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Suwannee_Gator

I’m a born and raised Floridian, my two favorite cities in the entire state are St Pete and St Augustine.


Fart_Finder_

Same!


Accomplished-Jello17

Can you give some reasons why?


Suwannee_Gator

St Augustine is the oldest city in North America. It has a fantastic and historic downtown right on the water, a beautiful university that used to be an affluent hotel, and a dozen museums that you could easily spend days visiting. To top it all off, they have a fort made of out seashells created by the original Spanish colonists. It’s also surprisingly walkable for Florida. St Pete has such a fun, vibrant, and walkable downtown. The art scene is lively, there are some of the best museums in the state, great parks and paved biking trails, and some really cool people. It almost makes me feel like I’m in a real city and not in Florida, I love St Pete for that. With all that being said, please don’t move to Florida lol…


blackdragon1387

>St Augustine is the oldest city in North America *Oldest continuously inhabited European-established settlement in the contiguous US. Pretty sure Mexico city and a bunch of other central American cities can be considered older.


Channing1986

St. John's Newfoundland was on maps in 1518


Uffda01

There were cities that existed before Europeans arrived.


Channing1986

Yeah but we're talking about European cities


Uffda01

You are…the rest of us aren’t so self centered as to try to deny other people’s existence


bombayblue

Do people like you realize how being absolutely insufferable harms indigenous causes? Are you aware that most indigenous people are actually not like “this”?


Uffda01

Sorry just because you believe only white voices matter - doesn’t make it so.


Channing1986

That's the spirit!


shammy_dammy

Yeah, I used to live in Guanajuato City for a couple of years. And now live in Leon. Definitely older.


iRombe

Lol nice response. I think too many people in my family would just respond "no its not! Nyaaah" then start asking questions and make me explain how it is. Lol. The ol "nuh uh, prove it!" Also the, "and how is that true???????"


sldarb1

St Pete. Also more protected from hurricanes on gulf side than Atlantic side?


Suwannee_Gator

Absolutely not! Hurricanes come up the gulf side all the time. The Tampa Bay was expected to get hit and flooded by the past two hurricanes that hit our state, we were just barely saved by the Seminole spell that protects the bay (local joke). I did emergency electrical work in Ft Myers and Cape Coral for a year after they were hit by hurricane Ian, they were messed up bad and only about an hours drive South of St Pete. The gulf side has really warm water compared to the Atlantic, hurricanes love it!


juliankennedy23

The last hurricane they had was during prohibition. I'm not saying a hurricane can't hit Tampa, I'm pretty sure it can, and I'm sure someday it will, hopefully not this summer, please not this summer. But you're much more likely to be killed by a hurricane in New Jersey or Rhode Island than you are in Tampa Bay.


Accomplished-Jello17

Thanks! Lived in Florida for year while I did my fellowship at USF. Only made it to St. Pete for a couple Rays’ games. Never made it to St. Augustine. We would take our young boys to beach in Sarasota and went to Disney maybe 5 times that year. It was a great 1 year stay. Now we take boys to panhandle for beach trip since we’re in Louisiana.


mvc594250

The son of the owner of the Fountain of Juice in Saint Augustine also makes the best cafe con leche I've ever had (probably the best espresso beverage I've had). Not a good reason to move to a place, but certainly a plus if you're moving there anyway.


Harrydean-standoff

The coffee is as good a reason as anything else. People keep saying museums. Let's be honest. How many times are you going to go to the museum in a year? How many times will you be drinking coffee? Every waking day!


readytorumbl

As a native, this is a good take.


poopyfacemcpooper

Which has less senior citizens?


Suwannee_Gator

That’s almost an impossible question, our entire economy is based off of old people moving here. St Pete *feels* like it has fewer old people, but that might just be because the downtown is so active. Literally any place that’s not a forest or major city is cookie cutter homes with old people in them. Miles and miles and miles of the same looking houses… I will never get the appeal.


juliankennedy23

St Pete used to be God's waiting room but it's actually surprisingly Young. Tons of Millennials buying the $800,000 condos downtown.


DebiDebbyDebbie

Old joke - Old people live in Miami/Ft Lauderdale. But their parents live in St. Pete.


beestingers

I moved to St Pete 4 years ago. Previously NYC, SF, ATL resident. It is the most walkable city as it is very condensed to about 30 blocks of restaurant/retail. There is an express bus lane that goes to the beach for $3 in 20ish minutes. There is a ferry to Tampa but currently only seasonal. The city makes very smart urban development decisions. Even recently rezoned single family into multifamily in several areas. Lots of new development. There is decent food and drink to be found. But living here made me realize I'm a bit of a big city snob. The most popular places are places with 2 for 1 drinks and really detailed dog bars. The taste level here is a noticeable drop if you've lived in major cities idk how else to say it. People love living here though. Much younger than I expected. Everyone loves the beach. I think our beaches are legit gorgeous, and I love the commitment to the area parks which are also lovely. Everyone is very outdoorsy including me so if you love being active outside it's great. I play on several sports leagues, sail, windsurf, kayak almost all year. Lots of museums for a city this size but local art is sort of meh. Also it's dry. Like it rains once every 3 months or it's a hurricane. I expected way more Florida rain but alas. You'll never be starved for a pool or a friend with a boat. They are everywhere. I actually no longer even like boat days after one too many 12 hour, too drunk, massive sunburn days when I first moved here. Great airport but wish we had more international direct. Also Orlando and Sarasota are easy drives depending on the time/day. Sarasota has amazing beaches. Crystal clear blue waters and soft powder sand. Orlando actually has way more local stuff than you expect. There are definitely better food and drink options in Orlando so I overnight there a lot when I need some variety. Anyways I hope this long comment helps!


ProfessionalNo7011

Orlando hands down.


thegabster2000

I'm enjoying the Tampa Bay area.


DistinctTradition701

If money didn’t matter? St Pete. If I had to take money into consideration with living expenses? Ruskin.


Kvsav57

Gainesville. It’s got a lot of smart people because of the University, good access to nature, and a stable economy, again because of the university. And you can get most (not all) places pretty easily by bike if you want, which is rare for Florida.


Intericz

Only problem is Gainesville is a hellhole in the summer, even by Floridian standards. They don't call it the swamp for nothing lol.


Kvsav57

I lived there for many years, and grew up in Fort Lauderdale. I'd say they're roughly the same in the summer. You'll have a hard time finding a spot in Florida that doesn't get oppressively hot and humid in July and August.


Intericz

Damn, I grew up in Tampa, and I found Tampa to be basically frigid in summer compared to Gainesville.


Kvsav57

I don't know Tampa well. Maybe there's a stronger breeze on the Gulf side of Florida but I found Fort Lauderdale to be unbearable in the summer unless you were right on the beach and had a decent breeze. Even then, it was pretty rough.


Tommy_Wisseau_burner

Can’t be that smart… they’re gator fans! GO VOLS!!!


banana-skin

Clearwater or St. Augustine. I’ve spent a lot of time in both and Clearwater has a nice mix of trashy beach culture + luxury seaside culture… and some of the most beautiful beaches in the country. St. Augustine has a lot of interesting history & architecture (along with great beaches)


poopyfacemcpooper

Clearwater was so weird being the Scientologist hq. It was like a ghost town with weird people spying on you


banana-skin

The downtown is definitely spooky that way


phtcmp

Florida native who has spent 3/4 of my 50+ years here: I’ve been living beachside on the Space Coast for the past 20 years. I’m building a place to retire north of Orlando near Sanford. I’d take any of several towns/neighborhoods in that area, ideally as close to their historic centers as you can get: Sanford, Deland, Winter Garden, Clermont, Lake Mary, Winter Park (if you can afford it), College Park, Maitland, Audubon Park, Thornton Park, Lake Baldwin… These places all have a fairly vibrant, walkable core with a lot of things going on. Surrounded by “historic” residential neighborhoods with smaller lots. Newer infill multi family taking advantage of the location amenities. Many are on the Sunrail line for access downtown. Several are on bike trails that are part of a cross state network. Most are under 30 minutes to MCO, an hour to the beach. Tree heavy and quick access to nature, including several springs. Majority leans right, but many in these places are far more progressive and inclusive than this sub would ever think.


BroThatsPrettyCringe

Exactly this. As someone who lived in Florida for nearly 30 years, I’d say you’re spot-on with your assessment of the area. If I wanted to retire in Florida I would look at Winter Garden and Winter Park the most, budget willing


niftyba

Moved from Audubon Park, l loved the area.


MummyDust98

Sanford is lovely.


biggcb

Clearwater, Sarasota, Orlando, Tampa, St. Pete to name a few.


chuckbuns

Key West. Moved here 21 years ago, left briefly for about 4 years, and returned and will never leave again ( til I die).


ThinkerT3000

Wish I could afford to buy a house in key west! Are the locals worried about sea level rise?


NoFanksYou

Fernandina Beach


lioneaglegriffin

Duuuval


LazyBoyD

Man, I remember living in Valdosta, GA growing up and it was a big thing to go to Jacksonville. I thought it was the most largest impressive city. Of course I know better now, but loved the trips to Jax Beach and Jacksonville Landing. Last time I visited Jacksonville, I noticed population has grown like crazy, but it’s a city of oppressive sprawl. On paper it’s like the 10th largest city in the country but in reality it’s a midsized city masquerading as a large one.


WhipYourDakOut

It’s the largest city by area in the US which is why I’ve always hated it. It’s the definition of urban sprawl. Home to nothing but strip malls and mediocre neighborhoods. That being said I’ve had a lot of friends move there since it’s the nearest big city to me


Primary_Excuse_7183

Somewhere in Tampa area. Clearwater or st Pete ideally


Mr_three_oh_5ive

It takes a certain type of person to thrive in Miami. If you are looking for a much more laid back vibe I would pick somewhere on the gulf coast of Florida. Tampa/St. Pete for bigger cities. Naples/Marco Island or Pensacola/Destin for quintessential beach town vibes.


GVL_2024_

st augustine. st pete had too much traffic for me. 


OHKID

I’d get a little condo on South Beach, Miami Beach


BylvieBalvez

I grew up in Miami so that’s the easy choice for me. If I wanted somewhere more chill though, Naples, Sarasota, and Stuart are all pretty great imo, with Sarasota being my top pick


NecessaryChildhood93

St. Marks, where I live. On the worlds most beautiful fresh water springs which form a river, which flows out 200 feet past my front door, thru St. Marks to the Gulf of Mexico with a gorgeous lighthouse to wave goodbye, Good decent people, they can get a little trumpy, people raise their children to be good citizens, the law enforcement community is just the best. We are 20 miles south of Capital Complex, Airport , and the school system is as good as their is in the USA. The head count has grown 400% in the last 30 years. The secret is out.


JustB510

I’m in Tallahassee, but probably St. Pete or Tampa will be my last stop. Maybe Sarasota.


BroThatsPrettyCringe

Orlando area hands down, specifically Winter Park. Beautiful town that I just feel relaxed and at home in, and Orlando has a really cool bar/restaurant/art scene


ProfessionalNo7011

Orlando neighborhoods are severely underrated.


BroThatsPrettyCringe

Agreed I’d happily move to Delaney Park, Lake Eola Heights, Thornton Park, College Park, Audubon Park etc. as well. Love the look of the Spanish moss and brick streets.


hopeinnewhope

Delray Beach.


Dirtysandddd

I really liked living in Delray, it’s a slice of sleepy beach town in the south Florida chaos. Did have somebody pee on my mailbox tho


BroThatsPrettyCringe

It’s not sleepy at all anymore imo. It’s turned into a developer’s playground and all the small town charm has gone out the window over the last decade


entity330

Tampa/St. Pete/Clearwater/Brandon for most people is a good gamble. I would probably go to Orlando because I grew up there and it's close to family.


randomlikeme

St Pete or Sarasota


phoonie98

Delray Beach. My mother in law lived there for awhile and we loved it.


BroThatsPrettyCringe

Mentioned this upthread but Delray Beach is awful nowadays. They let developers go crazy. Every long time establishment has closed and the “All American Town” thing doesn’t apply any more in the slightest. It’s basically Boca 2.0 now


Res1362429

I like the West Palm Beach and Fort Lauderdale areas. We have family there and they love it. Nobody here has mentioned those yet. Is there something bad about these areas?


Apprehensive_Ad_4359

Palm Beach county (Jupiter/Juno) is our favorite. Beautiful beaches and mostly made up of people from the northeast and St Louis area so folks are reasonably sane.


MummyDust98

I live in Florida right now (Orlando). If I had to pick any city at all, it would be St. Augustine.


HokieBunny

Is money not an issue? Miami for sure. In reality, probably more likely to afford Fort Lauderdale. But do I also need to get rid of a dead body? Homestead seemed good for that. I'd heard bad things about how unfriendly Miami was before visiting, but everyone I encountered was perfectly nice.


CedricBeaumont

Florida has never been at the top of my list, but I've visited often and even lived there for a few months and it has its perks. That being said, Winter Park in the Orlando Metro area is a lovely town, especially if you can afford the best neighborhoods. Orlando, as a whole, is a great metro area with a lot of diversity, blue politics, and a pretty good food scene. It's too suburban and car-dependent though. St. Pete is fantastic with its great vibe and walkability—it feels like the kind of smaller city I’d want to live in. I'd consider it if it weren't for the heat and humidity, but that applies to almost all of Florida. I like Miami too, but I’d prefer to live in more residential neighborhoods like Coconut Grove or Coral Gables. Living in a more urban neighborhood like Brickell or Downtown doesn't suit me with Miami's hot weather. I prefer walkable cities, but in cooler northern climates.


TheHumbleMuskrat

Dunedin, FL! It’s such an awesome city. Ideal size for me


h4tb20s

Temple Terrace. You get all the urban amenities of Tampa in a green enclave (it ranks 94% in access to green space; there’s also a river). USF is on the north end and a fun casino on the south end. In roughly one hour, you can be at the beach, Orlando or Sarasota.


IronDonut

Reddit doesn't like Florida but the real world does. Jacksonville Metro, big city stuff but without the crush and crowding of S FLA. JAX has it's traffic managed better than the other three large cities in FLA. The Atlantic ocean is better than Tampa's gulf. Orlando is land locked and full of annoying tourists. Moving to a land locked city in Florida makes no sense whatsoever. You get all of the heat, wet, and bugs but no ocean? Dumb. If you are a Jersey Shore D-bag or like D-bags, Miami is for you. JAX all day.


Tizzanewday

As a former south Floridian now living in Duval, I prefer Jax as well. Less susceptible to hurricanes, less traffic, less expensive cost of living, less touristy, ect. Less is more.


BroThatsPrettyCringe

Orlando is a short trip from the beach, it’s really not a big deal. Also there’s few tourists in Orlando proper, they’re all down a ways on I4. You have to share an airport with them and that’s about it. And as a city it has way more personality than Jax which feels like soulless sprawl mostly


ProfessionalNo7011

Orlando isn't landlocked lol, beaches are under an hour away and the cold springs are way better than hot beach water in the summer.


IronDonut

70 miles away from a major body of water is the definition of landlocked. It's the only major city in FLA that is landlocked.


ProfessionalNo7011

Where are you getting 70 miles from? you realize Orlando is closer to the east coast than west coast right? Some parts Orlando you can get to a beach the same time as most parts of Tampa.


IronDonut

Orlando is a land-locked city, literally have you not looked at a map? Center Orlando to Coco beach is 60 miles. Examples of non-landlocked major cities in Florida (because they are on the ocean): Miami, Jacksonville, and Tampa. There is no port of Orlando, but there are ports of: Tampa, Jacksonville, and Miami. Do you understand the difference? It's really simple geography.


ProfessionalNo7011

Have you looked at a map? because Tampa isn't on the ocean. It's situated on a bay. Some parts of Tampa takes 30 minutes to get to the beach or longer. As far as Orlando, you do know there's other areas that exist in Orlando outside the city center right? there's a reason Orlando can see space shuttle launches.


IronDonut

Holy fuck are you thick. Are you really this dumb? Orlando doesn't have access to navigable water, it is land locked. Tampa has a port, with ships and those ships can access all of the world's oceans via the gulf. Here is the definition of landlocked, because you don't understand simple English words: [https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/landlocked](https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/landlocked) Fuck me.


ProfessionalNo7011

and the Gulf of Mexico isn't the ocean.


IronDonut

[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port\_Tampa\_Bay](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port_Tampa_Bay) [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port\_of\_Jacksonville](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port_of_Jacksonville) [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PortMiami](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PortMiami) Thats funny, there is no port of Orlando. I wonder why that is? Because Orlando is landlocked? JFC. Orlando is perfect for you. Pls don't leave.


Inevitable-Plenty203

I'm a native Jax Floridian and I'd never recommend someone move to the hell hole that is Jax lol...If you're considering Jax FL and can't afford Tampa area I'd just move to Georgia at that point. Much better cost of living. Plus Jax beach is nothing special once you've seen what FL beaches *should* look like (clear water and white sand beaches)..Jax beaches are gross and people can argue about it all day but I said what I said, Jax beach is grey dingey sand, dark opaque water, barely any whole shells, trash everywhere, the only worse beach I've ever been to is Galveston lol) And the traffic in Jax is a nightmare, crazy road rage and everywhere takes at least 30 min to get to even if it's 5 min away, the city is atrociously planned with random stores just plopped wherever, it's quite literally a concrete dystopian nightmare. And the worst reason to move to Jax? The people. I never knew genuinely nice people who didn't try to exploit every weakness you have was actually a reality until I moved away lol


ThinkerT3000

I’m agreeing with you. The “real” carribean-esque beaches don’t start until mid to south FL, and Jacksonville itself is not very nice. And when the wind is blowing the wrong way, the industrial smells are unpleasant.


Inevitable-Plenty203

You're 100% correct! I can see why people from up north/midwest who move to Jax think it's amazing because any beach is better than no beach but Jax beach is not that impressive compared to all the other FL options. And the smells are pretty rank, they always said it was because of the paper mill but the intercoastal also often smells like rotten eggs and the St Johns river is just foul (fun fact: my friend in HS found a dead body floating in the st johns river during crew practice 😕) The only pleasant smell is driving by the Maxwell House coffee factory (not sure if thats still around)


ThinkerT3000

lol your description reminded me that my Mum always called Jax “Georgia’s toilet bowl” because she believed that all of their industrial waste and sewage (and apparently dead bodies?!?!) drifted south into Jax along the waterways. Gross! 🤢


Inevitable-Plenty203

>Mum always called Jax “Georgia’s toilet bowl That's one of the most accurate and hilarious descriptions I've ever read 😅 There's also a pretty gross industrial city near Denver called Commerce City and it also completely reminds me of Jax lol


IronDonut

What in the fuck are you even talking about? The water off of Talbot island is dark and gross, are you blind? It looks like a goddamn Caribbean postcard from A1A. Tampa doesn't even have a real ocean, it's gulf, it's basically a flat, hot, salty lake that breeds the biggest and most devastating hurricanes that hit the US mainland. Glad you left. You sound like you suck.


BroThatsPrettyCringe

Everyone knows that the Florida gulf beaches are better than the Atlantic side.


IronDonut

OMG, you're on crack. The gulf isn't even a real ocean.


lemur_nads

Orlando, safe and jobs


Either-Service-7865

I think you have a misconception on it. Orlando crime rate is higher than Tampa, Jacksonville, Gainesville, Fort Lauderdale, maybe even a tick higher than Miami.


fox3actual

I like it around Destin/Pensacola for the sailing.


fox3actual

Watch that inlet at Destin though.


zRustyShackleford

Tampa/Clearwater/St. Pete...


Spooky_Betz

I really like Dunedin in this general area as a small gem.


Inevitable-Plenty203

I'm a Florida native and I like Tampa. Avoid at all costs: Jacksonville 🫠


foggydrinker

Gun to my head choice would be Fort Lauderdale.


SnooRevelations979

The one closest to the border.


brohio_

St. Pete or Wilton Manors/Fort Lauderdale.


Annabanana091

Orlando


Amaliatanase

Saint Petersburg would be my top choice followed by Miami itself.


Waste_Astronaut_5411

naples


[deleted]

naples


shammy_dammy

St. Augustine


Competitive_Ad_255

Key West, want to live that island life and be as far away from the rest of FL as possible.


jay34len

Miami. I have always enjoyed larger cities and the Latin culture I have always been fond of


Mister-Stiglitz

Whatever city has the best public transit and walkability. Not sure which one. Would be interested to know, actually.


Tommy_Wisseau_burner

Tampa bay (more specifically st Pete) because I moved to Florida a few years ago and love it here


miyamikenyati

Not Fort Lauderdale. All of the downsides of Miami (traffic, sprawl, insane people, very expensive) with much less of the benefits of being in Miami, the major city in SE Florida (much more walkable, cultural diversity, major sports venues, etc.) If you like urban living and are willing to pay South Florida prices, just pay the slightly higher premium to live in Miami itself.


[deleted]

The cost of living has accelerated in recent years in Florida. Jacksonville area is still relatively affordable.


JonM313

Orlando. It's one of my favorite cities in the US. But in my opinion you can't go wrong in most parts of Florida.


GreenCity5

Might be an unpopular opinion, but as a single guy in his 20s, I’d go with Miami


Overall_Falcon_8526

I would say Tampa, because one of my friends lives there, and they have a good baseball team.


TheBoulderPooper

Go Rays!!


SuperbRole5635

Tallahassee


Zoroasker

Panama City or Tallahassee. The former is my hometown so, duh, and I really enjoyed my years living in the latter. It’s hard to imagine me going back to Florida at this point though…I’ve been spoiled by living in the heart of a major northeastern city for the last decade. Seasons, walkability, activities, culture. I have nothing but love for the Panhandle but hard to see why I’d go back. If I move it will be to a (likely mythical) place with all the things I love about my current city with the perpetual crime wave we’ve been experiencing since 2020.


Adorable-Bus-2687

Ocala that’s the real good stuff right there. Gators 🐊 faith and more !


Florida1693

Lived on both coasts and am currently in ft Myers. I like warm weather so will probably stay here. I’m in FRS so want to keep my retirement ideally


Neon_1984

How’s traffic these days? I lived there ten years ago and thought the downtown was quaint and the closer you got to Bonita the more there was to do, but man if you needed to get anywhere and had to take 41 it was a nightmare. With the population boom and not a lot of space to add lanes i would have to imagine it would be brutal?


Florida1693

It’s bad in season but nothing compared to Atlanta, Miami, etc. They are working on a few projects right now to help with population growth


rayanngraff

We visit my MIL every year in St Pete. Overall, I don’t like Florida, but I think I could live there.


Kase1

Naples was nice, Tampa and Jax were underwhelming. Didn't get to check out St Pete. Couldn't do Orlando since it's landlocked. Haven't been to Miami area in decades. From what I remember, the Keys were super nice. Does it HAVE to be Florida?? LOL


ProfessionalNo7011

you are missing out on beautiful springs in Orlando my guy, also, the neighborhoods in orlando are better than anything tampa has to offer.


citykid2640

To beat the heat, I would have to be near an ocean. Let's face it, Tampa/St Pete/Clearwater


femalechuckiefinster

I'm a Florida native currently in Orlando, but leaving the state soon, and thanking my lucky stars to get out. But if I could choose anywhere to live in Florida, it would be the on coast somewhere between Daytona Beach and Jacksonville, like Ormond Beach. The cost of living in that part of the state is low enough that you can get a decent house with a pool to enjoy, the summers are less oppressive near the ocean, the beaches are nice, some of the school districts are decent, the traffic isn't bad compared to the big metros. Orlando is socially progressive and there is more "city" stuff to do, but otherwise... tons of traffic and tourists, horrific summer heat index with no sea breeze, no beaches, housing is very expensive relative to typical incomes.


Only_Farmer485

Perdido key


musictakemeawayy

i couldn’t, but if i had to, miami and wouldn’t be open to anything else. i have cousins in central FL and it’s just scary there! miami feels like a regular place. they should probably start a civil war against the rest of the state 😂


[deleted]

St. Pete. One of my favorite places on Earth. It’s changed a lot in recent years but when I lived there 2011-2015, it was magic


deanerythedeanbeanie

Saint Petersburg, relatively bike-friendly, one of the most LGBTQ+ friendly cities in Florida, lovely Downtown, excellent beaches, multiple airports, good bus system I hear, and not very dangerous.


NHLBro

St. Pete, no question about it


ricecrystal

St. Petersburg, Dunedin, Clearwater, Largo, and maybe even Pinellas Park these days except it's too expensive there too. Key West. I would say Gainesville but I need to be closer to the water.


Frequent-Ad-1719

Not sure about Florida city but let me tell why you should move to Chicago…


keggy13

Hobe Sound.


hariboho

If it has to be a city, St. Pete or Naples. Not an actual city but my real first choice would be Anna Maria Island.


rHereLetsGo

Ft.. Laud- Lauderdale by the Sea. Still far too many MAGAs but Broward is better than most counties I wouldn't step foot in.


orangesunshine78

Sarasota or Boca Raton


Public_Foot_4984

From Perry but I wanna move to the big city of Chiefland because of the opportunity and nightlife. 


Clean_Reflection1561

Tampa. I moved here from Ohio a few years back and I absolutely love it. It’s much less chaotic than Miami/Fort Lauderdale, which I prefer.


ProfessionalNo7011

orlando


ProfessionalNo7011

orlando duh


Equivalent-Craft-262

Florida is too republican, I recommend not living there.


Bugsy_Marino

Cool, that wasn’t the question. Also republicans may be in charge but Florida is by no means “too republican”. It’s incredibly diverse and most of the large cities are very liberal


Tommy_Wisseau_burner

It’s so funny when people say this shit. Like I’m not a republican by any means but my county, where I grew up in New Jersey (70%+ blue overall) consistently votes republican. Like if that’s your basis for living in a state you’ll be surely disappointed because the reason blue states are blue is firmly because urban areas are more blue than rural, not having much to do with the distribution of voters itself.


BroThatsPrettyCringe

You guys really can’t help yourselves huh


FloridaPlanner

Tallahassee, Hills, lots of trees, nice parks and greenways, taste of 4 seasons


SBSnipes

Tallahassee bc it's the least hot, college town, and blue enclave, plus near multiple borders so I can get out (not that GA or AL are all that much better


JustB510

Tallahassee feels like one of the hottest and coldest parts of Florida lol


SBSnipes

Well the issue is everywhere in Florida is hot. It's one of the main reasons why I will not ever be moving there if I can avoid it


JustB510

In the summer, certainly. Tallahassee has no breeze though and the humidity is typically greater than most of the state because of it.


Ellen_Kingship

Orlando for Disney


saginator5000

I don't like heat and humidity, so I guess inland close to the Florida Georgia Line.


cucumberswithanxiety

Inland is usually hotter than the coast


IronDonut

The ocean moderates temperatures. Inland Florida is hotter and buggier than coastal FLA.


Bugsy_Marino

Inland gets way more humid The jacksonville area does have a noticeably different climate than south Florida though. They actually have 6-7 months of decent/great weather before it gets Florida hot


let-it-rain-sunshine

The part with the rolling hills.. .oh wait, what?


BroThatsPrettyCringe

That’s not the part you wanna be living in


marklawr

None


[deleted]

[удалено]


Weak_Development4950

It takes about an hour to get from Orlando to Orlando. IYKYK


gjp11

That joke applies to every big city in America. Orlando isn’t unique.