Cottage Court Apartments
7110 Tudor Ln,
Port Richey, FL 34668
$1,249 - $1,299
1-2 Beds
The Bayonet Point neighborhood sits approximately five miles north-northeast of downtown Port Richey, which offers the typical city amenities such as the New Port Richey Public Library. For amenities closer to home, head over to Beacon Woods Golf Club and enjoy an afternoon improving your swing. This golf course includes 18 holes and features beautiful greenery that makes for a golfer's paradise. Chose from one of the many neighborhoods surrounding this area to find your next home for rent and never be far from a day of golf. Take a short, 10-minute drive to Robert K Rees Memorial Park where you can spend a day along the coast of the Gulf of Mexico or head to the Boy Scout Preserve just down the street. This preserve has a .3-mile hiking trail that takes hikers through the natural landscape where they can observe the protected habitat. Tampa lies just 42 miles south of downtown Port Richey for anyone wanting to take a day trip and enjoy life away from the suburbs.
As of March 2026, the average apartment rent in Bayonet Point is $1,323 for one bedroom, and $1,525 for two bedrooms. Apartment rent in Bayonet Point has decreased by -0.5% in the past year.
1 BR
691 sq ft
Average Sq Ft
$1,323/month
Average Rent
2 BR
887 sq ft
Average Sq Ft
$1,525/month
Average Rent
Explore how walkable, bikeable, drivable, and transit-friendly Bayonet Point - Port Richey, FL is for everyday living.
Somewhat Walkable
You might be able to get out and walk when living in this area. Some errands can be accomplished on foot, but for others you’ll need a car.
Bikeable
While there’s some bike infrastructure in this area, you’ll still need a car for many errands.
Niche User
10 years ago•Niche Review
Honestly, I don't care for the area that I live in. It seems as though everyone is sitting around doing nothing, not contributing to society what so ever. I would not live in this area in the future, it would be about a 2 on a scale of 1 to 10. I believe this area is going to get worse as time progresses, more drug addicts and alcoholics are going to move in and continue contributing nothing to society.
Niche User
10 years and 6 months ago•Niche Review
I chose to live here because the homes in the area were affordable on one income. The crime was low. The schools are low to average. If i had a better income I would probably move somewhere else. There are a lot of homeless and drug abusers in the general area. The neighborhoods are either working class or elderly. There business's in the area seem to come and go pretty quickly. Overall I would say the majoroity of people living in the county are at the povertly level.
Niche User
10 years and 9 months ago•Niche Review
People post jobs in this area all the time, yet when you send in an application, the hiring manager never reviews any of the applications.
Niche User
11 years ago•Niche Review
The mall in our area is awful... Local businesses aren't really around until you get 10-20 min out. around a half hour out you can find some mom and pop shops but you have to get to Tarpon Springs area
3,490
Communities
959,772
Units
895
Cities
715
Communities
198,674
Units
340
Cities
625
Communities
174,401
Units
249
Cities
625
Communities
125,220
Units
245
Cities
557
Communities
125,188
Units
221
Cities
457
Communities
108,184
Units
229
Cities
† Our analysis of utilities, groceries, transportation, healthcare, home prices, and other goods and services is sourced from the Cost of Living Index, a respected benchmark published by the Council for Community and Economic Research (C2ER) that provides a thorough overview of living expenses across different regions.
Rent data is provided by CoStar Group’s Market Trend reports. As the industry leader in commercial real estate information, analytics, and news, CoStar conducts extensive research to produce and maintain a comprehensive database of commercial real estate information. We combine this data with public record to provide the most up-to-date rental information available.
Consumer goods, services, and home prices are sourced from the Cost of Living Index published by the Council for Community and Economic Research (C2ER). The data on this page is updated quarterly. It was last published in February 2026.