DeLand is the kind of city you don't know about until you visit, and then you can't quite believe it isn't more famous. Brick streets. A 1925 movie palace that still shows films. The first city in Florida designated a Monarch City USA. Stetson University in the middle of it all. A working downtown where people actually walk.

If you're considering a move here, this guide covers what an honest local would tell you over coffee — the good, the worth-knowing, and the things you'll want to plan for.

Aerial view of DeLand from a Cessna
DeLand from above. The downtown corridor cuts through the city with a tree canopy in every direction.

What DeLand actually is

DeLand is the county seat of Volusia County, about 35 miles north of Orlando and 25 miles inland from Daytona Beach. Population around 36,000 in the city, roughly 90,000 in the broader DeLand area. Founded 1882, named for the Henry A. DeLand who first developed it. The downtown core has been continuously inhabited and updated for nearly 150 years, which is why it has the character it does.

It's not a beach town. It's not a theme-park town. It's not a retiree town, though plenty of retirees love it. It's a real working city with a university, an airport (DeLand Municipal, with skydiving operations that are a daily feature of the local sky), a downtown where people live above the shops, and a cultural infrastructure that punches well above its size.

The Monarch City heritage

DeLand was designated the first Monarch City USA in Florida in February 2018, a recognition by Monarch City USA for cities committed to monarch butterfly conservation through native plantings, pollinator gardens, and community education. You'll see the orange-and-black motif everywhere if you're paying attention.

1882
Year DeLand was founded
Feb 2018
Designated first Monarch City USA in Florida
35 mi
North of Orlando, inland from Daytona

The neighborhoods, in plain English

Historic Downtown DeLand Victoria Park

Historic Downtown DeLand

Walk to everything. Brick streets. Live oaks. Homes from the 1890s through the 1940s, mostly Craftsman, Colonial Revival, and Queen Anne styles. Athens Theatre, the Saturday morning farmers' market, MainStreet DeLand events. Most expensive area on a per-square-foot basis, and worth it for the right buyer.

Stetson University area

Just north and east of downtown. Mix of student rentals, faculty homes, and family residences. Active during the school year, quieter in summer.

Victoria Park

Master-planned community on the east side. Built starting around 2003, mostly single-family homes from $400k–$700k. Sidewalks, parks, an HOA, and a community pool. Predictable, family-friendly, easy to live in.

West DeLand

Older neighborhoods, more affordable, character homes mixed with newer infill. Some of the best value-per-square-foot in the city.

DeBary

South of DeLand, semi-rural feel, larger lots, access to the St. Johns River. Some of the best mid-price waterfront in West Volusia.

Orange City

Between DeLand and Sanford. Established neighborhoods, Blue Spring State Park (where you can see manatees in winter), and good value for buyers who don't need to be in DeLand specifically.

Deltona

Bigger city to the south, much newer construction, lots of inventory in the $300k–$450k range. Most house for the dollar in the area.

Lake Helen

Tiny historic town just east of DeLand. Charming, quiet, character homes at slightly lower prices than DeLand's downtown. Self-described "Gem of Florida."

Schools

Volusia County Schools serves the area. Honest summary: like any large Florida district, school quality varies dramatically by school. Doing your homework on specific schools matters more than the district reputation.

Top-rated public schools in the DeLand area:

For higher education:

Weather, hurricanes, and the things you should plan for

DeLand sits about 25 miles inland, which is the single biggest reason it has the housing prices it does compared to the coast. Inland location means:

Hurricane prep, briefly

Hurricane season is June 1 to November 30. Most active months: August, September, October. Have a shutter or impact-window plan, a generator, 1–2 weeks of food/water/medications, important documents in a waterproof container or scanned to cloud, and an evacuation plan. Most years storms miss us. Some years they don't.

Cost of living

The Muse Bookshop, downtown DeLand
The Muse Bookshop on Indiana Ave — one of dozens of independent businesses that give downtown its character.

Things to do, places to know

The places we'd send a new neighbor to first:

Coffee/food spots loved locally: Bake Chop, Persimmon Hollow Brewing, The Half Wall, Boston Coffeehouse, The Table, Old Spanish Sugar Mill (in De Leon Springs).

Getting around

You'll need a car. DeLand is walkable downtown but the rest of the area assumes vehicles. Volusia County has limited bus service. There's no commuter rail to DeLand (the SunRail line ends in DeBary, about 20 minutes south).

Drive times from DeLand:

Unwritten rules, briefly

People say hi. Walking downtown, your neighbors will greet you. Greet back.

Saturday mornings belong to the farmers' market. If you're not there, you're missing the social hub of the week.

Stetson games are a thing. The Hatters basketball, baseball, and football schedules are part of local life.

Hurricane prep isn't optional. Even if it's been three years since a real one. The day a real one is forecast, every store is sold out of plywood and water. Stay ahead of it.

The downtown businesses know each other. Be kind. Word travels.