Toll Brothers has launched sales at Layton Pointe, a 31-home build-to-order community in what the developer is marketing as Delray Beach's Gold Coast, with homes starting at $1.35 million and first move-ins planned for October 2026. The development sits four miles from Atlantic Avenue, adding new construction inventory at a configuration and price point that positions it as a small-scale enclave rather than a standard production community.
The 31 homes come in single- and two-story configurations ranging from 2,643 to 4,187 square feet, with floor plans spanning three to six bedrooms and 2.5 to 5.5 bathrooms. The $1.35 million base applies to the entry configurations; larger floor plans will close above that figure, though per-plan pricing has not been publicly detailed beyond the starting number, per the developer's marketing materials.
The build-to-order structure is the element Toll Brothers is leading with. Buyers at Layton Pointe can select finishes and configure layouts before construction begins — an arrangement that distinguishes the community from developments where homes are completed, or nearly complete, before a buyer is identified. For new construction at and above $1.35 million, the ability to influence decisions about finishes and spatial configuration before a slab is poured is a meaningful departure from how most production-market inventory in this corridor is delivered.
Toll Brothers is among the relatively few publicly traded national homebuilders that operates consistently at and above the $1 million new construction price point. Layton Pointe's 31-home footprint is on the smaller end of the builder's typical project scale — a deliberate constraint that reinforces the enclave positioning. The Gold Coast location, four miles from the Atlantic Avenue commercial strip, offers coastal adjacency without the direct-oceanfront pricing that tends to push entry well above the $1.35 million floor.
October 2026 deliveries would put Layton Pointe's first closings roughly five months from the community's public launch. How quickly Toll Brothers moves through the 31 lots will serve as a useful data point for where the Gold Coast corridor's build-to-order ceiling sits heading into 2027 — and whether a purpose-limited enclave at this price point finds a shorter or longer path to full absorption than the broader new construction inventory currently on the market in eastern Palm Beach County.



