Sun Lakes, Arizona: A Buyer’s Guide to All Five Country Clubs
Everyone says “Sun Lakes” like it’s one place. It’s actually five separate communities, each with its own golf course, its own clubhouse, its own gate (or not), and its own personality. Here’s how to tell them apart — and find the one that fits you.
Sun Lakes is a large 55+ area just south of Chandler, in the southeast Valley. Ed Robson started building it in 1972 — it was the community that launched Robson Resort Communities — and by the time it sold out in 2006 it had grown to around 10,000 homes across five distinct country club communities.
And that word — distinct — is the whole point of this page.
The one thing you have to understand about Sun Lakes
Sun Lakes is not one community. It’s five separate ones, each with its own homeowners association, its own golf course, its own clubhouse, restaurant, pools, and amenities. They share a name and a ZIP code — they do not share a membership.
If you live in one, you generally cannot use another community’s amenities unless you’re there as the guest of someone who owns in it. There’s one friendly exception: you can eat at any of the five communities’ restaurants. So you can golf and swim only in your own, but you can dine all over Sun Lakes.
Two of the communities do share amenities with a partner, and we’ll flag that below. But the headline rule is: the community you buy in is the community whose pool, gym, and course you’ll actually use. Choosing the right one matters more here than almost anywhere, and it’s exactly what we help you do.
The five communities, at a glance
| Community | Gated? | Started | The short version |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sun Lakes Country Club | No | 1972 | The original. Single-family + manufactured homes, all on owned land. Lowest buy-in. |
| Cottonwood | No | 1979 | Affordable, welcoming, shares amenities with Palo Verde. Has a kids’ pool. |
| Palo Verde | Guard | 1983 | Guard gated, single-family, shares amenities with Cottonwood. |
| Ironwood | Guard | 1987 | Guard gated, part of IronOaks with Oakwood. Upscale. |
| Oakwood | Guard | 1994 | The newest. Guard gated, IronOaks partner, has townhomes. |
The pairings — who shares with whom
This is the part that confuses even longtime residents, so here it is plainly:
- Ironwood + Oakwood run together as IronOaks Country Club. They share amenities — live in one, use both. Both guard gated.
- Cottonwood + Palo Verde share amenities with each other. One’s gated (Palo Verde), one isn’t (Cottonwood), but they’re an amenity pair.
- Sun Lakes Country Club stands alone — its own amenities, no sharing partner.
So functionally, if amenity access is what you care about, think of it as: IronOaks (Ironwood/Oakwood), the Cottonwood/Palo Verde pair, and Sun Lakes Country Club on its own.
Explore each community
Sun Lakes Country Club
The one that started it all. A mix of single-family homes and manufactured homes — and critically, you own the land under both. One flat HOA fee no matter what you own, and the lowest capital buy-in of the five. The value entry point to Sun Lakes.
Sun Lakes Country Club guide →Cottonwood
An affordable, friendly community with single-family homes, golf homes, and townhomes. It has its own kids’ pool for visiting grandchildren — unusual and handy. Shares amenities with neighboring Palo Verde.
Cottonwood guide →Palo Verde
Guard gated, single-family homes only (no townhomes). The HOA fee is a bit higher — it includes the gate and road maintenance. Shares amenities with Cottonwood, so you get two communities’ facilities.
Palo Verde guide →Ironwood
Guard gated and upscale, Ironwood runs together with Oakwood as IronOaks Country Club — live in Ironwood and you use both communities’ amenities. Single-family homes, higher-end.
Ironwood guide →Oakwood
The newest of the five, so the homes are the most recent construction. Guard gated, the other half of IronOaks with Ironwood, and the community that has townhomes if you want low-maintenance living.
Oakwood guide →Not sure which of the five is right for you?
That’s the whole reason to call us. Tell us your budget and how you want to live — we’ll narrow five to one.
Help Me ChooseWhat they all share
Different as the five are, they’re cut from the same Robson cloth, and some things are true across all of them:
- Each has its own 18-hole golf course — five courses in total across Sun Lakes, with several ways to play and membership options that differ by course. Ask us about each; they’re not all the same.
- Each has its own clubhouse with a fitness center, restaurant, pools, hobby rooms, and a ballroom.
- Pickleball, tennis, and an active social calendar throughout.
- You can eat at any of the five restaurants, even if you can’t use the other communities’ pools and gyms.
- Location: just off the I-10 and Riggs Road area south of Chandler, with the whole East Valley — Chandler, Gilbert, Queen Creek — close by. Far more central than the far-flung newer communities, and shopping, dining, and medical are minutes away.
Age rules across Sun Lakes
Sun Lakes is a 55+ community, and the rule works like this: at least one resident in each home must be 55 or older, and no one under 19 may live in the community permanently.
There’s also an under-55 allowance — you’ll sometimes see Sun Lakes described as “40+” because up to a set share of homes may have residents as young as 40. It’s a carve-out inside a 55+ community, not a different category, and the exact rules can change. If you’re under 55 and want in, call us and we’ll confirm exactly where things stand before you write an offer — it’s the kind of detail that can cost you your earnest money if it surfaces after your deadlines.
Is Sun Lakes right for you?
A great fit if you…
- Golf, and want your own course inside your community.
- Want a central East Valley location — near Chandler, not out on the edge.
- Like the idea of an established, grown-in community with mature trees.
- Want to choose your price point and style across five distinct communities.
- Value good value — several of the five are among the more affordable golf communities we sell.
Worth knowing before you buy…
- The five are separate. Pick carefully — you use your own community’s amenities, not the others’.
- These are resale communities — sold out in 2006, so no new construction. Homes range widely in age; check the mechanicals.
- Fees and capital buy-ins vary by community — from about $2,763 to $6,072 at closing.
- Some are gated, some aren’t. Know which you’re buying.

Five communities is a lot to sort through. That’s my job.
I’m Jarl Kubat, a licensed Arizona agent with 22+ years in the state’s 55+ communities. Tell me your budget and how you want to live, and I’ll tell you which of the five Sun Lakes communities actually fits — and then find you the right home in it.
Call or Text: (480) 710-6326 Contact PageFrequently asked questions
Is Sun Lakes one community or several?
Five. Sun Lakes is an area south of Chandler made up of five separate country club communities — Sun Lakes Country Club, Cottonwood, Palo Verde, Ironwood, and Oakwood — each with its own HOA, golf course, clubhouse, and amenities. They share a name, not a membership.
Can I use the amenities in all five?
No. You use your own community’s amenities. You can’t use another community’s pool, gym, or courts unless you’re the guest of someone who owns there. The exceptions: Ironwood and Oakwood share as IronOaks, and Cottonwood and Palo Verde share with each other. And you can eat at any of the five restaurants regardless of where you live.
Which ones are gated?
Ironwood, Oakwood, and Palo Verde are guard gated. Cottonwood and Sun Lakes Country Club are not gated.
Can I buy a brand-new home in Sun Lakes?
No — Sun Lakes sold out in 2006, so every home is a resale. The homes span from the 1970s to the mid-2000s depending on which community, so condition and mechanicals matter a lot. That’s exactly what we check for you.
Which community is the most affordable?
Generally Sun Lakes Country Club (the original) and Cottonwood are the value entry points, with the lowest buy-ins. The gated communities — Palo Verde, Ironwood, Oakwood — run higher. But “affordable” depends on the specific home; tell us your budget and we’ll show you what it buys across all five.
Can I buy here if I’m under 55?
Possibly. Sun Lakes is 55+, but a limited share of homes may have residents as young as 40 under the community’s under-55 allowance. No one under 19 may live there permanently. The rules can change, so call us and we’ll confirm exactly where things stand before you write an offer.
Community information: Sun Lakes comprises five separate homeowners associations, each with its own fees, amenities, rules, and gate status. Details are summarized here for general information and can change. Fees, age rules, amenity-sharing arrangements, and golf membership structures vary by community and must be verified with the specific association before you rely on them. Homes are resale; condition varies widely by property and age — always obtain a licensed home inspection. Verify all figures and rules with the relevant association or your licensed agent before you buy. Jarl Kubat is a licensed Arizona real estate agent.

