Visit Leesburg

Leesburg is located in the heart of the Florida peninsula, south of the Ocala National Forest and about one hour northwest of Orlando. It sits on the Lake Wales Ridge, a range of hills that runs north and south.

Travelers arriving by car find Leesburg convenient to exits where the Florida Turnpike merges with I-75 west of the city and with US 27 south. Major highways include US 441 and US 27.

Leesburg is located in Lake County with the county's southern tip extending to Walt Disney World. Leesburg offers easy access to Florida's most famous attractions, yet offers an active but leisurely lifestyle sought by so many visitors and newcomers. Opportunities for fishing, hunting, camping, hiking, horseback riding and swimming in deep, clear springs set the stage for an "endless vacation".

Leesburg is no stranger to exciting year-round events, with an annual Mardi Gras Celebration and parade, the Leesburg BikeFest, holiday festivities and a Fine Art Festival.

For visitor information, visit the Leesburg Area Chamber's Welcome Station located at the Econolodge-Leesburg, 1308 N. 14th Street (US 27/441) Leesburg, Florida 34748. Detailed area maps are available for a nominal fee.

 
New Residents

For Leesburg, a healthy and growing economy makes for a great place to establish roots, with a complete range of job opportunities and all amenities of the big city life. Many area retirement communities offer restaurant, recreation, entertainment, shopping and medical facilities on-site for the convenience of their residents and those living in Lake County. Leesburg residents of all ages find a complete range of housing, businesses and shopping centers. Lake County boasts some of the best schools in the state, as well as a prominent community college.

Yet, it is to the community's credit that Lake County has refused to sacrifice the natural beauty of lakes and wooded areas - home to snowy egrets, herons, cranes and other wildlife, a picturesque backdrop for this wonderful community.

The Harris Chain of Lakes (Lake Harris, Little Lake Harris, Eustis,Dora and Griffin) provides a spectacular backdrop for small town living at its finest. The natural resources so prevalent in the area make for the most pristine environmental benchmarks in the entire state.

A visit to the newly renovated and revitalized downtown Leesburg, a Florida Main Street City, is just the ticket for relaxing and awe-inspiring measures of Florida living at its finest.

Leesburg's Regional Airport features a 4,950 and a 6,000-foot lighted runways, tie down, hanger facilities and helicopter operations for the general aviation pilot. Private and charter flights are available. Flight training is also available for those interested in pursuing the excitement of flying.

 
Demographics

Lake County's strategic development has attracted an impressive array of manufacturers and distribution centers. Available land and a pro-business attitude contribute to the county's success in attracting new and expanding businesses.

The county-owned Christopher C. Ford Commerce Park serves as a model for efficient permitting. Other key assets are Lake Technical Center and Lake-Sumter Community College, both of which prepare citizens for the challenges of the job market. The University of Central Florida, Troy State University and St. Leo University also provide higher education for an increasingly skilled workforce.

Large distributors, such as Domino's Pizza, Sprint North Supply, Circuit City, and Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company, have found the county's central location a significant business benefit. Convenient access to Florida's Turnpike allows for easy and efficient distribution throughout the state and the Southeast.

An emerging industry in Lake County has been sports medicine and technology. South Lake Hospital's 150-acre all-in-one campus is home to the National Training Center, which is designed to meet the needs of all ages and at all fitness levels, from residents in the local community to national and international athletes. Together the Central Florida Sports Commission and National Training Center partner to develop triathlon training programs and events throughout central Florida.

Another emerging market for Lake includes agra-technology. Companies such as Agri-Starts III, Inc., Florida Food Products, Inc. and Seninger Irrigation, Inc. call the county home. Creation of the 80-acre Eustis Commerce Park has attracted high-wage, high-value tenants such as U.S. Nutra and Traymax, Inc.

As one of the top economic development groups in the world, the Metro Orlando Economic Development Commission (EDC) generates new business investment, technology industry growth, international trade, and film and television production for Lake County and the rest of the four-county Metro Orlando region. The EDC also works to ensure that companies remain and expand here.

Population Trends1990200020042009*
 152,104210,528256,893311,975
* As projected. Source: Decision Data Resources - 2005
Population By Ethnicity*
White224,42987.4%
Black21,6078.4%
Asian2,1410.8%
American Indian/Eskimo/Aleut8560.3%
Other4,8241.9%
2 or more races3,0361.2%
Total256,893100.0%
 
Hispanic20,6938.1%
*Note: Hispanic is not a race, thus are not delineated separately.
Source: Decision Data Resources - 2005
Population By Age
0-1443,87517.0%
15-2437,91510.9%
25-4459,30223.1%
45-6460,37523.5%
65 and over65,42623.5%
 
Median Age44.2 
Source: Decision Data Resources - 2005
Population By City
 Astatula
Clermont
Eustis
Fruitland Park
Groveland
Howey-in-the-Hills
Lady Lake
Leesburg
1,640
10,986
18,151
3,728
2,988
1,217
14,198
18,540
 Mascotte
Minneola
Montverde
Mount Dora
Tavares
Umatilla
Unincorporated
2,951
6,700
1,170
11,365
11,568
2,487
149,204
 
Source: Decision Data Resources - 2005
Commuting Patterns
 Into Lake County - From* 
 Lake County
Orange County
Seminole County
Marion County
Sumter County
31,842
7,063
1,645
3,968
3,188
70.80%
9.65%
2.25%
5.42%
4.35%
 
 From Lake County - To* 
 Lake County
Orange County
Seminole County
Volusia County
Sumter County
51,842
20,009
2,979
1,536
1,214
63.64%
24.56%
3.66%
1.89%
1.49%
*Note: percentages are those that work in Lake County and live in a specific county.
Source: 2003 Census Release, latest data available - 2005
Labor Taxes / Finance
Labor Force (2001)112,750 Taxes 
County Unemployment Rate4.0% Personal Income TaxNone
National Unemployment Rate5.2%
Personal Property (millage rate)18.3810 - 22.3620
Florida Unemployment Rate4.0% Corporate Income Tax5.5%
MSA Unemployment Rate3.7% Sales Tax7%
Note: Data compiled monthly, not seasonally adjusted.
Source: Florida Agency for Workforce Innovation, Labor Market Statistics - July 2005
 Source: County Tax Collector -2005
Financial Institutions (Billions) Major Employers
Bank Deposits$2,310,594 Lake County Public Schools
Saving & Loan Deposits$429,678 Villages of Lake-Sumter, Inc.
Source: Florida Banker's Association Leesburg Regional Medical Center
Cost of Living (MSA) Florida Hospital Waterman, Inc
Composite Index99.8 Sprint
Grocery Items92.4 G&T Conveyor Company, Inc.
Housing98.1 Casmin Inc
Utilities97.3 Lake Port Square
Transportation101.9 Bailey Industries
Health Care94.9 Accent
Miscellaneous Goods & Services104.6 Lake County Sheriff's Department
 
 Lake County Government
Source: ACCRA Cost of Living Index -- 2nd Quarter 2005 Cherry Lake Tree Farm
  Source: Metro Orlando Economic Development Commission - 2005
Retail Sales Business Start-Ups
($Billions)$2,238,882 
199920002001200220032004
2,0122,2342,9003,4544,4796,136
*Note: Includes home-based businesses
Source: 2004, www.MarketForceCorporation.com- 2005
Education
 Elem. SchoolJunior/MiddleHigh SchoolTech. CentersCharter School
Number of Schools219838
Number of Students16,1688,0149,806n/an/a
Number of High School Graduates (2004) 1,751
Source: www.firn.edu/dot/eias/flmove/lake.htm, Lake County School Board - 2004
 Test Scores (Average)
   Mean
 SAT Scores (Verbal/Math)653/654501/307
 ACT Scores28.720.8
 *Top 10% of test-takers.
Source: 2004 FL Department of Education - 2003
 
 Education Profile
 Graduate Degree9,8905.3% 
 Bachelor's Degree20,83311.3% 
 Associate's Degree10,9615.9% 
 Some College42,56023.0% 
 High School Graduate63,41834.3% 
 Grade 9 - 12 (no diploma)26,84014.5% 
 Grade K - 810,5813.7% 
 Number of Adults185,103100.00% 
 Source: Decision Data Resources - 2005 
Economic Projections   
 200020012002*2003*
Population210,528214,904219,358228,281
Employment62,65264,49262,70363,712
Income (Billions)$6.2$7.4$8.6$9.8
Unemployment Rate2.73.04.85.0
Housing Starts5,1173,9304,0303,213
Single Family3,8633,6893,4322,885
Multi-Family1,255241598328
*As projected. Source: Fishkind & Associates Econocast - 2002
Housing (MSA)
 2002200320042005
Average Home Price$136,600$145,100$169,600$232,200
National Average$158,100$170,000$184,000$208,500
Note: Not seasonally adjusted.
Source: National Association of Realtors, 2nd Quarter 2005
Facilities 

Each WEEK Metro Orlando Welcomes AN ESTIMATED:
$508 million in retail sales
1,275 new adult residents
549,407 air travelers
531 residential building permits
$689 million total buying income
103 new businesses
3314 new jobs
866,000 visitors

Source: Orlando Sentinel Market Book - 2005

Leesburg Regional Airport
Located 30 miles northwest of Orlando, the Leesburg Regional Airport features a 5,000 foot asphalt runway. The airport, accommodates general aviation and corporate pilots with 24 hours a day services which include FBO facilities, fuel, flight instruction, maintenance, refurbishing, navigational aids, industrial space, hangar space, and open tie-down space. The airport also features a recently added U.S. Customs and border protection inspection. For those interested in starting a business in this thriving area, land is available for aeronautical industries and commercial frontage is available for other development.

CompanyInvestmentProduct/Services
National Institute of Telehealth (NIT)$5,000,000Interactive Video Tech./Research & Dev.
Southeast Fabricators, Inc.N/AMfg. Steel Signage
Anchor Coatings, Inc of Leesburg$1,000,000Mfg. Exterior Coatings
Umatilla Academy for Girls$4,000,000Residential Treatment for At-Risk Girls
Blue Rhino$6,000,000Refurbish Propane Cylinders
ICS of Florida, Inc.$800,00Mfg. Energy Efficient Panels
Traymax, Inc.$750,000Mfg. Plastic Trays
Total Industrial Market Summary 
Total existing industrial space76.81 million sq. ft.  
Under construction93,460 sq. ft. 
Current vacancy rate6.9% 
Lease rate$4.76 avg / sq. ft.  
Net Absorption (YTD 2005)1.32 million sq. ft.  
Total Office Market Summary 
Total existing office space40.38 million sq. ft. 
Under construction152,100 sq. ft. 
Current vacancy rate9.9% 
Lease rate (class A)$19.56 / sq. ft. 
Net Absorption (YTD 2005)1.057 million sq. ft. 
Central Business District Office Market Summary 
Total existing CBD office space5.33 million sq. ft. 
Current vacancy rate9.1% 
Lease rate (class A)$19.93 / sq. ft. 
Construction Costs$70.00 - $150.00 / sq. ft. 
Source: CoStar, 2nd Quarter 2005 
Bulk Distribution Warehouse Summary 
Total existing warehouse space13.6 million sq. ft. 
Under construction203,125 sq. ft.  
Current vacancy rate15.8%  
Lease rate$4.48 / sq. ft.  
Net Absorption (projected 2003)500,000 sq. ft 
Source: Rebman Properties - 4th quarter 2003 
Household Income 
Average Household$54,088 
Median Household$39,810 
Per Capita$23,086 
Source: Decision Data Resources - 2005 
Economic Incentives

County Incentives:

Lake County is the owner of the Christopher C. Ford Commerce Park located a the intersection of U.S. 27 and Florida's Turnpike. The County has enacted the Job Growth Investment Trust Fund, which may award a qualified business up to $4,000 for each new job created at a salary of 115 percent of the county's average annual wage. The county also offers a deferral plan for the payment of transportation impact fees for qualified projects.

Lake County has two HUBZones, whereby certified companies may participate in the Federal Government's Empowerment Contracting Program. The two census tracts that are qualified as a HUBZone are located in Leesburg. To determine what areas of the county are HUBZones or to more specifically determine if an address is located in a HUBZone, visit www.sba.gov/hubzone.

City Incentives

EUSTIS - The city of Eustis offers a deferral plan for the payment of water/wastewater impact fees and has a utility tax ordinance which caps the tax rate on manufacturing.

LEESBURG - Companies that locate or expand into the city of Leesburg may qualify for an abatement of city property taxes. The city has industrial land available for development. On a case-by-case basis, the city will offer additional incentives to significant projects. The city also offers an impact-fee financing, deferral plan, and piggybacks its Jobs Growth Investment Program with the county's to qualifying businesses.

GROVELAND - Companies that locate or expand into the city of Groveland may qualify for up to a ten-year exemption of city ad valorem taxes on buildings and equipment.

MASCOTTE - Companies that locate or expand into the city of Mascotte may qualify for an abatement of property taxes.

 State Tax Incentives
  • No state personal income tax
  • No sales tax on food and medicine
  • No state-level ad valorem tax
  • No inventory tax
  • No ad valorem tax on goods-in-transit
  • Exemptions from sales tax on electricity used during the manufacturing process
  • Sales and use tax exemptions for research/development costs
  • No sales tax on boiler fuels
  • Sales tax exemptions for the motion picture, television and recording industries
  • Tax refunds up to $3,000 per job created for qualified target industries
State Financing Incentives
  • Industrial Revenue Bond (IRB) financing authorized for industrial & not-for-profit use
  • Enterprise Bonds provide tax-exempt bone financing at attractive rates for small to medium manufacturers requiring less than $2 million.
  • Enterprise Florida provides capital for start-ups, expansions, technology-transfer and businesses seeing to export goods and services. Florida First Capital Finance Corporation is a non-profit corporation certified to issue SBA debentures.
  • International transactions are exempted from documentary stamp tax and international banking transactions are exempted from intangible tax.
  • Florida Black Business Investment Board provides financing for black-owned businesses.

Founded in 1977, the EDC is a not-for-profit, public/private partnership serving the City of Orlando and Orange, Seminole, Lake and Osceola counties. For more information about the Metro Orlando Economic Development Commission visit our website at www.OrlandoEDC.com or call 352-728-0899.

Lake-Sumter Community College

With campuses in Leesburg, Clermont and Sumterville, LSCC serves over 3,600 students annually. The college offers Associate in Arts (A.A.) and Associate in Science (A.S.) degrees in a wide range of curriculums. In addition to degree programs, non-credit continuing education, corporate training, children's and arts programs are available through the community college.

A number of four-year and graduate degrees are offered on LSCC campuses through partnerships with UCF, St. Leo University and Troy State University. The Leesburg campus houses the Business Assistance Center, a one-stop organization designed to assist entrepreneurs and advanced businesses with start-up and expansion assistance, SCORE and ACE Counselors are available to provide guidance in all industry sectors.

Lake Technical Center

With the main campus in Eustis, LTC is a specialized, post-secondary institution which provides job preparatory and supplemental skill training. The LTC Institute of Public Safety, Located in Tavares, operate as an extension campus.

 
Area Maps
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