Toll Brothers Sells Final Fontaine Home in Lake Mary at $1.175 Million
Toll Brothers announced on Jan. 6 that the final quick move-in home at Fontaine by Toll Brothers in Lake Mary has been listed at $1.175 million, marking the close of new inventory in the gated community. The sale underscores sustained demand for luxury single-family homes in Seminole County and has implications for local property values, school enrollment patterns, and municipal tax revenues.

Toll Brothers, the nation’s leading builder of luxury homes (NYSE:TOL), confirmed the final opportunity to buy a new home at Fontaine by Toll Brothers in Lake Mary on Jan. 6, 2026. The remaining quick move-in residence, a Bronte Transitional model, is priced at $1.175 million and offers more than 3,400 square feet of living space with a first-floor primary bedroom suite and a projected delivery in early 2026.
The Fontaine community features single-family homes on 70-foot-wide home sites, open-concept floor plans, high-end finishes and integrated smart-home technology. Located among lakes and groves in Lake Mary, the gated development provides convenient access to downtown shopping, dining and the greater Orlando metro area, and it sits inside the Seminole County Public Schools district, a key selling point for families seeking suburban schools and amenities.
At a list price of $1.175 million for a 3,400-plus square-foot residence, the unit equates to roughly $345 per square foot using the lower bound of stated living area, a useful benchmark for local brokers and appraisers as they update comparables. The announcement that this is the final quick move-in home in Fontaine signals constrained new-construction inventory at the upper end of the local market, which can support price stability or modest upward pressure on nearby resale values as buyers seeking similar features look elsewhere in Seminole County.
For county fiscal planners and school officials, the completion of a high-value new home represents incremental property tax revenue that can help fund local services and schools, though a single sale will have limited near-term budgetary impact. Over time, clustering of luxury developments contributes more materially to the tax base and may shift patterns of school enrollment and transportation demand within the district.

Market dynamics that shape local demand include accessibility to Orlando employment centers, the draw of Seminole County Public Schools, and buyer appetite for modern smart-home features and larger lots. For prospective buyers and brokers watching supply, the sale highlights how finished inventory in highly finished, amenity-rich neighborhoods can be absorbed quickly when product matches local preferences.
Toll Brothers encouraged interested buyers to schedule appointments for sales inquiries; with this final quick move-in home, buyers seeking similar new-construction specifications will now look to other Lake Mary or Seminole County developments, potentially influencing pricing and development strategies in the months ahead.
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