WaterColor runs along Scenic Highway 30A in Santa Rosa Beach, sitting between Grayton Beach State Park and Seaside, with Western Lake, South Walton's largest coastal dune lake, threading through it. It is a 500-acre St. Joe community, and it plays a different role than Origins or Camp Creek. This is the established, amenity-heavy, design-controlled heart of 30A, and it is one of the strongest vacation-rental markets on the entire coast. If you want a home that earns its keep when you are not in it, WaterColor is usually the conversation.
Why buyers choose WaterColor
- Gulf-front Beach Club. The Beach Club is WaterColor's crown amenity and, by the community's own billing, the only beachfront clubhouse pool on 30A open to rental guests. Three pools, upper and lower decks, dining, and towel service right on the sand. For owners who rent, it is a major booking driver.
- The most pool access on 30A. Beyond the Beach Club, you get Camp WaterColor with its lazy river, slide, and playground, plus the Frog, Dragonfly, and Marina pools spread across the districts. Very few communities anywhere can match it for families.
- A serious tennis and pickleball program. The WaterColor Tennis Center runs five Har-Tru clay courts and two pickleball courts with a pro shop and lessons. It is a genuine draw, not an afterthought court tucked behind a clubhouse.
- Western Lake and the BoatHouse. Paddleboard and kayak access on a rare coastal dune lake sits right inside the community, which is something most 30A neighborhoods simply cannot offer.
- Walk-everywhere location. You can walk or bike to Seaside's shops and restaurants, reach Grayton Beach State Park next door, and grab groceries at the Publix in the Crossings district without leaving the bubble.
- Short-term rentals are allowed. This is the big one. Unlike Origins, WaterColor permits short-term rentals and has the demand to back it up, which is why so many buyers here are looking at income, not just lifestyle.
- On-site dining and a real town feel. Fish Out of Water and the WaterColor Grill, plus shops and the spa at WaterColor Inn, mean you are buying into a place that functions like a small town, not just a subdivision.
How it is built, and why that matters for buying
WaterColor is largely built out, which makes it a fundamentally different buy from the active-construction communities up the road. You are not choosing a neighborhood or a lot here. You are choosing a district, a location, and a level of condition, and each of those drives both price and rental performance. A cottage steps from the Beach Club, a larger home on the lake side, and a place over in the Crossings are three very different investments even at similar price points.
Pricing is premium and runs well into the multimillions, but the rental income is real, and for a lot of buyers it meaningfully offsets the carry. The listings below show live numbers. Where a home sits relative to the beach, the pools, and Western Lake matters more here than almost anywhere else on 30A.
Why work with me on WaterColor specifically
WaterColor rewards knowing the inventory cold. I help buyers figure out which homes actually perform, which in an established rental market comes down to location within the districts, proximity to the amenities renters care about, condition, and realistic income, not just curb appeal. I can walk you through resale options, run honest rental projections, and flag where a renovation adds real value and where it does not. Most agents sell the lifestyle here. The lifestyle sells itself. My job is to make sure the numbers behind it actually work.
The listings below are the starting point. If you want the real read on a specific district, a home's rental history, or how WaterColor compares to other 30A communities, that is a conversation. Reach out and let's have it.