June 11, 2026
Wondering whether The Pointe at Pelican Landing matches the way you actually want to live? If you are looking for a low-maintenance Southwest Florida home, the details matter just as much as the address. From building style to amenities to ownership rules, this guide will help you decide if The Pointe is the right fit for your lifestyle and goals. Let’s dive in.
The Pointe is a 160-unit low-rise condominium neighborhood within Phase I of Pelican Landing. According to the community’s official information, it includes 52 coach homes and 108 carriage houses, with views that may include lakes, fountains, or the Spring Creek Preserve.
One standout feature is the neighborhood dock with canoe and kayak access. If you want a community that blends condo living with water-oriented recreation, that adds a meaningful lifestyle benefit beyond the home itself.
Pelican Landing as a whole is a gated, 2,365-acre master-planned community along Florida’s Gulf Coast near Estero Bay. It is also a mature, fully built-out community, which means you are buying into an established setting rather than waiting for landscaping, roads, or amenities to catch up.
The first question many buyers ask is simple: what kind of condo building am I really buying into? At The Pointe, that answer depends on whether you choose a coach home or a carriage house.
Coach homes are located in two-story buildings. Carriage houses are located in three-story elevator buildings.
That difference can shape your day-to-day experience. If elevator access matters to you, the carriage houses may feel more practical. If you prefer a more traditional low-rise setup and stairs are not a concern, a coach home may feel like the better match.
Recent listing examples suggest many units are 2- or 3-bedroom condos in roughly the 1,622 to 1,673 square foot range. Some have been marketed with one-car garages and screened lanais.
It is important to treat those details as a snapshot of recent listings, not a guarantee that every unit follows the same layout or feature set. If you are comparing available homes, the specific floor plan and building type should stay front and center.
For many buyers, The Pointe is less about square footage alone and more about how the community lives. This neighborhood appears especially well-suited to buyers who want an amenity-rich, social, and seasonal-friendly environment.
The Pointe’s own website notes that some residents live there full time while many are seasonal owners. It also states that residents are of all ages, so this is not a 55+ community.
Within the neighborhood itself, residents have access to:
The community also notes that the pool is one of the largest in Pelican Landing. For buyers who want a neighborhood gathering point close to home, that can be a nice advantage.
The Pointe also offers a social side that may matter if you want a more connected ownership experience. According to the neighborhood site, the social committee organizes activities such as:
If you are hoping to land in a condo community where it is easy to meet neighbors and join in when you want to, this is worth noting. If you prefer a more private, less structured setting, it may feel more active than you need.
One of the biggest reasons buyers consider The Pointe is that ownership also connects you to the larger Pelican Landing amenity package. That broadens the lifestyle well beyond your immediate building or street.
According to Pelican Landing, residents have access to a 34-acre private beach park on Big Hickory Island that is reached by shuttle boat. Residents also have use of a tennis center with 12 Har-Tru courts, a wellness center, six pickleball courts, two bocce courts, a kayak and canoe park, three fishing piers, a butterfly garden, and a marina on Estero Bay with complimentary sailing lessons.
Pelican Landing states that these amenities, except golf and country club access, are included in the annual HOA assessment. The master association also states that the annual assessment includes basic cable and internet.
If you want more than just a condo and a pool, The Pointe becomes more compelling. You are really buying into a larger gated lifestyle community with beach access, sports amenities, boating-oriented features, and established infrastructure.
That can be especially attractive if you are shopping for a second home and want plenty to enjoy without having to leave the community every day. It can also work well if you want a centrally located Southwest Florida base with a long list of built-in activities.
Lifestyle inside the gates matters, but so does what is nearby. Pelican Landing’s official area information points to strong convenience for shopping, travel, and regional access.
Coconut Point is about two minutes from the north entrance. Miromar Outlets is less than six miles away, and Southwest Florida International Airport is about 22 minutes from the north gate.
The community also notes that both downtown Naples and Fort Myers cultural destinations are within a short drive. For buyers who want a central location rather than a more isolated beach-only setting, that balance can be a major plus.
Before you fall in love with the amenities, it is important to understand how ownership works. The Pointe is governed by both the Pelican Landing master association and its own condominium association.
That means ownership is likely to feel more structured than a detached home in a non-HOA setting. For some buyers, that is a benefit because it supports consistency and oversight. For others, it may feel restrictive.
The Pointe’s document library includes sale and transfer applications, lease applications, rules and regulations, hurricane-shutter approval forms, and clubhouse-use applications. In practical terms, that tells you this is a process-driven condo environment.
The lease application requires board submission and allows for reference checks, criminal background checks, and credit report review. It also states that tenants must agree to the condominium documents.
The sale and transfer process also requires board processing and similar screening. If rental flexibility is high on your priority list, or if you are used to communities with lighter oversight, you will want to review these requirements carefully before making an offer.
Out-of-state buyers should pay close attention to the storm-prep process as well. The Pointe requires board approval for hurricane-shutter installations, along with contractor information and plans or specifications.
That does not mean improvements are impossible. It does mean remote owners should be prepared for coordination, paperwork, and approval timelines when planning updates related to storm protection.
The publicly reviewed sources did not clearly show one current dues figure for The Pointe. Because of that, any buyer should confirm condo fees and master association costs through current listing information, association documents, or the estoppel process during a transaction.
There is also an inconsistency in the reviewed management-contact information. One community source lists Resort Management and Lee Ann Roush, while Pelican Landing’s January 2026 parcel management roster lists The Pointe as self-managed with Mike Stirling. That is another detail worth verifying during due diligence.
The Pointe may be a strong fit if you want a gated, established condo community with a low-rise feel, social programming, water access, and broad master-community amenities. It may also appeal to you if you are a seasonal owner who values a settled neighborhood over new construction activity.
You may especially like The Pointe if you want:
The Pointe may be less ideal if you want the feel of a detached home with fewer association rules. It may also be a tougher fit if you want very flexible leasing, minimal approval requirements, or a simpler ownership structure.
You may want to look elsewhere if your priorities include:
If you are still deciding, start with the lifestyle question first and the floor plan question second. The Pointe works best when you want the Pelican Landing amenity package and are comfortable with condo association structure.
From there, compare coach homes and carriage houses based on how you want to live day to day. If stairs are not an issue and you like a two-story low-rise setup, coach homes may be the better fit. If elevator access matters more, carriage houses may be the smarter choice.
The right answer is less about whether The Pointe is objectively good and more about whether it aligns with your version of Southwest Florida living. If you want help evaluating The Pointe against other Pelican Landing options, Angela Graziano can help you compare the details and move forward with confidence.
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Angela Graziano is a Naples, Florida real estate agent serving buyers and sellers throughout Naples, FL and nearby Southwest Florida communities including Bonita Springs, Estero, Fort Myers, and Marco Island.
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Looking for a real estate agent in Naples, FL or the surrounding Southwest Florida area? Angela provides a clear strategy, strong negotiation, and an organized contract-to-close process.