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Best Parks in Bunnell, FL

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Updated July 2026 · Reviewed by Adams, Cameron & Co.

Quick answer

Bunnell, the small, inland seat of Flagler County government, maintains five named city parks. Edward Johnson Park and Joann B. King Park are the two largest, both with sports courts, fields, and playgrounds. Municipal Park, Commissioner Louis L. Jackson Park, and Heritage Park are smaller neighborhood spots built around play equipment, exercise stations, and picnic space. Just outside the city, Flagler County's Old Dixie Park adds a larger 20-acre facility with pickleball and horseshoe courts.

Key takeaways

Bunnell is the historic, inland seat of Flagler County government, not a beach town, and its park system reflects that. The city maintains five named public parks, according to the City of Bunnell Parks and Recreation department. Here's an honest look at each one.

Edward Johnson Park

Located at 401 E. Court St., this is Bunnell's largest and most complete park: a baseball field, soccer/football field, and volleyball, basketball, and tennis courts, alongside a children's playground and a covered BBQ pit. It's the closest thing the city has to a full sports complex, and it is used by community recreational teams with approval from the city commission.

Joann B. King Park

At 300 Citrus St., Joann B. King Park is the other major multi-use park in the city, named for a former Bunnell mayor. It has a basketball court, a tennis court, two multipurpose fields, children's play equipment, adult exercise equipment, and two covered pavilions, a genuinely well-rounded park for a city this size.

Municipal Park

A smaller neighborhood park at 1307 E. Howe St., with a children's play area, an exercise station course, and a picnic bench. It's a low-key option for residents who want play space closer to home rather than a drive to one of the city's larger parks.

Commissioner Louis L. Jackson Park

Located at 308 S. Pine St., this park is built around younger kids, with spring rides for toddlers, a swing set, and a jungle gym, plus a game table and a pergola for the adults supervising them.

Heritage Park

At 103 N. State St., Heritage Park is the smallest and simplest on this list, a pergola with picnic tables and a bike rack. It's a quiet spot rather than a destination, useful for anyone passing through downtown Bunnell on foot or by bike.

Old Dixie Park (Flagler County)

Just outside city limits at 1250 S. Dixie Highway, Old Dixie Park is run by Flagler County rather than the City of Bunnell, but it's close enough to town to be worth knowing about. At 20 acres, it's considerably larger than any of Bunnell's own parks, with basketball, volleyball, and tennis courts, four pickleball courts, 18 sanctioned horseshoe courts, a playground, and a picnic pavilion.

Why this matters beyond just a nice afternoon

Bunnell is small, inland, and built around county government rather than tourism, so it's never going to have a park system like the coastal cities nearby. But five real, maintained city parks, plus a larger county facility just outside town, is a genuine amenity base for a city of about 3,200 people. That's worth knowing whether you're a prospective resident, a buyer, or an agent building honest local expertise in this part of Flagler County.

Park amenities and hours can change. Confirm current details directly with the City of Bunnell at (386) 437-7500 before visiting.

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