front parcels carry meaningful flood insurance costs — typically $4,000–$8,000 annually — which buyers should factor into their carrying costs when underwriting any Snell Isle purchase.

**Q: Which St. Pete neighborhood is best for families?**

Old Northeast and Shore Acres both have strong family profiles. Shore Acres has Shore Acres Elementary, good sidewalks, and a rec center feel. Old Northeast offers walkability to North Shore Athletic Fields and a quiet tree-lined streetscape. Snell Isle is quieter and more estate-style — great for families who want space, but less walkable to daily amenities.

**Q: Can I get a boat dock in all three neighborhoods?**

Shore Acres and Snell Isle both have canal-front and open-bay properties with private docks — these are legitimately boater-friendly neighborhoods. Old Northeast sits on Tampa Bay along Coffee Pot Bayou but has far fewer properties with private docking; most water access is via North Shore Park's public waterfront. If a dock is non-negotiable, Shore Acres and Snell Isle are your hunting grounds.

**Q: How accurate is Zillow for these three neighborhoods?**

Not very. Zillow's Zestimate carries a 7–12% error rate in Pinellas County according to Zillow's own data disclosure, and that error compounds dramatically for waterfront, historic, and flood-zone properties — all of which describe large portions of these three neighborhoods. A local agent pulling actual MLS comps is the only reliable way to value a specific address here.


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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.*
