Three communities, one shared river. The honest comparison every Cape Fear region buyer makes before committing to an address.
Buyers evaluating the Cape Fear region almost always compare these three communities before they commit to one. Southport and Leland share Brunswick County's tax rate. Wilmington is across the Cape Fear River in New Hanover County with a dramatically different character and cost structure. The comparison is not just about price — it is about which of three very different daily-life environments fits the specific buyer.
The tax difference between Brunswick County and New Hanover County saves a buyer approximately $2,500-$3,000 per year on a $800K property. Over a 10-year hold that is $25,000-$30,000. That is real money but it is not the primary reason to choose Southport over Wilmington. The primary reason is which community fits how you actually want to live.
Directional estimates. Verify with Brunswick County and New Hanover County Tax Administration. June 2026.
| Factor | Southport | Wilmington | Leland |
|---|---|---|---|
| Active listings ($600K+) | 127 | 229 total; 134 at $1M+ | 99 |
| Character | Historic small city + golf community | Coastal city; urban scale | Suburban development; value tier |
| County | Brunswick (lower taxes) | New Hanover (higher taxes) | Brunswick (lower taxes) |
| Golf community | Yes (St. James: 4 courses) | Yes (Landfall) | No |
| BHI ferry access | 20 min (ferry departs Southport) | 35-40 min drive to ferry | 45-50 min drive to ferry |
| Nearest ocean beach | Oak Island (~15 min) | Wrightsville Beach (~15 min) | OI or Wrightsville (~25-35 min) |
| Airport (ILM) | ~40 min | ~10 min | ~20 min |
| Hospital and specialist medical | ~35-40 min to Novant / NHRMC | In-city; immediate | ~15-20 min to Wilmington |
| Commercial infrastructure | Small city scale; limited specialist retail | Full coastal city; all services | Suburban corridor; major retail |
| Historic character | Strong; intact downtown | Good (Midtown); riverfront | None |
| Primary buyer profile | Retirees, remote workers, lifestyle buyers | All higher-income types; most diverse | Value buyers; bridge-commute tolerance |
Directional comparison for buyer orientation. June 2026.
The buyer who belongs in Southport has specifically decided they want the small-city character, the Cape Fear River waterfront, the historic downtown walkability, and the St. James Plantation amenity infrastructure — and values those things over Wilmington's urban scale and Leland's price-per-dollar advantage. The Southport buyer typically has a stable daily routine that does not require frequent airport runs or specialist medical access, enjoys the BHI ferry as a lifestyle asset, and finds the 35-minute drive to Wilmington an acceptable trade for the lower tax rate, quieter environment, and community character they are buying.
Belongs in Southport: Active retirees who want golf, boating, and historic town character. Remote workers who want coastal small-city life without urban density. Buyers who will use the BHI ferry regularly. Anyone for whom the St. James Plantation amenity package is genuinely the primary purchase motivation.
The Wilmington buyer needs the city. They need the Harris Teeter and the specialty grocery within 5 minutes. They need the airport accessible without planning around it. They need specialist medical within the same municipality. They want Landfall's golf community or Midtown's walkable neighborhood character or the downtown riverfront lifestyle. They are not interested in a 35-minute drive to Wilmington because they are already in Wilmington, and that is exactly where they want to be.
Belongs in Wilmington: Buyers who need the full urban infrastructure of a coastal city. Healthcare professionals working at Novant. Buyers who fly frequently. Anyone for whom the ILM airport proximity, the commercial density, or the specialist medical access is a primary daily life requirement.
The Leland buyer wants more house at a lower price than Wilmington delivers, is comfortable with the Cape Fear Memorial Bridge commute, and wants the value-tier advantage that Brunswick County's lower tax rate provides alongside Wilmington's commercial corridor within 15-20 minutes. Leland does not have Southport's historic character or its direct BHI access. It also does not have Wilmington's price premium. The buyer here has made a deliberate value calculation that the commute is worth what they save.
Belongs in Leland: Value-oriented buyers who want new construction, more square footage per dollar than Wilmington provides, and a tolerable bridge commute. Buyers who need Wilmington's commercial access but cannot justify Wilmington's prices for their specific budget and goals.
Southport residents drive to Wilmington regularly. It is not a once-a-month trip. Major grocery runs, specialist medical, the airport, specific restaurants, and the commercial infrastructure that Southport lacks are all 35-40 minutes north. Before choosing Southport, map your actual weekly routine against that drive. How many times per week do you realistically need to be in Wilmington? What time of day? The drive is consistent and manageable for buyers who have thought it through. It is a persistent friction point for buyers who underestimated it.
Still deciding between Southport, Wilmington, and Leland and want an honest read on which fits your specific situation?
A private inquiry gets you that conversation within two business days. 412-225-0598 · petertumbas@bhhsne.com
Related: Southport Market Briefing · Southport Neighborhoods · Wilmington Market Briefing · Wilmington Neighborhoods (incl. Leland) · Bald Head Island
Not legal, tax, or financial advice. Tax rates are directional estimates. Verify with county tax administration. June 2026.