Alanton Virginia Beach deep water access Linkhorn Bay Broad Bay boating

Alanton's Deep Water Access: A Buyer's Guide to Virginia Beach's Best Waterfront Neighborhood

April 18, 20266 min read

Alanton's Deep Water Access: A Buyer's Guide to Virginia Beach's Best Waterfront Neighborhood

Most waterfront neighborhoods in Virginia Beach will get you near the water. Alanton gets you on it. There is a meaningful difference, and for buyers who are serious about boating, fishing, or simply owning a home with genuine deep water dock access, Alanton stands apart from nearly every other neighborhood in Hampton Roads.

This guide is specifically for buyers who want to understand what deep water access in Alanton actually means, how the waterways connect, what to look for in a waterfront property here, and why this neighborhood is in a category of its own.

What Makes Alanton's Water Access Different

Alanton sits on a peninsula in the Great Neck Corridor of Virginia Beach, bordered by Linkhorn Bay to the south and Broad Bay to the north. Both are navigable bodies of water connected to the broader Hampton Roads waterway system. Most waterfront homes along the perimeter of Alanton have deep water access, with views looking east over the bays toward First Landing State Park.

That combination is rare. You are not looking at a narrow tidal creek that dries out at low tide or a canal that limits the size of vessel you can dock. You are looking at open bay frontage with legitimate deep water access via Wolfsnare Creek and Linkhorn Bay all the way to the Chesapeake Bay and beyond.

For buyers who want to keep a serious boat behind their home, Alanton is one of the very few neighborhoods in Virginia Beach where that is genuinely possible.

How the Waterways Connect

Understanding the waterway network helps you appreciate what living in Alanton actually gives you access to.

From Alanton you can reach Broad Bay and Linkhorn Bay directly from your dock. From Broad Bay you connect through the Lynnhaven River system out to the Chesapeake Bay. From the Chesapeake Bay you have open access to the Atlantic Ocean, the Outer Banks, and beyond. The full run from an Alanton dock to open water on the Chesapeake is a realistic day on the water, not a multi day trip.

Broad Bay itself is a wide, open body of water popular for wakeboarding, tubing, and water skiing. Linkhorn Bay offers calmer water and protected coves ideal for kayaking, paddleboarding, and fishing for puppy drum and speckled trout. The Narrows, a state park beach at First Landing State Park, is accessible by boat and is a favorite destination for Alanton residents who want to beach the boat and spend the afternoon in the sun.

The Community Boat Ramp

Not every home in Alanton sits directly on the water, but some properties in the neighborhood include access to a community boat ramp. This is a meaningful amenity that most Virginia Beach neighborhoods simply do not have. For buyers who keep a boat on a trailer, having the ability to launch directly from the neighborhood without driving to a public ramp or paying marina fees is a genuine lifestyle advantage.

For buyers who want the Alanton boating lifestyle at a non waterfront price point, boat ramp access is one of the features worth asking about when evaluating specific properties in the neighborhood.

What to Look for When Buying Waterfront in Alanton

Deep water access is not guaranteed on every waterfront lot in Alanton. Water depth varies by location, and doing your homework before making an offer matters significantly at this price point. Here is what serious buyers need to evaluate:

Water depth at mean low water is the number that matters, not depth at high tide. If you plan to dock a vessel with meaningful draft, verify the actual low tide depth at the pier before you go under contract. A marine surveyor can confirm this for you and it is worth every penny.

Dock condition is a separate evaluation from the home inspection. Docks in the Hampton Roads area take weather and marine wear seriously. A dock that looks sound above the waterline can have structural issues below. Budget for a dedicated dock inspection and factor any needed repairs into your offer.

Flood zone designation affects your insurance costs directly. Pull the FEMA flood map for any Alanton waterfront property you are seriously considering and get a flood insurance quote before you are under contract. This is one of the variables that surprises buyers most often when they skip this step.

Shoreline and bulkhead condition should be evaluated carefully. Waterfront properties in Virginia Beach can experience shoreline erosion over time. Ask about any bulkhead work that has been done and when. Understanding the current state of the shoreline gives you negotiating leverage and protects you from a major post closing expense.

Vessel size and clearance matters if you plan to keep a larger boat. Confirm the water depth, any overhead clearance from bridges on your intended route, and whether the dock configuration can accommodate the type of boat you own or plan to own.

Alanton Waterfront Pricing in 2026

Waterfront homes in Alanton with deep water dock access range from approximately $1.7 million on the lower end to well above $5 million for larger estates with premium bay frontage. A waterfront home on North Alanton Drive sold in September 2025 for $5.2 million. A home with direct water access on East Road sold in May 2025 for $1.705 million in just 2 days on market.

Price per square foot for deep water waterfront homes generally runs from $400 to over $600 depending on lot size, bay orientation, dock infrastructure, and construction quality. Homes with south facing Linkhorn Bay frontage and deep water capable of accommodating larger vessels sit at the top of that range consistently.

Non waterfront homes in Alanton with access to the community boat ramp range from $900,000 to $1.4 million. For buyers who want the boating lifestyle at a more accessible entry point, this is the path into the neighborhood.

Why Alanton Is the Right Neighborhood for Serious Waterfront Buyers

There are other waterfront neighborhoods in Virginia Beach. What sets Alanton apart for buyers who are serious about the water is the combination of factors that no other neighborhood in Hampton Roads packages together in the same way.

Deep water bay access on two sides of the neighborhood. A deeded community boat ramp for non waterfront residents. Views of First Landing State Park across open water. A top rated school pipeline. One of the lowest crime scores in Virginia Beach. Lot sizes averaging an acre or more. And a neighborhood culture built over nearly a century that attracts buyers who stay for decades.

If deep water access and waterfront living are at the top of your priority list, there is no better neighborhood in Virginia Beach to start your search.

Call or text me at 757-270-3994 or visit 757King.com to talk through what is available in Alanton right now and what it would take to get positioned as a buyer in this market.

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About the Author: John King is a Navy veteran and licensed real estate agent with Berkshire Hathaway RW Towne Realty, serving Hampton Roads including Virginia Beach, Norfolk, and Chesapeake. Known for a straightforward approach and deep market expertise. 📞 757-270-3994 📧 [email protected] 🌐 757King.com

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