Find a home in Tennessee.
Real estate by REALTORS® who actually live in Tennessee
About Tennessee real estate
Tennessee runs from the Mississippi River in the west to the Smoky Mountains in the east. The real estate market here doesn't behave like one market. It behaves like four. Middle Tennessee's growth corridor moves on tech jobs and out-of-state migration. East Tennessee trades on lakefront, mountain land, and short-term rental rules. West Tennessee runs on river-town pricing and Memphis comeback neighborhoods. Southern Tennessee is small markets with farmland that's only now getting priced for what it's worth.
Expert take: Our Tennessee team has been REALTORS® here since 2019. We know which Brentwood streets back up to the new high school's traffic, which Franklin builders are using which warranties, which Knoxville lakefronts hold value when the dam draws down, and which Gatlinburg cabins actually cash flow on Airbnb after the new permit rules. This is local knowledge you can't get from a Zillow Premier Agent who lives in Phoenix.
By the numbers
- Median home price in Middle Tennessee: $485,000 (up 4.2% YoY)
- Average days on market across the state: 38 days
- Active MLS feeds we cover: RealTracs, UCAR, ETAR, Greater Smoky Mountains
- Brokerage: eXp Realty · TN License #262943
Why buy in Tennessee?
- No state income tax
- Three major MSAs (Nashville, Knoxville, Memphis) plus 12 secondary markets
- Population growth #5 in the country (2024)
- Average property tax effective rate: 0.66% (one of the lowest in the US)
Spring 2026 market snapshot
Data refreshed monthly. Source: Redfin Data Center · US Census ACS 5-Year.
Tennessee through experienced eyes
What makes Tennessee different.
Tennessee runs on something most states don't have: real geographic variety inside three driveable hours. From Franklin you're 25 minutes to downtown Nashville and 15 minutes to Leiper's Fork pastures. From Knoxville you can be on a Smoky Mountain trail before lunch and home for dinner. From Chattanooga the rivers and ridges meet in a way that pulls runners and climbers and remote workers who used to live somewhere harder. No state income tax matters. The school districts in Williamson County matter more.
Current conditions.
Spring 2026 looks tighter on the buyer side than it did a year ago. Median sale price in Tennessee sits at $385,000 (up 3.4% year over year). Days on market crept back up to 31 from 27 last spring, which sounds like cooling but isn't. It reads as buyers getting selective again after two years of grabbing whatever came up. Inventory holds at about 3.8 months of supply statewide, which is balanced. The state-level number hides the local truth: Williamson County still moves in under three weeks; some Upper Cumberland counties take twice that.
The single biggest trend.
Out-of-state money has slowed but hasn't stopped. The wave of California and Illinois buyers who pushed prices in 2022-2023 is now a steadier trickle. What's filling in behind them is in-state movement. Memphis to Nashville, Knoxville to the Tri-Cities, retirees from Middle Tennessee heading to the Smokies. The deals that close fastest in 2026 are the ones priced for the local buyer, not the relocation buyer.
Where to look in Tennessee
Hand-picked by Find a Home Network partners on the ground.
Cool Springs / Franklin
The center of Williamson County. Top-rated schools (Walnut Grove → Page Middle → Centennial High feeder), corporate HQs nearby, walkable retail. The trade-off: traffic on Mack Hatcher after 4 PM is real.
East Nashville (12 South, Edgefield)
The food and music scene that put Nashville on the cultural map. Walkable, dense, eclectic. Buyers from Brooklyn and Austin land here.
North Knoxville (Fourth & Gill, Old North)
Historic Victorian and craftsman housing stock at prices that no longer exist in comparable Southern cities. Walkable to UT and downtown.
Signal Mountain / North Chattanooga
Mountain views, top schools, outdoor access. The remote-worker corridor for the Tennessee River Gorge.
Gatlinburg / Pigeon Forge Cabin Belt
Short-term rental territory. Nightly rental income works here in a way it doesn't most places. Buyers underwriting these as investments need to know the county's STR permit rules cold.
School districts buyers ask about
Ratings from GreatSchools. Local context from Find a Home Network partners.
Williamson County Schools
Consistently top-5 in Tennessee for over a decade. The Walnut Grove → Page Middle → Centennial High feeder pattern is what most Franklin buyers organize their search around. Funding stability matters: WCS doesn't churn leadership the way some districts do.
View GreatSchools rating →Knox County Schools (West Knox cluster)
West Knox cluster (Farragut, Hardin Valley, Bearden) carries the strongest reputation. Magnet options like L&N STEM Academy pull from across the county for students who test in.
View GreatSchools rating →Hamilton County Schools (Signal Mountain cluster)
Signal Mountain Middle/High is the anchor that pulls Chattanooga families up the mountain. CSAS (Chattanooga School for the Arts and Sciences) is the magnet pull.
View GreatSchools rating →Rutherford County Schools
Growing fast. Population growth in Murfreesboro has put pressure on capacity, with new schools opening regularly. Blackman and Stewarts Creek high schools both have strong reputations.
View GreatSchools rating →Sevier County Schools
Smaller, tourism-economy district. Pi Beta Phi Elementary in Gatlinburg has a unique private-trust funding history that makes it the standout.
View GreatSchools rating →The things outsiders don't know
Local quirks that change how you should buy or sell in Tennessee.
For buyers from out of state
Out-of-state buyers underestimate Tennessee traffic. I-65 South after 3 PM, I-40 through downtown Nashville at any rush hour, and the Pigeon Forge parkway in summer are not commuter routes. Build your search around your actual commute time, not Google Maps estimates that assume no traffic. Also: well water and septic systems are common outside city limits. They're fine. But inspections cost more and your lender will want recent service records.
For sellers
Tennessee contracts default to 'time is of the essence,' which means inspection and financing contingency dates are hard deadlines. Sellers used to flexible coastal contracts get tripped up when a buyer's earnest money becomes non-refundable on day 11. Read the calendar carefully. Pricing custom in most TN markets: list slightly below the comp, expect multiple offers in the first weekend on anything moves-in-ready under $600K.
Taxes & cost of living
Tennessee has no state income tax. None on wages, none on most investment income (the Hall tax on interest and dividends was fully repealed in 2021). Effective property tax rate averages 0.66% statewide, one of the lowest in the country. State sales tax is 7%, with local additions bringing combined sales tax to 9.25-9.75% in most counties. There's no estate tax. For high earners, the move from CA or NY pays for itself within 18 months.
Climate & weather honesty
Summers run hot and humid June through September. 85°F+ days are normal, 95°F+ stretches happen. Winters are mild but punctuated by ice storms 2-4 times per year that shut everything down for 24-48 hours. Tornado season (April-May, occasionally November) is real. Most Middle TN homes have basements or interior tornado shelters, and you should verify yours does. Snow accumulates 3-8 inches per year in Middle TN, more at elevation in the east.
Local closing customs
Closing customs vary by region. Middle TN closings typically happen at the title company office with both parties present. East TN often uses mail-aways. Inspection windows default to 10 days. The 'as-is' offer is common on FSBO properties but unusual on agent-listed homes. Walk-throughs the day of closing are standard.
Questions buyers and sellers ask us most
How much do I need for a down payment in Tennessee?
For conventional loans, 20% is the sweet spot to avoid PMI. On the state median of $385,000, that's $77,000. But TN buyers regularly close with 3-5% down via conventional, FHA (3.5% down), or VA (0% for eligible service members). THDA (Tennessee Housing Development Agency) runs first-time buyer programs with down payment assistance up to $15,000. Worth checking eligibility.
What's the average property tax in Tennessee?
Effective rate averages 0.66% statewide, one of the lowest in the country. On a $385,000 home, that's about $2,540 per year. Williamson County runs slightly higher (around 0.73%); Shelby County (Memphis) runs higher still. There's no state income tax to offset this, but the overall tax burden in TN is among the lowest in the US.
Are short-term rentals legal in Tennessee?
It depends on the county and city. Gatlinburg, Pigeon Forge, and Sevier County are STR-friendly with established permit systems. Nashville (Davidson County) restricts non-owner-occupied STRs in residential zones. Strict enforcement. Memphis and Knoxville have ordinances that vary by neighborhood. If you're buying as an investment, verify the specific zoning and permit status before you offer.
What's the best time of year to buy a home in Tennessee?
Late summer through early fall (August-October) is historically the best window. Spring has the most inventory but also the most competition. Winter has the least competition but the least inventory. December and January closings happen at favorable terms more often than the rest of the year.
Do I need flood insurance in Tennessee?
FEMA flood zones in TN cluster around the Mississippi (West TN), the Cumberland and Tennessee Rivers, and creek floodplains throughout the state. Check the specific property's flood zone designation before assuming you don't need coverage. Lender requirements only kick in for AE and X zones, but optional coverage is cheap and worth considering in B and X-shaded zones too.
How long does it take to close on a home in Tennessee?
30-45 days is typical for a financed purchase. 14-21 days is achievable for a cash purchase. The bottleneck is usually appraisal and lender underwriting, not the title work. Tennessee title companies move quickly compared to most coastal states.
Can I buy a home in Tennessee without seeing it in person?
Yes, and many out-of-state buyers do. A trusted local REALTOR® running video walkthroughs, paired with a thorough inspection contingency, makes remote purchase manageable. Most TN agents are comfortable with this workflow now. The risk you can't manage remotely is the neighborhood feel at different times of day. Worth a quick visit before closing if at all possible.
Featured listings
A sample of homes our Tennessee REALTORS® are showing this week. Live MLS feed in the panel to the right.
Meet the Tennessee team
REALTORS® who actually live in Tennessee. Find a Home team members listed first.
Find a home in your region of Tennessee
Tennessee runs by region. Click yours to see the local team and listings.