Where to live in Florida?
#77
Heading for Poppyland
Joined: Jul 2007
Location: North Norfolk and northern New York State
Posts: 14,540
#79
Account Closed
Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 0
Re: Where to live in Florida?
Hi everyone! My husband and I would love to move to Florida, and are travelling over in a couple of weeks for 2 months to investigate further into areas etc. We have a good understanding of visa's etc and think we can make it work but are not sure where abouts in Florida to move to. We have 2 children aged 7 and 8, so if anybody has any advice or suggestions on where is a great place to live with a family that would be fantastic, thankyou in advance!
Again, why Florida? If you don't have to be somewhere specific in Florida for work, you probably don't have to be in Florida at all. Speaking purely for myself, I'd probably choose at least 40 other states and a couple of territories before I chose Florida. If Florida is really your thing, tell us why so that those who know the place can give you better advice.
You have to remember OP, we see hundreds of posts every year of people wanting to move to Florida just because of the beaches, the water and the weather. Most of them because they have vacationed there and imagine an iydilic life away from drab cold UK!
You may have chosen Florida for totally different reasons but just for a minute step back and think.
We have been here for 27 years. Here is Texas, we chose Texas because of family reasons. There was no job to dictate to us where we were going. Real life was certainly different from the vacation we had spent in Texas. School systems were hard to figure out, although we were lucky to be in a very good school district. And we had to work, so lots of fun adventures we had dreamed about before our move didn't happen for a long while.
Then life got easier and we thought about moving somewhere other than Texas because, as much as I like it, it is not always the best place to be! But then you realise life has taken over and you can't just up and move especially when it involves kids and school, work etc..
What I'm saying and what Adobe Pinon is saying is..look at the big picture. You obviously have choices because of your husbands business so don't settle for the something just because on the surface it sounds like the Magical Kingdom, keep an open mind.
(And to all the Floridian's on here, I am just trying to make a point. I'm sure most of do not regret your choice. Just as I don't regret mine, I just wish I had seen more of the other states before we settled!)
#80
Re: Where to live in Florida?
In Florida it gets hot, but it's more humid and it rains a lot so that combined with AC and it's not that bad really. Phoenix though, well it's 45 today and it's not even summer.
#81
Re: Where to love in Florida?
Anyway now people are confusing the OP even further by going on about other places in the US.
Florida is a perfectly okay place to live, if you are in the web design business I'm guessing you're not making a lot and Florida overall has one of the lowest tax burdens in the US and also has a low cost of living, so it does make sense to move there. Where in Florida is more subjective.
Texas has really high property taxes for example. I think the only States that can compete with Florida on taxes and cost of living are Nevada and South Dakota. New Hampshire has lower taxes but a higher cost of living.
#82
Re: Where to love in Florida?
Also really high property taxes compared to earning potential.
As for CoL in Florida...Naples is really lovely, but you'd need to be banking rather a lot to live in a part of it that wouldn't be shit and scary. Downtown, lovely, but a bit condo heavy but you can walk a parallel street away and it be a complete ghetto and rather scary.
As for CoL in Florida...Naples is really lovely, but you'd need to be banking rather a lot to live in a part of it that wouldn't be shit and scary. Downtown, lovely, but a bit condo heavy but you can walk a parallel street away and it be a complete ghetto and rather scary.
#83
Forum Regular
Joined: May 2007
Location: Northern Ireland/Florida
Posts: 112
Re: Where to live in Florida?
I live in the Tampa Bay Area and absolutely love it. We have kids similar in age to yours and really haven't found the school district to be as bad as everyone outside of Florida assumes it is. We love our kids school. My son struggled academically this past year and the amount of extra help and resources he got was amazing to me. We have annual passes to legoland and seaworld which you can reach in under an hour and a half from here. The beaches are awesome and Clearwater beach offers a good pedestrian experience (which is sometimes hard to get in Florida). The town I live in is also very pedestrian, very family friendly. We walk or bike everywhere. We are also a 5 minute drive to pretty much every type of store/ restaurant you could want. If you want more localized advice about the the area join The Dunedin Moms meetup group on Facebook. I'm sure there are similar groups for Sarasota or St Augustine. You can ask more specific questions about schools, houses, family activities on there from people that live in the area.
It's by far my favorite place I have lived in the States :-)
Good luck.
It's by far my favorite place I have lived in the States :-)
Good luck.
#84
Banned
Joined: Feb 2016
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 348
Re: Where to live in Florida?
I live in the Tampa Bay Area and absolutely love it. We have kids similar in age to yours and really haven't found the school district to be as bad as everyone outside of Florida assumes it is. We love our kids school. My son struggled academically this past year and the amount of extra help and resources he got was amazing to me. We have annual passes to legoland and seaworld which you can reach in under an hour and a half from here. The beaches are awesome and Clearwater beach offers a good pedestrian experience (which is sometimes hard to get in Florida). The town I live in is also very pedestrian, very family friendly. We walk or bike everywhere. We are also a 5 minute drive to pretty much every type of store/ restaurant you could want. If you want more localized advice about the the area join The Dunedin Moms meetup group on Facebook. I'm sure there are similar groups for Sarasota or St Augustine. You can ask more specific questions about schools, houses, family activities on there from people that live in the area.
It's by far my favorite place I have lived in the States :-)
Good luck.
It's by far my favorite place I have lived in the States :-)
Good luck.
#86
Re: Where to live in Florida?
In answer to the OP, Birmingham would be my recommendation. That or Solihull. Or maybe Wolverhampton. Kettering at a push. Not Northampton or points south. Too many gators.
#87
Heading for Poppyland
Joined: Jul 2007
Location: North Norfolk and northern New York State
Posts: 14,540
#90
Re: Where to live in Florida?
I'm just north of Sarasota.
Great place to spend the winter, it's recognised as the USA's #1 top cultural small town. weather might require the occasional wearing of a jacket and I get to dig the jeans out of the back of the closet. Tampa is close by and it's an easy haul to Cape Canaveral (just beyond mouseworld but that's not my type of thing)
It's summer now. The place is empty (compared to when the snow birds hit town). If you want anything more culturally stimulating than mouseworld then you are screwed. I work outside, 32C today and it's now raining again, the previous 36 hours we had just over 10" of rain (250mm if you are too young to remember imperialism ) and on Monday evening in the midst of the storm it sounded like a jet passed close by (probably why Panavia called their jet a tornado). On the bright side it doesn't matter if it rains or not, I finish every working day just as wet, and I never feel cold. We lost the power for an hour or two Sunday evening, not nearly as common an occurrence than if you head for a smaller inland town or rural residence.
4bed, 3 bath home in a nice subdivision sets us back $1600 a month. Cable costs a fortune as do mobile phones. Water quality varies from county to county.
You'll be astounded at the number of reported road accidents in the general area (inc Tampa). In the last three years I've lost count of the number of school friends funerals that my step children have been to - one died two days ago and the last funeral was only a fortnight ago. Driving is an eye raising experience every time I hit the road ( and I was once a multi-drop driver in the UK and a class1 HGV holder). Probably goes a long way to explain why the most basic car insurance policy here costs an arm and a leg.
Heat. I visited Austin, Texas, last summer. Temps were over 100F dry heat, I found it far more pleasant than 80F high humidity as found here (on the flip side my wife, who has several generations of Floridian ancestry, found Austin hotter than hell). Most locals spend their waking hours indoors or in their A/C equipped cars so it isn't too grim unless you like spending time gardening, walking and generally getting out and about.
Research cycle ways and pedestrian access, this area is quite forward thinking and has quite a few sidewalks that make for pleasant walking and cycling (even if you do have to brave the odd crosswalk on a busy 4-way stop every so often). We have quite a reasonable bus service throughout the area, although my wife forbids me to ride them thanks to the local policy of homeless shelters giving their customers free tickets to get them away from the hostels.
Education is hit and miss, research it carefully. As I mentioned in an earlier thread, my wife's large, nice, high school doesn't include geography in the standard curriculum - the state of Florida doesn't require it, so many schools don't teach it.
We'll be headed North in a few years time (nearer Pulaski-land ) where the land is cheaper, the population less transient, less swamp, more hills and four seasons in the year.
Great place to spend the winter, it's recognised as the USA's #1 top cultural small town. weather might require the occasional wearing of a jacket and I get to dig the jeans out of the back of the closet. Tampa is close by and it's an easy haul to Cape Canaveral (just beyond mouseworld but that's not my type of thing)
It's summer now. The place is empty (compared to when the snow birds hit town). If you want anything more culturally stimulating than mouseworld then you are screwed. I work outside, 32C today and it's now raining again, the previous 36 hours we had just over 10" of rain (250mm if you are too young to remember imperialism ) and on Monday evening in the midst of the storm it sounded like a jet passed close by (probably why Panavia called their jet a tornado). On the bright side it doesn't matter if it rains or not, I finish every working day just as wet, and I never feel cold. We lost the power for an hour or two Sunday evening, not nearly as common an occurrence than if you head for a smaller inland town or rural residence.
4bed, 3 bath home in a nice subdivision sets us back $1600 a month. Cable costs a fortune as do mobile phones. Water quality varies from county to county.
You'll be astounded at the number of reported road accidents in the general area (inc Tampa). In the last three years I've lost count of the number of school friends funerals that my step children have been to - one died two days ago and the last funeral was only a fortnight ago. Driving is an eye raising experience every time I hit the road ( and I was once a multi-drop driver in the UK and a class1 HGV holder). Probably goes a long way to explain why the most basic car insurance policy here costs an arm and a leg.
Heat. I visited Austin, Texas, last summer. Temps were over 100F dry heat, I found it far more pleasant than 80F high humidity as found here (on the flip side my wife, who has several generations of Floridian ancestry, found Austin hotter than hell). Most locals spend their waking hours indoors or in their A/C equipped cars so it isn't too grim unless you like spending time gardening, walking and generally getting out and about.
Research cycle ways and pedestrian access, this area is quite forward thinking and has quite a few sidewalks that make for pleasant walking and cycling (even if you do have to brave the odd crosswalk on a busy 4-way stop every so often). We have quite a reasonable bus service throughout the area, although my wife forbids me to ride them thanks to the local policy of homeless shelters giving their customers free tickets to get them away from the hostels.
Education is hit and miss, research it carefully. As I mentioned in an earlier thread, my wife's large, nice, high school doesn't include geography in the standard curriculum - the state of Florida doesn't require it, so many schools don't teach it.
We'll be headed North in a few years time (nearer Pulaski-land ) where the land is cheaper, the population less transient, less swamp, more hills and four seasons in the year.