First Look
Goal — Announce the listing and pull in serious local buyers fast.
A B-roll pack is footage. This is the plan that turns it into a month of Instagram content — and a vault of real Celebration knowledge to keep posting long after this listing sells.
Read this part once. It's the difference between posting a listing and building a business off of it.
Each listing piece is a different angle — a feature, a feeling, the neighborhood, the agent. Posted back to back, they keep the same home in front of people without the audience tuning out.
Half of this content is the home; half is Celebration and Erica. That's deliberate. Listing posts work this sale. The rest builds the pipeline that's still there after it closes.
Nobody shares a listing with a friend. They do share "it snows in Celebration" or "here's what the HOA actually covers." Part 2 of this guide is built entirely to be shared.
The algorithm rewards a post people save for later or send to someone. Useful and surprising both travel. A thumb tap goes nowhere.
Trending sounds change by the week, so this guide won't hand over song titles that are stale by the time Erica posts. Here's how to find the right one in about five minutes.
Watch 15–20 Reels first. When a sound is trending, a small upward arrow sits next to the audio name. That arrow is the signal.
Check the use count. Tap the sound. Roughly 5,000 to 100,000 uses is the sweet spot — rising, but not late.
Save sounds, not just videos. When one fits, hit "Save sound." Build a folder of 8–10 ready options.
Match the mood to the post. Use the table below. The mood matters more than the exact track.
Keep the audio audible. Even on a no-talking edit, the trending sound needs to be present — that's part of what gets the post pushed.
Stick to audio inside Instagram's own library. It's cleared for use — songs pulled from outside the app can get a Reel muted or its reach limited.
Ten pieces of content from the delivered B-roll, across five strategic goals. Each card has the goal, which shots to pull, a caption starter Erica can post or rewrite in the Edits app, an on-screen text sequence, a music direction, and hashtags.
Goal — Announce the listing and pull in serious local buyers fast.
Goal — Lead with the home's strongest feature. Kitchens close deals.
Goal — Lead with the differentiator. Most homes on this street don't have a garage apartment — make that the headline.
Goal — Build emotional connection. Make a buyer picture their life inside the home.
Goal — Sell the outdoor lifestyle. In Florida, the backyard is a feature — frame it as one.
Goal — Position Erica as the Celebration expert, not just the person listing this house.
Goal — Evergreen community content that reaches buyers who aren't searching yet — the top of the pipeline.
Goal — Put a face to the name. New profile visitors should know who Erica is within two seconds.
Goal — Demonstrate expertise. Teaching builds more trust than selling — and it earns comments.
Goal — Maximum reach. A no-talking, music-led edit built to grow the audience itself.
A listing gets Erica in the door. Local knowledge keeps her there. This is a vault of accurate, current information about Celebration — events, history, design, and the buyer details people actually ask about. Erica writes her own captions; this gives her the facts to write them from. Most of it has nothing to do with one house — and that's the point. Community content is what gets shared.
What's actually happening this June and July. Dated events were checked against the Town of Celebration and Celebration Town Center calendars in mid-May 2026. Where a detail is still pending, it's flagged — confirm it before posting a specific time.
Celebration runs on a rhythm. Knowing what's coming lets Erica tease events weeks early — and signal to buyers that this is a year-round community, not a tourist drive-by.
Facts that never expire. Each of these is a post on its own — and together they're the story of why Celebration commands a premium. Pull from these any week the calendar is quiet.
Celebration was developed by The Walt Disney Company. Ground broke in 1994, and the first family moved in on June 18, 1996. The roughly $2.5 billion master-planned town was designed by architect Robert A.M. Stern with the firm Cooper, Robertson & Partners. Disney sold the commercial Town Center in 2004 — today Celebration is fully independent. Population is about 11,200.
Celebration is one of America's best-known examples of New Urbanism — designed to be walked, not just driven. Front porches sit deep and close to the sidewalk, garages tuck onto rear alleys, and streets curve to slow traffic. The Urban Land Institute named it New Community of the Year in 2001.
Residents get community pools — including the kids' favorite circular East Village pool — plus tennis, basketball, sand volleyball, splash pads, playgrounds, a dog park, and more than 10 miles of walking and biking trails and boardwalks. The public Celebration Golf Club was designed by Robert Trent Jones, Sr. and Jr.
Market Street is brick-paved and lined with rocking chairs. Front Street wraps Lake Rianhard, with an interactive fountain kids run through all summer. Dining ranges from the historic Columbia Restaurant to lakefront sushi, French pastry, and even a dog bakery.
Celebration K-8 and Celebration High School are part of the School District of Osceola County. Private options include a Montessori academy and a language-immersion prep academy. For a family buyer, being able to walk a child to a K-8 school is a genuine selling point.
Celebration sits about 5 miles — 10 to 15 minutes — from Walt Disney World. It's roughly 20 minutes to Orlando International Airport via SR-417, and about 25–30 minutes to downtown Orlando on I-4. A rare mix of Disney-area location and a real, non-tourist residential feel.
AdventHealth Celebration, a 357-bed hospital designed by Robert A.M. Stern, is minutes from town. It houses a Global Robotics Institute and in June 2025 performed the world's first transcontinental robotic surgery. An 8-story tower is under construction that will push capacity past 430 beds.
Downtown's lakefront Bohemian Hotel is an AAA Four-Diamond boutique property in Marriott's Autograph Collection, with 115 rooms, an on-site art gallery, and dog-friendly policies. In the early years, residents called it the town's "front room."
The part buyers get confused by — and the part that makes Erica look like the expert. This is high-save, high-share content: useful enough that people keep it and send it to someone who's house-hunting.
Every Celebration owner pays into two separate things. Buyers almost never understand the difference — which makes this one of the most valuable posts Erica can make.
"In Celebration you pay your HOA for the people side — the rules, the parks, the pools, the trash, the architectural review — and your CDD for the bricks-and-mortar side — the roads, the drainage, the downtown lake and fountain, and the bonds that originally paid for them. The HOA bills you directly; the CDD shows up on your county tax bill. Both are normal in a master-planned Florida community. Just remember they're additive — always check the current totals before writing an offer."
This list is a carousel post on its own — and a genuinely useful thing for Erica to walk a client through.
What's the current annual HOA (CROA) assessment on this home?
Is there a separate condo or village sub-association fee — and what does it cover?
What's the CDD assessment on the most recent tax bill?
Are any special assessments active or planned for this property?
What needs architectural-review approval before I change it — paint, fences, landscaping, windows?
What are the leasing restrictions? Short-term rentals are limited in most of Celebration.
Florida homestead exemption: a primary residence can qualify for up to $50,000 off assessed value, with annual increases capped at 3%. Has the seller been homesteaded, and what will the taxes reset to?
Post bait. These are the facts that stop a scroll and get sent to a friend. Short, surprising, and true. Each one is a Reel, a carousel slide, or a Story on its own.
Every night from late November through New Year's Eve, soap-based "snow" falls on Market Street at 6, 7, 8 and 9 PM. 2026 marks the 28th year of the tradition.
Town Hall is by Philip Johnson. The post office is by Michael Graves. The original bank is by Robert Venturi. The old cinema is by César Pelli, who also designed the Petronas Towers.
Celebration's logo and signage were designed by the firm Pentagram — and the town's typeface appears on its street signs and even its storm drains.
A common myth. That film was shot in Seaside, Florida — a different New Urbanism town. Celebration just gets the credit.
Before the first homes were even built in 1995, around 5,000 hopeful buyers competed for the first 350 lots.
World Drive runs from near Magic Kingdom right down toward town — a literal road tie to Disney, even though Celebration is fully independent now.
The planners lined Market Street with rocking chairs and built deeper-than-normal front porches — design choices meant to get neighbors talking.
Architect Robert A.M. Stern's actual line about the town's design standards at the 1996 launch — a memorable way to explain why Celebration looks so consistent.
Celebration's designers studied New Orleans, Savannah, and Charleston so a 1990s town would feel like it had a century of history.
AdventHealth Celebration performed the world's first transcontinental robotic surgery in 2025 — a surgeon in Celebration operating on a patient in Angola.
Celebration turns 30. Founders Day on November 7 is built around the anniversary — a storyline Erica can ride all year.
The Urban Land Institute named Celebration New Community of the Year, and it's been cited among the prettiest neighborhoods in America.
The ten listing pieces launch first, in sequence. Then the Vault keeps the account alive long after. Here's how the two fit together.
Once the listing pieces are out, keep three posts a week using the Vault. This is what stops the account from going quiet between listings.
The first line of the caption is the only one people see before "...more." Make it stop the scroll.
Comment a word, send a DM, or save the post — pick one. Two asks split attention and you get neither.
Blend local (#celebrationfl), niche (#celebrationrealestate), and broad (#floridaliving). Change the set each post.
On community posts, tag Celebration Town Center, the farmers market, the brewery, the restaurant. Those accounts and local followers reshare it — free reach.
The first 60 minutes of comments matter most. Be available right after posting.
For most local real estate audiences that's 7–9am, 12–1pm, or 6–8pm. Check Instagram Insights after a few posts and adjust.
Before posting an event time, a fireworks time, an HOA fee, or a market price — confirm it's current. Anything flagged in this guide should be double-checked.