
Kissimmee's Tesla delivery, service, and pre-owned sales center at 2935 N. Orange Blossom Trail quietly rode shotgun in a roughly $49.5 million, two-property portfolio sale earlier this year. The 57,528-square-foot building sits on about 5.3 acres and adds another big-ticket commercial investment to the busy Orange Blossom Trail corridor.
Deal specifics
According to JLL, the transaction, recorded at $49.47 million, covered two build-to-suit Tesla facilities in Florida and was arranged by JLL Capital Markets. The firm says it represented a New Jersey-based private family that acquired the fully leased assets from O'Connor Capital Partners.
Local reporting and timing
Local coverage by the Orlando Business Journal notes the Kissimmee site officially changed hands on Jan. 30 and that this is the first time the property has sold since it was built. That reporting frames the deal as part of rising investor interest in single-tenant EV infrastructure across Central Florida.
Property details
Commercial listings and county records show the Kissimmee facility totals about 57,528 square feet and occupies roughly 5.36 acres under APN 02-25-29-3136-0001-0010. Those public listings provide the clearest numbers for both the building footprint and the lot size at the site.
Who developed and who occupies it
Developer O'Connor Capital Partners reports it delivered the Kissimmee building as a build-to-suit project for Tesla and that the center is fully leased to Tesla under a long-term deal. Tesla's own location page lists 2935 N. Orange Blossom Trail as its Kissimmee pre-owned sales and delivery center, confirming the company's active operations at the property.
Why this matters locally
JLL notes both properties are structured as net-lease assets, with Tesla on the hook for taxes, insurance and maintenance. That setup tends to draw investors who like steady, corporate-backed cash flow. The firm also points out that Florida ranks near the top among states for Tesla purchases, a trend that supports ongoing demand for service and delivery hubs in the Orlando metro area.
For Kissimmee, the sale keeps a high-profile, fully leased tenant locked in along a major retail corridor and highlights continued investor appetite for EV-related real estate across Central Florida. Market watchers say deals like this help validate the long-term value of brand-specific, net-leased facilities in fast-growing metros.









