Neighborhood guide
Regency Park Jacksonville NC Neighborhood Guide
Jacksonville, Onslow County
Last updated: April 30, 2026
Area & streets
Williamsburg Plantation; New Castle Dr, Newport Dr (28540)
Era
Resale; early-2000s build window in listing history
Homes
Detached 3–4 BR, ~2,000–2,700+ sq ft; 2–2.5 bath; 2-car garage; ~0.29–0.35 ac lots in cited examples
Regency Park is an established Jacksonville, NC neighborhood with a clear identity on real estate portals and property pages. Homes tied to the area cluster along New Castle Drive and Newport Drive, and multiple public pages connect Regency Park to the Williamsburg Plantation part of the city. Zillow
Development and history
Regency Park is a resale neighborhood rather than a current new-construction community. Tied property pages have shown homes built in the early 2000s, including examples from 2003 and 2004, which places the pocket in Jacksonville’s later 2000s subdivision growth period rather than the newest builder pipeline. Realtor
Homes and architectural style
Homes in Regency Park are primarily detached single-family residences. Public examples on New Castle Drive have shown three- and four-bedroom layouts, two to 2.5 baths, attached two-car garages, and floor plans often from about 2,000 square feet into the upper-2,000s. Exteriors on cited homes have included vinyl, brick, and stone; lot sizes in those examples have often landed near 0.29 to 0.35 acre. Zillow
The neighborhood today
Today, Regency Park reads as a smaller established resale neighborhood with a consistent single-family pattern rather than a broad mixed-housing area. Realtor’s Regency Park search and Zillow references around New Castle and Newport help reinforce a compact identity and recognizable street network—treat any portal as a snapshot; confirm on live MLS. This guide from Salt & Soil Realty is meant to help buyers and sellers see Regency Park as a defined resale neighborhood rather than a new builder line.
PCS and location context
For PCS buyers, Regency Park is an established 28540 option within the Williamsburg Plantation context rather than a far-flung new perimeter. It fits buyers comparing larger established subdivisions and everyday routes back toward the Camp Lejeune area without claiming a specific gate distance—verify any commute in your own maps. Zillow
Real estate perspective
Regency Park fits a familiar Jacksonville resale niche: larger detached homes from the early 2000s with more square footage than many older in-town pockets. Realtor’s neighborhood search for Regency Park is only a point-in-time view—inventory, Jacksonville-wide medians, and asking prices on New Castle and Newport all move with the market; work with your agent and current MLS to compare this pocket to new construction and other neighborhoods.
Key takeaways
Regency Park is an established Jacksonville subdivision in the Williamsburg Plantation area, with detached early-2000s single-family homes and a clear link to New Castle Drive and Newport Drive—a defined resale community with a larger typical floor plan than many smaller older in-town pockets. Zillow
Contact Salt & Soil Realty for current listings, comps, and how Regency Park lines up with your PCS or local move.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Regency Park in Jacksonville, NC?
Regency Park is an established single-family neighborhood in Jacksonville, with homes directly tied to New Castle Drive and Newport Drive and a repeated link to the Williamsburg Plantation area.
No. It is a resale community. Directly tied property history often includes homes built in the early 2000s, with examples from 2003 and 2004 on public record.
Detached single-family homes dominate, often with three- and four-bedroom layouts, about two to two and a half baths, attached two-car garages, and floor plans commonly in the 2,000- to 2,700-square-foot range on many listings.
It sits in the 28540 area, with directly tied homes on New Castle Drive and Newport Drive and a typical association with the Williamsburg Plantation side of the city.
It can be a good fit for PCS buyers who want an established early-2000s resale neighborhood with larger single-family homes instead of a new builder line—compare commute, schools, and condition to your orders.
