439 Lakeview Drive

Property details·Oldsmar, Pinellas County, Florida·14-28-16-54940-000-0340

4Beds
2Baths
1,831Sq ft
0.31Acres
1982Built
$175KLast sale

Location

Address

439 Lakeview Drive

Oldsmar, FL 34677

Pinellas County

Parcel ID

14-28-16-54940-000-0340

Coordinates

28.053689, -82.676291

Building details

Bedrooms
4
Bathrooms
2
Square feet
1,831
Stories
1
Year built
1982
Garage
2-car G

Land & lot

Lot size
0.31 acres
Land area
13,495 sq ft
Frontage
1030 ft
Subdivision
Manors Of Forest Lakes,the
Neighborhood
200400
Land use code
1001

Tax & assessment

CategoryAmount
Tax value$2,372.26
Market value$458,699
Assessed value$176,906
Building value$287,079
Land value$171,620

Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.

County context

Pinellas County 2026 Insights

Pinellas County, Florida: Paradise on a Peninsula — With a Price

Pinellas County occupies one of the most geographically constrained pieces of real estate in America — a narrow peninsula wedged between Tampa Bay and the Gulf of Mexico, home to St. Petersburg, Clearwater, and nearly a million residents with nowhere left to expand. That physical reality shapes everything about its housing market: you simply cannot build outward here, which means pressure builds upward on prices even as values remain, for now, surprisingly close to the national median.

But the headline number masks a quiet affordability emergency hiding in plain sight.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Value$319,000Nearly identical to $320K national median
Rent Burden Rate54.7%vs. 30% healthy threshold — nearly double
Severe Rent Burden27.5%Over 1 in 4 renters paying 50%+ of income on housing
Median Age48.9Among the oldest large counties in Florida

The Renter Crisis Behind the Postcard

Pinellas looks affordable on paper. Its median home value is essentially the national average, and its per capita income of $46,580 suggests a reasonably comfortable county. Yet more than half of all renters are cost-burdened — paying over 30% of income on housing — and more than a quarter face severe burden. That's not a stress indicator; that's a structural failure.

The cause isn't mysterious. Post-pandemic migration from high-cost metros poured into the Tampa Bay region, compressing a rental market that was already tight in a county where land is genuinely finite. Median rent of $1,525 sounds reasonable compared to Miami or Orlando, but against a median household income of $70,293, the math breaks down fast for the county's 130,000-plus renter households.

Aging, Veteran, and Rooted

With a median age of nearly 49 and more than a quarter of residents over 65, Pinellas skews older than almost any major Florida county outside of retirement-heavy Sarasota. That aging profile explains several other data points: a labor force participation rate of just 58.7% (well below the national norm), an elevated disability rate of 15.4%, and a relatively high public insurance rate. This is a county where Social Security and Medicare do heavy lifting for a substantial share of households.

The 8.7% veteran population reflects the area's deep military connections — MacDill Air Force Base anchors the broader Tampa Bay region — and contributes to a homeownership rate of 69.4% that beats both state and national averages. Many of these owners bought in before the post-COVID surge and are sitting on significant equity, even as their renting neighbors struggle.

The Vacancy Paradox

One figure that deserves scrutiny: an 18.3% vacancy rate. In most markets, that would signal oversupply and falling prices. In Pinellas, it reflects the county's enormous stock of seasonal and short-term rental units — particularly in beach communities like Clearwater Beach, Treasure Island, and St. Pete Beach. Those properties are technically "vacant" by census standards for much of the year, but they're not available to local renters. They're serving tourists and Airbnb guests, effectively removing thousands of units from the year-round housing supply while inflating the vacancy headline.

What the Data Doesn't Say About St. Pete's Transformation

Downtown St. Petersburg has undergone one of the more striking urban reinventions in the Southeast over the past decade — a former rust-belt waterfront reborn as a hub for tech startups, the creative arts scene anchored by the Salvador Dalí Museum, and a restaurant culture that draws regional attention. The 17.6% work-from-home rate reflects that newer professional class, and limited English proficiency at 10.2% signals a growing immigrant community helping to power service industries.

The Gini coefficient of 0.488 is sobering — higher inequality than the national average of roughly 0.47 — and it maps neatly onto the geography: waterfront homeowners with locked-in values sitting alongside inland renters squeezed by a market they can't afford to enter.


FAQ: What makes Pinellas County unique in Florida's real estate market? Unlike most Florida counties, Pinellas has virtually no room to grow geographically. Its peninsula geography creates a hard supply ceiling that keeps long-term price pressure persistent even when the broader Florida market cools — making it one of the state's most structurally constrained markets.

FAQ: Is Pinellas County affordable to rent in? Not for most renters. Despite median rents that look modest compared to Miami or Fort Lauderdale, over half of Pinellas renters are cost-burdened, and the post-pandemic spike in rents has outpaced income growth significantly. The short-term rental market in beach communities further reduces the stock available to year-round residents.

FAQ: Why is Pinellas County's population so old? The county has been a retirement destination for decades, drawing retirees from the Midwest and Northeast who prize the Gulf Coast climate and beach access. That long-standing demographic pull, combined with younger residents being priced out of ownership, has gradually pushed the median age to nearly 49 — one of the highest for any densely populated county in Florida.

Local market context

Oldsmar has 10,838 properties in our comprehensive database.

With an average price of $422,573, Oldsmar offers mid-range housing options.

Buyers can expect to pay around $207 per square foot in this market.

Home prices in Oldsmar are 13% lower than the Pinellas County average.

MetricOldsmarPinellas Countyvs County
Average Price$422,573$484,869-13%
Avg Sq Ft2,0421,447+41%
Price/Sq Ft$207$335-38%
Properties10,838718,422-98%

Nearby properties

Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.

Frequently Asked Questions About Oldsmar, FL Real Estate

What is the average home price in Oldsmar, FL?

The average home price in Oldsmar, FL is $422,573, based on analysis of 10,838 properties in our database.

How many properties are tracked in Oldsmar, FL?

Our database includes 10,838 properties in Oldsmar, FL, providing comprehensive market coverage.

What is the price per square foot in Oldsmar, FL?

The average price per square foot in Oldsmar, FL is $207. This is calculated from an average home price of $422,573 and average size of 2,042 square feet.

What is the average home size in Oldsmar, FL?

Homes in Oldsmar, FL average 2,042 square feet, with an average price of $422,573.

How does Oldsmar, FL compare to other cities in Pinellas County?

Oldsmar, FL is one of many cities in Pinellas County, FL with property data available. Browse other cities in the county to compare market conditions and pricing.

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