Coral Springs is a planned community in northwestern Broward County, and the directory's category mix reflects its suburban, family-oriented character. Our listings here total 4,311, spread across 15 ZIP codes. Real estate leads the directory at 394 listings, narrowly ahead of salons at 373 and restaurants at 289.
The shape of the category tail is the more telling read. Dentists come in at 103 and insurance agencies at 101, which is a dense ratio of household-services professionals per capita for a city of this size. Lawyers follow at 87, churches at 82, and general contractors at 76. That mid-tier weight in clinical and professional services tracks with the demographic profile, which leans toward established families and dual-income households with stable insurance and healthcare needs.
The city sits in the I-75 and Sawgrass Expressway corridor that connects western Broward to Palm Beach County. Most of the residential stock was built between the 1970s and the 2000s, which means most home services operators here run standard service-call work rather than the older-infrastructure repair patterns that show up in the eastern Broward beach cities. Roofing, pool service, and air conditioning maintenance form the bulk of recurring home-services demand. Hurricane season generates spikes in roofing and tree-work demand from June through November, and pricing during a named-storm window tends to run above off-season rates.
The professional services tier is unusually deep for a city of this footprint. The 103 listed dentists, layered with the financial advisors, insurance agents, and lawyers, reflect a market where consumers shop locally for professional services rather than commuting to Fort Lauderdale or Miami. Family-practice dentists and orthodontists make up the bulk of the dental listings, with cosmetic and implant specialists in a smaller cluster.
Florida typically requires general contractors and the regulated trades to hold a state license. Status is verifiable through the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation. Healthcare and dental licensing flow through the Department of Health. Verify the license at the relevant board before any major work.
The restaurant scene runs heavily toward family-casual chains and independent operators serving Hispanic, Brazilian, and Caribbean clientele, which reflects the city's demographic mix. The 289 restaurant listings are spread across the 15 ZIP codes rather than concentrated in a single downtown corridor. There is no traditional city center in Coral Springs the way there is in Boca Raton or Fort Lauderdale, and the directory's geographic distribution reflects that.