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St. Johns County vs. Duval County Schools: What the Data Actually Shows

Susie TakaraSusie Takara
Apr 13, 2026 9 min read
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St. Johns County vs. Duval County Schools: What the Data Actually Shows

The District Grades Are Close Now — But the Averages Tell Different Stories

For the first time in at least two decades, both St. Johns County and Duval County are sitting at an overall A from the Florida Department of Education. That sounds like the gap has closed. It hasn't — not entirely.

St. Johns County Public Schools has held an A grade consistently, with 37 A-rated schools and 7 B-rated schools. Nearly every school in the district lands at the top two tiers. Duval County Public Schools earned its A in 2025 — a genuine improvement from a B in 2024 — but the district's 59 A-rated schools exist alongside 56 C-rated schools, 7 D-rated schools, and 1 F-rated school. The headline grade is the same. The distribution underneath it is not.

On FAST scores, Duval improved meaningfully: math proficiency rose from 48% to 53%, and English from 46% to 50%. St. Johns County continues to lead the region in both subjects. Niche ranks St. Johns County #1 in the Jacksonville area with a 4.3 out of 5 rating. Those are real differences — but they're district-level averages, and district-level averages are where the comparison usually stops. That's also where most families get into trouble.

District Snapshot: 2025 Florida DOE Grades

Metric: 2025 Overall Grade

St. Johns County: A (unchanged)

Duval County: A (up from B)

Metric: A-Rated Schools

St. Johns County: 37

Duval County: 59 (45 district + 14 charter)

Metric: C, D, or F Schools

St. Johns County: 0

Duval County: 64

Metric: FAST Math Proficiency

St. Johns County: Top regional scores

Duval County: 53%

Metric: FAST ELA Proficiency

St. Johns County: Top regional scores

Duval County: 50%

The number that matters most to most families isn't the district grade — it's the school their specific address feeds into. And that's a very different question than which district has the better overall rating.

What School-by-School Variation Actually Means for Homebuyers

District-wide rankings can hide big school-by-school differences, and nowhere is that more visible than in Duval County. Two streets apart, one neighborhood feeds an A-rated school and another feeds a C. That's not a hypothetical — it's a documented pattern in areas like Mandarin and Arlington, where pockets of excellent schools exist within a few miles of schools rated significantly lower.

Parents in Duval who do their homework on a neighborhood level — not just a district level — often find that the picture is more workable than the district's overall reputation suggests. Mandarin, for example, has consistently strong elementary and middle school options. Otis Mason Elementary and Osceola Elementary are frequently cited by families in the area as solid schools with engaged parent communities. But those results don't automatically extend to every feeder school in the surrounding zip codes, and assuming they do is where buyers make mistakes.

In St. Johns County, the variation is narrower. With 37 A-rated schools and 7 B-rated schools and nothing below that, the floor is higher. But that consistency doesn't mean every school is identical — it means the risk of landing in a significantly underperforming school is much lower. For families who want to minimize that uncertainty, St. Johns County delivers that more reliably.

What this means for your search: In Duval County, the school your child attends is determined by your exact address, not your general neighborhood. Zoning and neighborhood boundaries can make school access feel unpredictable, so families have to research each address individually — not just the zip code or community name — before making an offer. The Duval County Public Schools address lookup tool is the right starting point, not a neighborhood reputation.

The scenario plays out regularly on the First Coast: a family compares two homes in similar price ranges and realizes the one in Duval feeds an A-rated school while the one two streets over feeds a C. That kind of variation is why the address-level research matters more than the district grade. How school zones actually split between Mandarin and Bartram Park is a good example of how that plays out in practice across two adjacent communities.

What the school-by-school data doesn't tell you is what happens when your child has specific needs that go beyond grade-level proficiency scores — and that's where the comparison gets more personal.

IEPs, Charters, and Magnets: Program Access Is Not Equal Between Districts

A top district grade doesn't tell you whether a school is equipped to support your child's specific learning plan. For families navigating an IEP, the experience in St. Johns County and Duval County can differ in ways that the Florida Department of Education's letter grades don't capture.

Families who have moved between the two districts have noted that support for their student's IEP was a little stronger in Duval County — not because Duval outperforms St. Johns academically, but because DCPS, as a larger urban district, has had longer to build out specialized programs, staffing structures, and resource networks for students with disabilities. Duval's size and population can stretch resources thinner in some schools, but it also means more specialized program infrastructure exists at the district level. This is a trade-off that doesn't show up in any ranking.

A child with an IEP may have a better support experience in one district than the other, even if that district's overall grade is lower. That reality is worth sitting with before letting a headline grade drive the decision.

Charter and Magnet Access in Duval County

Duval County's 59 A-rated schools include 14 charter schools, which adds program variety that St. Johns County doesn't match in the same way. But families considering a charter or magnet option in Duval need to understand that access is not guaranteed. The waitlist lottery system means a family can identify the right program, apply, and still not get a seat. That uncertainty is real, and it's a friction point that families encounter after they've already bought a home expecting a specific school option.

Planning around a charter or magnet as your primary school option — rather than your backup — is a risk in Duval County. The zoned school is the guaranteed option. Everything else is contingent on the lottery.

Program access checklist before you buy:
  • Look up the zoned school for the specific address — not the neighborhood or zip code.
  • If your child has an IEP, contact both districts directly to ask about program availability at the zoned school.
  • If a charter or magnet is part of your plan, ask about current waitlist lengths before assuming access.
  • In St. Johns County, verify which school serves your specific community — master plan communities like Nocatee have schools located right inside the development, but zoning can still vary by village or section.

Program fit and IEP support are the part of this comparison most families don't research until after they've moved. The housing cost and commute trade-offs are more visible — and they're the next real filter.

Housing Cost, Commute, and the Real Price of a St. Johns County Address

St. Johns County offers stronger district-wide averages, but that consistency comes at a cost that shows up in the mortgage payment, not the school grade. Homes in top-rated St. Johns County communities — Nocatee, World Golf Village, Julington Creek — carry price premiums that reflect both the school reputation and the demand from families who've already run this comparison.

A family comparing two homes on the First Coast will often find that the better-rated district comes with a meaningfully higher housing cost. That gap forces a real calculation: how much of the school premium is actually buying a better outcome for your child, versus how much is buying peace of mind from a district average? That's not a rhetorical question — it's the one families are actually sitting with when they're comparing addresses across county lines.

Master Plan Communities and What They Add to the True Cost

Many of St. Johns County's highest-rated school zones are tied to master plan communities where schools are located right inside the development — your kids are close by and surrounded by other families in similar situations. That convenience is real. So is the CDD fee that comes with it.

In communities like Nocatee and World Golf Village, CDD fees typically add $50 to $150 or more per month to the true housing cost beyond the mortgage. That's $600 to $1,800 annually that doesn't appear in the listing price. Families who budget based on the purchase price alone sometimes find that their money has to go a lot further than they expected once the full monthly picture comes into focus. How CDD fees actually break down in Northeast Florida communities is worth reading before you compare sticker prices across county lines.

Duval County's Affordability and the Commute Math

Duval County's median home price has run around $326,000 with faster sales velocity than surrounding counties. For families who identify a strong school zone in Duval — Mandarin, parts of the Southside, or specific pockets near the St. Johns River — the affordability difference compared to St. Johns County can be significant. That difference in monthly payment is real money that can go toward other priorities.

The commute equation cuts both ways. Some St. Johns County communities sit well south or west of Jacksonville's employment centers, and the drive time to downtown, the Southside, or the Beaches adds up. Families who prioritize the school district sometimes find themselves trading 20 to 30 minutes each way in commute for the address they wanted. Whether that trade makes sense depends on where you work and how much of your day that drive consumes.

For a direct look at how commute times and school zones interact across specific St. Johns County communities, how school zones and drive times compare between Durbin and Nocatee breaks that down by neighborhood.

The cost and commute math is where many families recalibrate their initial assumptions — but the final filter is usually the most personal one: which school actually fits your child.

Which District Actually Fits Your Family's Situation

The right district isn't always the one with the higher average. That's the part of this comparison that rankings and letter grades can't answer for you.

St. Johns County is the lower-risk choice if consistency matters most to you. The floor is higher, the variation is narrower, and the district's reputation is stable. If you're buying in a master plan community with schools located right inside the development, the school experience is likely to be predictable and well-resourced. The trade-off is that you're paying for that predictability in the purchase price, the CDD fees, and potentially the commute.

Duval County requires more homework on a neighborhood level. The district's improvement to an A grade is real and reflects genuine gains — FAST math scores up five points in a single year is not a small move. But the variation between schools is wide enough that your zoned school matters far more than the district grade. Families who do that address-level research carefully can find pockets of excellent schools in Duval at a price point that makes the overall financial picture work better.

A few situations where Duval County may be the better fit:
  • Your child has an IEP and you've confirmed the specific support programs available at the zoned school.
  • You've identified a specific A-rated school zone in Mandarin, the Southside, or another strong Duval pocket and verified the address.
  • The housing cost difference between districts is significant enough to affect your financial stability or other priorities.
  • You work in Jacksonville and the commute from St. Johns County adds meaningful time to your day.
A few situations where St. Johns County is likely the better fit:
  • You want to minimize the risk of landing in a lower-rated school regardless of which address you buy.
  • You're buying in a master plan community and the school proximity and community environment matter to your family's daily life.
  • Your child doesn't have specialized program needs that require district-level infrastructure.
  • The price premium is manageable and the commute from St. Johns County works for your job location.

Families comparing specific communities across county lines — Julington Creek versus Mandarin, for example — often find the school zone question is just one layer of a broader daily-life comparison. How Mandarin and Julington Creek compare on commute options, schools, and daily errands gets into the specifics of that cross-county decision.

For families still deciding which county to focus on before narrowing to a neighborhood, how Jacksonville, Clay County, and St. Johns County compare as places to buy covers the broader regional trade-offs that sit underneath the school question.

The district grade is a starting point, not a conclusion. The school your address feeds into, the programs available for your child, the monthly cost of the home, and the commute you're signing up for — those are the variables that actually determine whether the choice works. Both districts have strong schools. The question is whether the right one is in the right place for your family's specific situation.

If you're narrowing down to specific St. Johns County neighborhoods and want to understand how lifestyle, school zones, and community character vary across the county, St. Johns County neighborhoods sorted by lifestyle and daily routine is a useful next step.

WRITTEN BY
Susie Takara
Susie Takara
Realtor

Susie Takara is a Northeast Florida REALTOR® with United Real Estate Gallery and has worked full-time in residential real estate since 2013. An Accredited Buyer’s Representative® and Certified Negotiation Expert, she specializes in helping buyers and sellers across Jacksonville and surrounding communities with clear communication, ethical representation, and local market insight.

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