
Pulte Homes
National scale, legitimate appeal.
Pulte Homes: National Scale, Legitimate Appeal
Pulte has been building homes since 1950. Over 875,000 of them.
Pulte builds single-family residences and townhomes across multiple communities. The homes present well. Pulte has always understood curb appeal and interior flow, and their floor plans reflect decades of refinement based on actual buyer feedback at scale.
The feature that genuinely sets Pulte apart, though, is their accordion slider. A fully retracting three-panel slider that disappears completely behind the wall — no glass panel left blocking the opening, no compromised airflow, just a fully open connection between interior and patio. Most builders, even luxury ones, offer sliders that leave half the opening obstructed. Pulte solves that. In Florida's climate, where indoor-outdoor living isn't a design trend but a lifestyle, that's a meaningful differentiator.
Del Webb, their active adult brand, operates under the same umbrella — same construction standards, same warranty framework, different buyer demographic.
If you're buying a Pulte home, you know what you're getting: a proven floor plan, national warranty support, a finish package that presents well, and genuine indoor-outdoor flow most builders charge considerably more for.
Pulte has been a public company building at volume for seven decades. That scale invites scrutiny, and they've accumulated their share of complaints through missteps — the same way any large institution does. Measured against homes delivered, their track record is considerably more reasonable than raw complaint numbers suggest. They carry a legal and warranty infrastructure that smaller regional builders simply don't.
Pulte's design sensibility sits squarely between assembly-line production and true custom building. Coffered ceilings, actual wooden staircases, floor sockets in the loft — these aren't throwaway details. They're choices that signal real thought about how a home lives. Solid curb appeal, quality-of-life features throughout, and an unapologetic price tag for the upgrades you want to add. They fill a very real niche: buyers looking for a production builder with an upscale aesthetic and genuine design depth. You pay for the name, but they earn that check with homes that are well thought out, built at scale, and positioned well above the assembly-line baseline most large builders default to.

Why you still need your own agent.
The builder's sales agent works for the builder — their job is to protect the builder's margin and close the deal. That's not a judgment, it's just how it works. Having Blue Gecko represent you costs you nothing (the builder pays buyer's agent commission), and means you have someone in your corner on contract terms, inspections, upgrades, and the parts of the process where builders have the advantage.
We've walked through more new construction on the Space Coast than we can count. We know what's negotiable, what isn't, and when to push.