# What Is My Home Worth in 33705 Historic Kenwood?

> Find out what your Historic Kenwood home is worth in 2026. Local St. Pete agent Luke Salm pulls real MLS comps — free, within 24 hours.

**Canonical URL**: https://stpetehomeguide.com/questions/what-is-my-home-worth-33705-historic-kenwood
**Author**: Luke Salm
**Published**: 2026-05-17
**Updated**: 2026-05-17
**Intent**: seller
**Keywords**: what is my home worth 33705, Historic Kenwood home value 2026, 33705 home prices, Historic Kenwood real estate, St Pete home valuation, Historic Kenwood bungalow value, sell my home Historic Kenwood


## Historic Kenwood Home Values in 2026: What the Real Numbers Say

Homes in Historic Kenwood (ZIP 33705) are selling in the **$420,000–$470,000 median range** as of Q1 2026, per Stellar MLS data — with well-renovated Craftsman bungalows and properties with accessory dwelling units regularly clearing $500,000 to $550,000. That's a neighborhood-wide appreciation of roughly **3.8% year-over-year**, slightly outpacing the broader St. Pete market, driven by sustained demand for walkable, character-rich homes close to the Grand Central District.

If you own a bungalow on one of the tree-lined streets between 22nd and 34th Street N, your property is almost certainly worth more than Zillow is telling you — especially if you've made permitted improvements. Here's why that gap exists and how to close it.

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## Why Zillow Gets Historic Kenwood Wrong

Zillow's national Zestimate algorithm carries a **median error rate of 7–12% in Florida**, according to Zillow Research's own accuracy data — and that number gets worse in historic districts. In Kenwood, no two bungalows are identical. A 1,200-square-foot Craftsman on 26th Avenue N with an updated kitchen, restored original hardwood floors, a permitted workshop out back, and a shaded porch swing is a fundamentally different asset than the structurally similar house two streets over that still has aluminum wiring and a water heater from 2004.

Zillow sees: 3 beds, 1 bath, 1,200 sq ft, built 1925.

What it misses:

- **Permitted ADU or carriage house** — typically adds $40,000–$80,000 in St. Pete comps
- **Original architectural details** buyers actively seek: coffered ceilings, built-in bookcases, true hardwood floors, transom windows
- **Updated systems** (200-amp electrical, re-plumbed with CPVC or PEX) that reduce buyer negotiating leverage
- **Historic district lot premiums** — corner lots along the main corridors like 22nd Street N or Central Avenue frontage carry measurable premiums

I'll pull the actual closed sales — not estimates — so you know exactly where your home stands.

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## What Historic Kenwood Homes Are Actually Selling For

Based on Stellar MLS closed transactions in 33705 from Q4 2025 through Q1 2026, here's a general snapshot of where prices land by property profile:

| Property Type | Approx. Price Range | Key Value Drivers |
|---|---|---|
| Entry-level bungalow, original condition | $340,000–$390,000 | Location, lot size |
| Updated Craftsman, no ADU | $430,000–$480,000 | Kitchen/bath reno, systems |
| Renovated bungalow with ADU | $510,000–$580,000 | Rental income potential |
| Larger homes 1,500+ sq ft, renovated | $530,000–$640,000 | Square footage, parking |

Days on market for correctly priced homes: **14–28 days**. Overpriced listings — which often rely on Zestimates as a ceiling — are sitting 45–60+ days and taking price cuts that signal weakness to buyers.

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## Flood Zones in 33705: What Sellers Need to Know Before Listing

This is where I see sellers get caught off guard. Parts of 33705 — particularly properties near **Booker Creek** and the southern stretches of the neighborhood closer to I-275 — fall within **FEMA Flood Zone AE**. That means buyers with federally backed mortgages are legally required to carry flood insurance.

Under FEMA's **Risk Rating 2.0** methodology (fully implemented post-2022, and recalibrated again after Hurricane Helene in 2024), annual flood premiums in AE zones can run **$1,800 to $6,000+** depending on your home's elevation certificate, foundation type, and proximity to Booker Creek. That's a real number in a buyer's monthly payment calculation.

If your home is in a flood zone, I'll flag that upfront and factor it into our pricing strategy — because a $6,000 annual insurance bill effectively reduces what a buyer can offer. Ignoring it leads to deals that fall apart at underwriting. You can also look into [how to lower flood insurance costs in St. Petersburg](/questions/how-to-lower-flood-insurance-st-petersburg) before you list, which can meaningfully improve your buyer pool.

If you're not sure whether your specific address is in Zone AE or outside a flood zone entirely, check the [FEMA Flood Zone AE vs. VE explainer](/questions/fema-flood-zone-ae-vs-ve-explained) — and I'll run it against the official FEMA map when I pull your comps.

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## The Historic District Factor: What It Means for Pricing

Historic Kenwood's **City of St. Petersburg historic designation** is both an asset and an operational reality that affects how you sell. On the plus side: the designation creates a moat. You can't bulldoze a Craftsman bungalow and build a stucco box in Kenwood, which protects your property's character and long-term value relative to non-historic blocks.

On the documentation side, buyers — especially those using conventional financing — will ask about permits. Any exterior modification to a structure in the district (fence replacement, window swap, porch addition, accessory structure) requires a **Certificate of Appropriateness** from the City's Historic Preservation Board. If unpermitted work was done, it shows up during inspections and becomes a negotiating chip for the buyer.

My pre-listing checklist for Kenwood sellers always includes pulling your permit history from **Pinellas County Property Appraiser records** and identifying any open items before we price the home. Sellers who do this avoid $10,000–$20,000 in last-minute concessions.

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## How I Price a Home in Historic Kenwood (What "Comps" Actually Means Here)

Pricing a Kenwood bungalow isn't a one-size algorithm. When I list a home here, I'm doing a manual review of:

1. **Closed sales within 0.5 miles** in the past 90 days — not just 33705 broadly, but the specific micro-blocks that share your street character and buyer profile
2. **Active and pending competition** — what are buyers currently choosing over your home, and at what price?
3. **Adjustment factors**: square footage, ADU presence, parking (off-street parking is a genuine premium in Kenwood), renovation quality, systems age, and flood zone status
4. **Days on market trends** — are prices holding or are sellers capitulating? Right now in Q1–Q2 2026, well-priced Kenwood homes are holding firm

The result is a defensible price range — not a Zestimate, not a guess, not a round number pulled from a national database.

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## Should You Sell in 2026? The Kenwood Market Case

Kenwood has benefited from two converging trends: the continued migration of buyers priced out of Old Northeast and Snell Isle, and a genuine lifestyle upgrade premium attached to walkable neighborhoods near the **Grand Central District**, the **EDGE District**, and downtown St. Pete. Buyers who can't stretch to a $700,000 Old Northeast home are landing in Kenwood — and they're competing for inventory.

Inventory in 33705 remains relatively tight. Sellers who list a well-maintained, properly documented home in Q2 or Q3 2026 are entering a market with motivated buyers and limited direct competition.

That said — and I'll say this plainly — overpricing is the single fastest way to turn a strong market into a stale listing. If your home sits 60+ days, buyers assume something is wrong with it even when nothing is. I'd rather price it right, move it in three weeks, and put real money in your pocket than chase a Zestimate ceiling.

For context on how Kenwood compares to nearby neighborhoods for buyer demand, see the [Historic Kenwood neighborhood page](/neighborhoods/historic-kenwood) and the comparison with [Old Northeast](/neighborhoods/old-northeast).

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## Get Your Real Kenwood Comps — Free, Within 24 Hours

If you want to know what your specific address is actually worth in today's market — not a range, not an algorithm, but 3 real closed MLS comps matched to your home's features — I'll pull them and text them to you within 24 hours.

No pressure, no listing pitch, no obligation. Just real numbers from someone who knows this neighborhood.

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

*Luke Salm | Licensed FL Real Estate Agent #SL3446380 | RE/MAX CHAMPIONS, Trinity FL | Serving all of Tampa Bay including Pinellas, Pasco, and Hillsborough counties. Data reflects Stellar MLS and Pinellas County Property Appraiser records as of Q1–Q2 2026 and is subject to change.*


## Frequently asked questions

**Q: What is the average home price in Historic Kenwood in 2026?**

As of Q1 2026, the median sale price for single-family homes in Historic Kenwood (ZIP 33705) sits in the $420,000–$470,000 range, according to Stellar MLS data. Craftsman bungalows with original hardwood floors, updated kitchens, and off-street parking consistently push the upper end of that range. Properties with ADUs or income-producing carriage houses can reach $550,000 or more.

**Q: How accurate is Zillow's Zestimate for Historic Kenwood homes?**

Zillow's Zestimate carries a median error rate of 7–12% in Florida, and that figure climbs in historic districts like Kenwood where no two homes are alike. A 1920s bungalow with a freshly restored front porch and updated plumbing won't appraise the same as a structurally similar house two blocks away that hasn't been touched in 20 years. Real comps pulled directly from Stellar MLS by a local agent give you a far more defensible number.

**Q: Does Historic Kenwood require special disclosures or approvals to sell?**

Yes. Historic Kenwood is a designated historic district in St. Petersburg, so exterior alterations — including fences, additions, and window replacements — require a Certificate of Appropriateness from the City's Historic Preservation Board. Buyers will ask about permitted work, so sellers should compile permit history from Pinellas County records before listing. An agent familiar with the neighborhood knows exactly what to document.

**Q: How long does it take to sell a home in Historic Kenwood?**

Well-priced Historic Kenwood homes have been selling in 14–28 days on market, based on Stellar MLS transactions from Q4 2025 through Q1 2026. Homes priced above $500,000 can sit 45–60 days if they need cosmetic work or lack off-street parking. Correct pricing from the start is the single biggest variable.

**Q: Is flood insurance required for homes in the 33705 ZIP code?**

Parts of 33705 fall within FEMA Flood Zone AE, particularly near Booker Creek and the southern edges of the neighborhood. Homes in AE zones with federally backed mortgages are required to carry flood insurance. Annual premiums under FEMA's Risk Rating 2.0 methodology can range from $1,800 to $6,000+ depending on elevation and structure type, and that cost directly affects buyer affordability — which is why it matters when pricing your home.

**Q: What features add the most value to a Historic Kenwood bungalow?**

Based on recent Stellar MLS comps, the highest-value upgrades in Historic Kenwood are permitted ADUs or carriage houses (adding $40,000–$80,000 in value), full kitchen and bath renovations with period-appropriate finishes, updated electrical and plumbing (buyers pay a premium to avoid that headache), and off-street parking. Original architectural details — coffered ceilings, original hardwood floors, wide front porches — are genuine selling points that Zillow's algorithm simply can't quantify.


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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.*
