Closing on a home in Nashville, Tennessee
What it actually costs, the money on the table, and what to watch for — for buyers and sellers in Nashville and Davidson County. Nobody at your closing table is paid to tell you this. We are.
The numbers in Nashville
300 Deaderick Street, Nashville, TN 37201
Median price is approximate and moves with the market; the transfer tax math is exact for any price: $0.37 per $100. Who pays it is negotiable.
What to watch for in Nashville
Nashville's tall-skinny duplexes and infill construction come with shared elements — common driveways, party walls, shared sewer laterals — governed by recorded agreements that don't show up in a listing. Your title commitment's Schedule B lists them: read it, because 'subject to easements of record' is where surprises live.
Buying with short-term rental income in mind? Metro Nashville STR permits do NOT transfer with the deed, owner-occupied and non-owner-occupied permits have different rules by zoning, and some neighborhoods are capped out. Verify permit eligibility with Metro Codes BEFORE waiving contingencies — not after.
Wire fraud hits Middle Tennessee closings like everywhere else: before you wire a dollar, call your closing office at a number you found independently — not one from an email — and read the account digits back to a human. Emailed wiring-instruction "updates" are the scam. Every time.
Davidson County context
Metro Nashville-Davidson County is a consolidated government — city and county are one, and the recording, assessment, and tax offices all run through Metro. Urban infill (tall-skinny duplexes, converted lots) means more title complexity per parcel than the suburbs: shared driveways, party-wall agreements, and short-term-rental permit rules that do NOT transfer automatically with the deed.
Questions Nashville buyers ask
How much is the transfer tax when buying a home in Nashville, Tennessee?
Tennessee's realty transfer tax is $0.37 per $100 of the sale price (T.C.A. § 67-4-409(a)). On a typical Nashville purchase around $450,000, that is roughly $1,665, collected when the deed is recorded. Who pays it is negotiable in the contract — most Middle Tennessee contracts assign it to the buyer by default.
Where are deeds recorded for Nashville?
Davidson County Register of Deeds, 300 Deaderick Street, Nashville, TN 37201. Recording happens after closing; your deed is a public record you can verify there.
Do I need an attorney to close on a house in Nashville?
Tennessee does not require one — title companies, escrow companies, and attorneys all conduct closings. Whoever closes yours, federal rules give you the right to your Closing Disclosure at least 3 business days before closing. Review every line, and ask about any fee you don't recognize.
What down payment assistance is available in Nashville?
The Tennessee Housing Development Agency (THDA) Great Choice Plus program offers down payment assistance statewide to eligible buyers as a second loan paired with a Great Choice first mortgage. Income and price limits apply by county — check THDA's current limits, and ask your lender to run the numbers even if they don't bring it up.
Does a Nashville short-term rental permit transfer to the new owner at closing?
No. Metro Nashville STR permits are not transferable — a new owner must apply for their own permit, eligibility depends on zoning and permit type, and some areas have caps or bans on non-owner-occupied permits. Confirm with Metro Codes before you remove contingencies.
Our reporting for Tennessee buyers & sellers
- Chattanooga's New $21,000 Down Payment Help: Do You Qualify, and What's the Catch?
The city just launched its biggest first-time buyer program yet. Here's the math, the fine print, and the three steps to take before your next closing.
Worth reading before any closing — in Nashville or anywhere
- The American Home at 250 Years: A Fourth of July for Buyers and Sellers Alike
Two and a half centuries in, owning a home is the closest thing the Republic has to a birthright. The history is worth celebrating. So is understanding a transaction most Americans go through only a handful of times, inside an industry that has quietly changed the rules between visits.
- Wire Fraud Stole $275 Million From Home Buyers Last Year. Here's the Step-by-Step That Could Save Yours.
The FBI's recovery team can freeze stolen funds, but only if you act within hours. Here's what to do before, during, and after your closing.
- The $275 Million Warning: AI Scams Targeting Home Buyers and Sellers Right Now
Five specific fraud patterns are draining closing accounts across the country, here is what each one looks like and exactly how to stop it before you lose a dollar
- The Mortgage Points Trap: Why Paying Thousands Upfront to Lower Your Rate Often Backfires
Before you hand your lender $9,000 to buy down your rate, do this one calculation or you could lose thousands
- Why Builder 'Preferred' Lenders and Title Companies Often Cost You More Than They Save
That 3% rate buydown or $15,000 closing credit looks like a bonus. Here's what's actually inside it, and what the builder doesn't want you to compare.
- Wire Fraud Is Stealing Six Figures From Home Buyers. Here's Your Defense.
In 2023, criminals stole more than $145 million from real estate transactions. The FTC and FBI can help, but only if you act within hours of discovering the theft. Here's exactly what to do.