In this work, the static fluctuation approximation (SFA) is used to investigate the thermodynamic properties of spin-polarized neutron matter. The energy per particle, pressure, entropy per particle, specific heat capacity, and effective magnetic field are studied as functions of density, temperature, and polarization fraction. The Argonne v18 nucleon–nucleon potential is used here. It is found that the energy per particle, pressure, entropy per particle, and effective magnetic field increase as the density or temperature increases. Also, the energy per particle and pressure are linearly dependent on the quadratic spin polarization δ2. The system becomes more ordered as δ increases. Our calculations are found to be in good agreement with previously published results obtained with different many-body techniques, such as the lowest order constrained variational (LOCV) method, the Brueckner–Hartree–Fock (BHF) approach, and the Dirac–Brueckner–Hartree–Fock (DBHF) technique.