Palm Beach
Palm Beach is a wealthy barrier island town on Florida's Atlantic Coast, sitting directly east of West Palm Beach across Lake Worth Lagoon. What started as a shipwreck-shaped wilderness over a century ago has become a place where extraordinary private wealth concentrates in a remarkably small geographic footprint. In recent years, it's grabbed international attention as home to Mar-a-Lago, President Donald Trump's resort and residence, while billionaires compete fiercely for limited oceanfront real estate. During 2025's third quarter, the median single-family home sale price hit $9.97 million, placing it among America's most expensive residential markets.[1]
History
Origins and Name
The name didn't come from planning. It came from an accident. According to early settlers, a shipwreck called the Providencia washed ashore in January during the town's earliest days.[2] The ship's cargo reportedly included coconuts, and coconut palms sprouted along the shoreline, giving the island its distinctive character and ultimately its name. This accidental seeding created a tropical landscape that would later draw developers, tourists, and eventually some of the world's wealthiest people.
But the region's human history went much deeper. The area that encompasses modern Palm Beach and West Palm Beach was home to aboriginal populations for more than 5,000 years before Europeans arrived.
Railroad Development and Early Settlement
Modern Palm Beach emerged alongside railroad infrastructure. Henry Flagler, the industrialist who pushed the Florida East Coast Railway southward, shaped the town's future. Starting in the early 1890s, his development activity brought workers, investors, and visitors, building the infrastructure that allowed growth to happen.
Jewish residents documented their presence in Palm Beach County from at least the early 1890s, coinciding with Flagler's regional development.[3] This reflects the population diversity attracted to South Florida during its formative years, even though Palm Beach itself would later become known for elite social exclusivity.
Growth and Twentieth Century Development
Throughout the twentieth century, Palm Beach built its identity as a retreat for wealthy Americans. The town incorporated its own government and kept tight control over development and land use, preserving the island's character. After World War II, Palm Beach County changed dramatically as population growth and suburbanization reshaped the mainland. But Palm Beach stayed true to itself, remaining a small, affluent enclave.
Geography and Setting
Palm Beach sits on a barrier island separated from West Palm Beach by Lake Worth Lagoon, which creates a natural boundary between the wealthy town and the more populated urban center to the west. The ocean lies to the east and the lagoon to the west, creating a narrow strip where oceanfront property is naturally scarce and therefore commands extraordinary prices.
That scarcity defines the real estate market today. Only limited beachfront land exists, so buyers chasing direct ocean access compete for finite resources. In recent years, billionaires have pursued oceanfront parcels intensely, sometimes demolishing existing structures to build new residences tailored to their needs.[4]
Real Estate and Economy
The Luxury Housing Market
Palm Beach's real estate market sets the standard for ultra-luxury residential property in the United States. The median single-family home price during 2025's third quarter was $9.97 million, placing it in direct comparison with Aspen, Colorado, where the median reached $13.95 million in the same period.[5] The comparison shows Palm Beach sits at the top tier of American luxury property, though Aspen still has a higher median.
Demand for oceanfront land has intensified recently, driven by an influx of ultra-wealthy buyers. Many have demolished existing structures before building new beachfront homes, creating a pattern of teardown-and-rebuild activity that characterizes Palm Beach's current real estate era.[6] This reflects both the premium placed on direct ocean access and buyers' desire to customize properties to their exact specifications rather than settle for existing homes.
Wealth Concentration
Wealth accumulates here at a rate that separates Palm Beach from most American towns. It's never been richer than now, with a resident population that includes a notable concentration of billionaires and centimillionaires who've relocated to South Florida, partly due to the state's favorable tax environment and, in some cases, proximity to political connections centered on Mar-a-Lago.[7]
Politics
Local and County Political Landscape
Palm Beach's politics differ sharply from the broader county. Republicans outnumber Democrats within Palm Beach itself, while Democrats outnumber Republicans across Palm Beach County as a whole.[8] This divergence reflects the town's demographic profile as a concentrated enclave of affluent residents whose political leanings differ from the broader, more diverse county population.
Mar-a-Lago and Federal Presence
Mar-a-Lago sits on the island. It's President Donald Trump's estate and private club, serving as his residence and working retreat. The presence of Mar-a-Lago has made Palm Beach a location of ongoing federal security concern. In one incident, an armed man drove into the secure perimeter surrounding the resort, prompting a response from the United States Secret Service that ended in the man's death.[9]
Trump's residency has had ripple effects beyond the town. In 2025, Florida lawmakers approved legislation renaming the international airport in neighboring West Palm Beach after President Trump, a move that drew national attention and reflected the political significance the region gained during the Trump era.[10]
County Government and Fiscal Oversight
Palm Beach maintains its own local government but exists within Palm Beach County's administrative structure, which has faced scrutiny over fiscal management. Florida's Chief Financial Officer announced that a state audit found Palm Beach County government exceeded its budget by $344 million, a finding that drew attention to how public funds are managed in one of the state's wealthiest counties.[11]
Relationship with West Palm Beach
Palm Beach and West Palm Beach share a name and a geographic boundary but represent distinct communities with different characters, governance structures, and population profiles. West Palm Beach is the county seat of Palm Beach County and functions as the region's primary urban center, with a far larger and more economically diverse population than the island town across the lagoon.
Bridges crossing Lake Worth Lagoon connect the two communities, and they're economically interrelated. Many workers, service providers, and businesses in West Palm Beach depend on the Palm Beach economy. The region's airport, located in West Palm Beach, serves as shared infrastructure and, following the 2025 legislative action, a point of political symbolism.[12]
The contrast between them recurs in discussions of South Florida development and inequality. Palm Beach's extraordinary concentration of private wealth exists next to a mainland city that, like most American urban centers, contains a broad economic spectrum. Regional news coverage of Palm Beach regularly reaches West Palm Beach audiences, with outlets such as the South Florida Standard providing local journalism covering both communities and the broader county.[13]