Tiger Woods rolled his Land Rover on Jupiter Island. The crash exposes fault lines in Florida's most exclusive enclaves.
The Big Picture

Jupiter Island isn't just any community. It's one of America's wealthiest ZIP codes, with properties regularly topping $50 million. Woods bought a 12-acre plot here for $40 million in 2006, razed the existing house, and built a custom megamansion. It's now worth $60 million. This isn't just an athlete's home; it's a luxury asset in a market that's proven remarkably resilient.
The community operates by its own rules. Private security, restricted access, the kind of discretion that attracts billionaires and celebrities. But the March 27 crash showed that not even money buys immunity from traffic laws. Woods was arrested for DUI with property damage, after refusing to provide a urine sample.
>A DUI crash on a private street exposes how ultra-luxury enclaves create bubbles that eventually burst.
Why It Matters
First, property values. Jupiter Island mansions are safe-haven assets. When a public negative event like this occurs, owners wonder: does this affect prices? Historically, scandals have minimal impact on ultra-luxury values. Land scarcity and privacy outweigh bad publicity. But in 2026, with higher interest rates and a luxury market finally cooling, any sign of vulnerability matters.


