Newer construction · Medical City · planned growth
Lake Nona
Lake Nona continues to draw relocation buyers who want newer homes, organized community design, and quick access to the airport, Medical City, and major employment hubs.

Orlando Real Estate
Orlando is one of the most varied housing markets in Central Florida. Buyers can search everything from established neighborhoods and downtown condos to newer master-planned communities and luxury homes. The challenge is not finding listings. It is knowing which parts of Orlando actually fit your budget, routine, and long-term goals.
Overview
Orlando is large enough that a broad search can waste a lot of time. Buyers often start with too many ZIP codes, too many home styles, and too little focus on commute, school preferences, or the parts of the city they will actually use every day.
The Florio Team helps buyers narrow Orlando into a more useful shortlist. That usually means comparing a few neighborhoods with different strengths rather than trying to monitor the entire market at once. Once the map gets tighter, the listings get better.
Current Listings
Featured Neighborhoods
Newer construction · Medical City · planned growth
Lake Nona continues to draw relocation buyers who want newer homes, organized community design, and quick access to the airport, Medical City, and major employment hubs.
Character homes · local identity · central location
College Park appeals to buyers who want an established neighborhood with architectural character, a recognizable main street, and an easier drive to downtown Orlando.
Move-up homes · dining corridor · southwest convenience
Dr. Phillips is a consistent target for buyers who want larger homes, established communities, and proximity to Restaurant Row, attractions, and major commuter routes.
Village feel · trails · polished resale market
Baldwin Park offers a refined master-planned feel with parks, lakes, neighborhood retail, and a strong mix of single-family homes, townhomes, and condos.
Why Orlando
Orlando gives buyers more range than most nearby cities, from urban condos to gated communities to lakefront homes.
Employment is broad enough that demand does not depend on one industry alone.
Relocation traffic remains strong, which keeps certain neighborhoods competitive and supports resale value.
The right search usually starts with commute, lifestyle, and monthly payment before it starts with square footage.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Orlando gives relocating buyers a wider spread of neighborhoods, price points, and property types than many smaller Central Florida cities. The key is narrowing the search correctly at the beginning.
The market includes downtown condos, townhomes, first-time buyer inventory, move-up pool homes, custom properties, and newer construction in master-planned communities.
That depends on budget, commute, schools, and the kind of neighborhood you want. Some buyers belong inside Orlando city limits. Others get better value or fit in Seminole County and nearby markets.
Next Step
Tell us what price range, area, and home style you are aiming for. We will help you focus on the Orlando neighborhoods that make the most sense before you spend time chasing the wrong inventory.