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River City Generators

St. Johns County · First Coast

Standby Generator Installation in Nocatee

Nocatee homes are new, but the grid they sit on is not immune to storms. We connect Nocatee homeowners with a vetted, licensed local installer who knows the county code, the gas-ready floor plans, and how a fast-growing community loses power in a big blow.

One vetted local installer Free, no-pressure quotes

Nocatee, by the numbers

Top 10
Ranks among the nation’s best-selling master-planned communities year after year
Gas-ready
Many neighborhoods are plumbed for TECO natural gas at the meter
FPL
The same grid every home shares still drops in a major storm
See if standby power is right for your home

Free quote

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Tell us about your home and we'll connect you with one vetted, licensed installer across the First Coast. No call-center list, no pressure, no cost.

  • A single trusted local installer, not a lead-seller list
  • Local permitting, flood-zone, and utility know-how
  • Free in-home assessment sets your real number
Prefer to talk? Call (904) 555-0142

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Nocatee

Why Nocatee homes need standby power

Nocatee is one of the country's fastest-growing, best-selling master-planned communities, a sprawl of newer neighborhoods south of Ponte Vedra that keeps landing near the top of the national rankings. That growth cuts two ways: the homes are modern and well built, but every new phase adds thousands more households leaning on the same electric grid and the same restoration crews when a storm hits.

Power here comes from FPL, and Nocatee was planned from the start as a natural gas community served by TECO Peoples Gas. That combination is unusually friendly to standby power: many homes were built gas-ready, so a generator can often tie straight into a line that is already there.

There is a myth worth clearing up. A brand-new, code-built house handles hurricane wind far better than an older one, and that is real. But it does not keep the lights on. When Matthew, Irma, and the 2022 storms took down FPL feeders across St. Johns County, the newest homes in Nocatee lost power at the same moment as everything else on the circuit.

A permanently installed standby generator is what closes that gap. It senses the outage, starts on its own within seconds, and carries the whole house until the grid comes back. See how installation works →

St. Johns County

Permitting in Nocatee

Nocatee is unincorporated, so almost every install runs through St. Johns County Building Services, with a small Duval-side exception. Here is what a compliant standby install involves.

St. Johns County permits

Nocatee is unincorporated and sits almost entirely in St. Johns County, so a standby install permits through St. Johns County Building Services. You need an electrical permit for the transfer switch and panel tie-in, plus a gas permit for the fuel connection. A small northern slice of Nocatee falls in Duval, where the City of Jacksonville permits instead.

Built to current wind code

Because most of Nocatee went up over the last fifteen years, homes here were built to modern Florida Building Code wind standards, roughly 130 mph design speed for the area. That helps the structure, but the generator itself still has to sit on an engineered, anchored pad that the inspector signs off on.

Flood-zone lots

New does not mean high and dry. Lots backing to the Tolomato River, the tidal creeks, and the preserve marshes can fall inside FEMA flood zones. In those areas the unit is set on a pad above the base flood elevation so a flood or surge cannot take out your backup power.

HOA and community rules

Nocatee runs on tight architectural standards. Del Webb, Twenty Mile, Crosswater, Greenleaf, Willowcove, and the Town Center villages often add their own placement, screening, and setback rules for equipment, so the generator location gets planned around both the county code and the community guidelines.

Recent history

What outages actually look like in Nocatee

2016

Hurricane Matthew

Matthew skirted the St. Johns County coast just as Nocatee was filling in, and its winds took down trees and FPL lines across the county. A newer home built to current wind code rode out the gusts better than an older one, but the grid is shared: when feeders and substations go dark, the newest house on the block loses power right alongside the oldest. That is the lesson Nocatee owners keep coming back to.

2017

Hurricane Irma

Irma hit the whole First Coast the following year, flooding low-lying St. Johns County and knocking out power to huge stretches of the region for days. Along the Tolomato River and the marsh-edge lots inside Nocatee, water and outages arrived together, proof that new construction does not exempt a neighborhood from a regional event.

2022

Hurricanes Ian and Nicole

Two back-to-back late-season storms pushed more wind and rain across Northeast Florida within weeks of each other, and outages followed. For a community growing as fast as Nocatee, each storm season adds thousands more homes that all depend on the same restoration crews.

The pattern is the point. See the full First Coast outage history →

Fuel

Natural gas or propane in Nocatee?

Nocatee has a real edge here. Because the community was designed around TECO Peoples Gas, a large share of homes already have natural gas at the house, so a standby generator can run off the existing line with no tank to bury and nothing to refill during a long outage. Where a particular street or floor plan was not plumbed for gas, propane from an on-site tank is the fallback. Either way, a gas-ready home usually makes for a cleaner, simpler install. Compare natural gas vs propane →

Cost

What a standby generator costs in Nocatee

There is no flat price. It comes down to the size of the unit, your fuel setup, and how much electrical and gas work the home needs. Nocatee has its own swing factors: gas-ready floor plans can trim the labor on the fuel side, while a flood-elevation pad on a marsh-edge or riverfront lot, or a larger unit for a big Del Webb or Twenty Mile home, can move the number up.

The honest way to pin down a real figure is a free in-home assessment. That is exactly what we connect you with.

Get my free quote

Typical whole-home install (about 20 to 26 kW)

$12k to $21k

Includes the transfer switch, pad, and permitted electrical and gas work. Gas-ready homes can land toward the lower end; flood-elevation pads and larger liquid-cooled units run higher.

A ballpark for planning, not a quote. Your in-home assessment sets the real number.

Nocatee standby generator FAQ

Do I need a permit for a generator in Nocatee?

Yes. Most of Nocatee is unincorporated St. Johns County, so a standby install permits through St. Johns County: an electrical permit for the transfer switch and panel work, plus a gas permit for the fuel line. The small Duval portion of Nocatee permits through the City of Jacksonville instead. Either way the work has to be done by licensed trades, and a local installer pulls the permits for you.

Are Nocatee homes already set up for a natural gas generator?

Often, yes, and that is one of Nocatee’s advantages. Nocatee was planned as a natural gas community with TECO Peoples Gas service, and many homes were built with a gas stub or an existing line at the house. That can simplify a standby install, since the generator ties into gas you already have instead of needing a buried propane tank.

My home is brand new. Do I still need a standby generator?

A new, code-built home rides out the wind better, but it draws power from the same FPL grid as everyone else. When a storm takes down lines and substations, the newest house on the street goes dark right along with the rest of the neighborhood. A standby generator is what keeps your home running through that regional outage, no matter how new the construction is.

How much does a standby generator cost in Nocatee?

Whole-home installs in Nocatee generally land in a rough range of about $12,000 to $21,000. Gas-ready homes with an existing line can sit toward the simpler end, while flood-elevation pads on marsh-edge lots or larger units for bigger homes push higher. Treat that as a ballpark for planning, not a quote. A free in-home assessment is the only way to a real number.

Will it keep my AC running through a summer outage?

Yes, with proper whole-home sizing, usually around 20 to 26 kW for a Nocatee home depending on square footage and equipment. In Florida heat that is the whole point, so your installer sizes for the air-conditioning startup surge to keep the system from tripping when you need cooling most.

Do you install the generators yourselves?

No, and we are upfront about it. River City Generators is a First Coast resource that connects you with one vetted, licensed local installer. We are not a contractor and we do not sell your details to a call-center list, so your request goes to a single trusted local pro who knows Nocatee and St. Johns County.

Repair & service

Generator repair & maintenance in Nocatee

Already have a standby generator in Nocatee? Keeping it serviced is what makes sure it actually starts when the next storm spins up. The vetted local pros we connect you with handle generator repair, annual maintenance, and battery replacement, not just new installs. If your unit is throwing a warning light, skipping its weekly self-test, or has not been serviced in a year, get it checked before hurricane season. See the maintenance guide →

Service area

Generator installation near you in Nocatee

Searching “generator installation near me” around Nocatee? We connect homeowners across Nocatee and St. Johns County with a vetted, licensed local installer. The smart time to lock in a quote is before hurricane season, the best installers book up fast once the first storm is in the Gulf.

  • Town Center
  • Del Webb
  • Twenty Mile
  • Crosswater
  • Greenleaf
  • Willowcove

Learn more

Standby generator guides

Plain-spoken answers before you commit: sizing, fuel, install day, and local permitting.

01 How to Size a Home Standby Generator Sizing a home standby generator on the First Coast: kW basics, why AC surge and well pumps drive the math, and how a load calc sizes your unit. Read guide 02 Do I Need a Standby Generator? Do you need a standby generator on the First Coast? Who benefits most, the local outage reality from Matthew to Irma, and honest cases where you may not. Read guide 03 Natural Gas vs Propane Standby Generators How natural gas and propane fuel a whole-home standby generator on the First Coast, and which one fits your Jacksonville, Nassau, or Clay County home. Read guide 04 Standby vs Portable Generators: First Coast Guide Standby vs portable generators for a First Coast hurricane outage: transfer switch, runtime, refueling, CO safety, cost, and who a portable really fits. Read guide 05 Standby Generator Permitting on the First Coast How generator permitting works across Jacksonville, St. Johns, Clay, and Nassau counties on the First Coast, including flood and wind rules. Read guide 06 What to Expect on Generator Install Day A step-by-step look at standby generator install day on the First Coast, from site assessment through inspection, load test, and weekly self-test. Read guide 07 Standby Generator Maintenance Guide Standby generator maintenance for the First Coast: the weekly self-test, annual service, battery swaps, and beating salt-air corrosion near Jacksonville. Read guide 08 Hurricane Prep for Your Standby Generator Hurricane prep for your First Coast standby generator: a June checklist, fuel readiness, and what to do before, during and after a storm. Read guide

Get Nocatee storm-ready

Tell us about your home and we will connect you with a vetted Nocatee installer for a free, no-pressure quote, or call now to talk it through.

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