About Jacksonville's Westside
Jacksonville's Westside is the broad swath of Duval County west of the St. Johns River and south of Interstate 10, stretching from the Murray Hill neighborhood near downtown all the way out to the rural edges of western Duval County. The core Westside ZIP codes — 32210, 32221, and 32244 — cover a vast area that includes established subdivisions like Cedar Hills, Lake Shore, Ortega Farms, Argyle Forest, and the neighborhoods along Blanding Boulevard (SR-21).
The housing stock on the Westside is predominantly single-family homes built between 1955 and 1985, with a significant cluster of concrete block ranch homes in the 1,000-1,400 square foot range. These homes were originally built as affordable starter and middle-class housing, and many remain in the hands of long-term owners — or their heirs. The Duval County Property Appraiser shows the median assessed value in ZIP 32210 at approximately $170,000-$200,000, making it one of the more affordable parts of the Jacksonville metro.
Westside residents access NAS Jacksonville (the area's largest employer), Orange Park and the Clay County commercial corridor via Blanding Boulevard, and downtown Jacksonville via Interstate 10. Cecil Commerce Center — the redeveloped former Cecil Field naval air station — has brought Amazon fulfillment centers and other logistics employers to the western edge of the area, driving new housing demand in surrounding subdivisions.
Schools serving the Westside include Westside High School, Edward H. White High School, and numerous elementary and middle schools across the Duval County Public Schools system. Lake Shore Middle School and John E. Ford K-8 are among the area's better-known campuses.
Westside Jacksonville Real Estate Market
The Westside has historically been Jacksonville's most active market for cash transactions and investor purchases. The combination of affordable price points, strong rental demand, and older housing stock that frequently needs updates creates a market where cash buyers are a significant portion of total transactions. In ZIP code 32210, cash purchases account for an estimated 25-35% of all residential transactions — well above the Duval County average.
Foreclosure activity on the Westside has remained elevated compared to other parts of Jacksonville. The affordable price point that attracted buyers during the 2020-2022 housing surge also attracted buyers who stretched their budgets — and as insurance premiums and property taxes climbed, some of those mortgages became unsustainable. If you're facing foreclosure on a Westside property, acting before the lis pendens is filed preserves the most equity.
For landlords, the Westside has been a double-edged sword. Rents for a 3-bedroom home in 32210 typically run $1,200-$1,500/month — solid for cash flow at the purchase prices of five years ago, but increasingly tight with today's insurance and maintenance costs. Deferred maintenance is rampant: many Westside rentals have original roofs from the 1970s-80s, aging HVAC systems, and plumbing that's approaching end-of-life.
We buy more homes on Jacksonville's Westside than in any other part of the city. We know the comps block by block, from the Cedar Hills ranch homes off Timuquana Road to the newer construction in Argyle Forest. That local knowledge means our offers are fair and our closings are fast — because we don't need to research the area from scratch.
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Why Westside Homeowners Sell for Cash
The most common Westside seller profiles we encounter are tired landlords who've owned rental properties in Cedar Hills or Lake Shore for 10-20 years and are done dealing with tenant turnover and expensive repairs, homeowners who inherited a parent's home and don't want to invest $15,000-$25,000 in updates to sell it traditionally, and owners who are behind on payments and need to sell before the situation escalates.
On the Westside, the gap between "as-is" value and "retail-ready" value is often $20,000-$40,000. A concrete block ranch home in 32210 might sell for $210,000 fully updated — but getting there requires a new roof ($9,000-$13,000), HVAC replacement ($6,000-$10,000), kitchen/bath updates ($8,000-$15,000), and cosmetic work. Most Westside sellers don't have that capital, and even if they did, the return on investment at Westside price points doesn't always justify the expense.
A cash sale puts money in your pocket in 7-14 days with zero out-of-pocket costs. No agent commissions (saving $10,000-$12,000 on a typical Westside home), no closing costs, no repair expenses, and no 60-90 day wait for a traditional sale to close. For many Westside sellers, speed and certainty are worth more than chasing an extra few thousand dollars through a traditional listing.
Common Situations in Westside
We work with Westside homeowners dealing with a range of challenges. No matter your situation, we can help with a fast, fair cash offer.
How It Works
Tell Us About Your Home
Fill out the form or call. Just the address and your situation.
Get Your Cash Offer
We review local Westside comps and send a no-obligation offer in 24 hours.
Close & Get Paid
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Westside Selling Guides
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