Cash Land Buyers in Davidson County, Tennessee
Finding reliable cash land buyers in a competitive market like Davidson County can be difficult. EasyOffer provides a transparent, no-pressure cash offer within 24 hours. No contingencies, no financing delays.
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Market Snapshot: Davidson County, TN
Latest available data from public sources. Updated .
Median Home Value
$417,400
Census ACS 2024
Median Sale Price
$450,000
Redfin
Days on Market
89 days
Redfin
Population
729,505
+1.9% since 2020
U.S. Census
Home Price Index
+3.3% YoY
+3.3%
FHFA
Median Household Income
$77,853
Census ACS 2024
Land Area
504 sq mi
U.S. Census
Net Migration
+671 households
IRS SOI 2022
Sale-to-List Ratio
96.9%
Redfin
Unemployment Rate
4.5%
BLS
Property Tax
$2,506/yr
Census ACS 2024
Median Age
34.6 years
Census ACS 2024
Poverty Rate
13.9%
Census ACS 2024
| Metric | Value | Change | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Median Home Value | $417,400 | — | Census ACS 2024 |
| Median Sale Price | $450,000 | — | Redfin |
| Days on Market | 89 days | — | Redfin |
| Population | 729,505 | +1.9% since 2020 | U.S. Census |
| Home Price Index | +3.3% YoY | +3.3% | FHFA |
| Median Household Income | $77,853 | — | Census ACS 2024 |
| Land Area | 504 sq mi | — | U.S. Census |
| Net Migration | +671 households | — | IRS SOI 2022 |
| Sale-to-List Ratio | 96.9% | — | Redfin |
| Unemployment Rate | 4.5% | — | BLS |
| Property Tax | $2,506/yr | — | Census ACS 2024 |
| Median Age | 34.6 years | — | Census ACS 2024 |
| Poverty Rate | 13.9% | — | Census ACS 2024 |
Why Land Owners in Davidson County Choose EasyOffer
Davidson County spans 504 sq mi across Tennessee with a population of 729,505, growing +1.9% since 2020 (U.S. Census). The median property value is $417,400 (Census ACS 2024), with prices up 3.3% year-over-year (FHFA). properties sell in a median of 89 days on the open market at 96.9% of list price (Redfin). 671 more households moved into Davidson County than left in 2022 (IRS SOI). The county has an unemployment rate of 4.5% (BLS), median property taxes of $2,506/year (Census ACS), a poverty rate of 13.9%. With a median age of 34.6 years, Davidson County skews younger than the national average. FEMA's National Risk Index rates the county with flood risk rated Relatively High and wildfire risk rated Very Low. Whether you own a vacant lot, inherited parcel, or acreage you no longer need, selling through traditional channels in Davidson County can take months or years. A cash offer from EasyOffer gives you a guaranteed close with no listing required.
Davidson County is consolidated as Metro Nashville government, so there is almost no large-tract rural land left inside its 503 square miles. The vacant-land market here is overwhelmingly infill: scattered teardown lots, split parcels, and unbuilt lots in corridors like Jefferson Street, Buchanan Arts District, and Bordeaux. With a median home value of $417K and median sale near $450K, even modest lots carry six-figure prices, drawing builders and developers. Sellers often hold inherited or vacant family lots in older neighborhoods rather than acreage; deals close slower at roughly 89 days on market.
Land in Davidson County is almost entirely urban and suburban — the county is built out, and demand is driven by residential infill, redevelopment, and assemblage rather than agriculture. Builders chase teardown lots and unbuilt R6 parcels in North Nashville, Madison, and Antioch. The remaining vacant ground is steep hillside, floodplain along the Cumberland and its tributaries, or industrial land near rail and the river.
As cash land buyers in Davidson County, we don't rely on bank financing. That means no appraisal contingencies, no loan approvals falling through at the last minute, and no delays. When we make an offer on your land, we have the funds to close — typically within 7 to 14 days, or on whatever schedule works for you.
We also buy land from owners in nearby Cheatham County, Williamson County, Robertson County, and throughout Tennessee.
About Davidson County
Davidson County was created in 1783 by the North Carolina legislature, named for Revolutionary War General William Lee Davidson, with Nashville as its seat. In 1963, Nashville and Davidson County consolidated into one of the first metropolitan city-county governments in the United States.
Communities We Serve
Nashville
The county seat and Tennessee's capital, a consolidated city-county of about 729,000 with land use that is fully urbanized across most of its core.
Antioch
A large unincorporated southeast Nashville community where most of the county's remaining developable residential land and newer subdivisions are concentrated.
Bordeaux
A North Nashville area along the Cumberland River with hilly, partly wooded terrain and some of the county's last sizable undeveloped residential parcels.
Madison
A northeast Nashville community along Gallatin Pike seeing teardown and infill redevelopment as values rise.
Bellevue
A southwest Nashville community along the Harpeth River and I-40 with hillside lots and Harpeth floodplain limiting buildable land.
County Seat
Nashville
Major Employers
- •Vanderbilt University and Vanderbilt University Medical Center — the region's largest employer, with tens of thousands of jobs in Nashville
- •HCA Healthcare — Fortune 500 hospital operator headquartered in Nashville
- •Nissan North America — North American headquarters located in Franklin but anchoring metro-wide auto employment
- •Metro Nashville government and Metro Nashville Public Schools — major public-sector employers
- •Asurion — technology and device-protection company headquartered in downtown Nashville
- •Nashville International Airport (BNA) — a major economic engine after a multibillion-dollar expansion
Getting Around Davidson County
Davidson County is the hub of Middle Tennessee's highway network, where I-24, I-40, and I-65 converge, joined by loop route I-440 and SR 155 (Briley Parkway). It is served by Nashville International Airport, CSX rail yards, the WeGo Star commuter rail to Lebanon, and barge traffic on the Cumberland River.
Land & Flood Risk
FEMA rates Davidson County's flood risk Relatively High. The May 2010 flood put much of Nashville's Cumberland River floodplain underwater, and the EF3 March 2020 tornado tracked across the county from downtown through Germantown and Donelson. Floodplain along the Cumberland, Harpeth, Mill Creek, and Browns Creek limits where vacant land can be built.
Recent Developments
- •Oracle began active demolition of 515,000 sq ft of buildings on the East Bank in January 2026 for its $4.5 billion campus that is projected to employ 8,500 workers by 2031.
- •The Tennessee Titans' new enclosed Nissan Stadium on the East Bank, a roughly $2.1 billion project, is under construction with a planned 2027 opening, anchoring a large East Bank redevelopment district.
- •Metro Nashville continues building out the East Bank Vision Plan, redeveloping former industrial riverfront land east of the Cumberland into a new mixed-use neighborhood.
- •Nashville International Airport completed its $1.5 billion-plus 'New Horizon' expansion, adding terminal capacity, a new concourse, and a hotel.
How It Works
Getting a cash offer on your Davidson County land takes three simple steps:
Tell Us About Your Property
Enter your address and contact info. Takes 30 seconds.
Get Your Cash Offer
We analyze your Davidson County property and send a fair, no-obligation offer.
Close and Get Paid
Pick your closing date. We handle paperwork and pay all closing costs.
Tell Us About Your Property
Enter your address and contact info. Takes 30 seconds.
Get Your Cash Offer
We analyze your Davidson County property and send a fair, no-obligation offer.
Close and Get Paid
Pick your closing date. We handle paperwork and pay all closing costs.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does it take to sell vacant land in Davidson County, TN?
On the open market, vacant land in Davidson County can sit for months or even years — properties here take a median of 89 days to sell (Redfin). With EasyOffer, you can receive a cash offer within 24 hours and close in as few as 7 days. No buyer financing delays, no waiting.
Can I sell land with back taxes in Tennessee?
Yes. We regularly purchase properties with delinquent taxes in Tennessee. In most cases, we work with the title company to resolve outstanding taxes at closing so you don't have to pay them out of pocket beforehand.
How much is my land worth in Davidson County, TN?
The median property value in Davidson County is $417,400 (Census ACS 2024), with prices up 3.3% year-over-year (FHFA). Vacant land values depend on acreage, access, utilities, and zoning. Submit your parcel details above for a no-obligation cash offer.
Can I sell inherited land without going through probate?
In many cases, yes. We buy inherited land throughout Tennessee, even when the property is still in the deceased owner's name. We work with probate attorneys and title companies to handle the transfer so you don't have to navigate the legal process alone.
Do I need a survey to sell my land?
No. While a survey can be helpful, it's not required to sell your land to us. We work with existing legal descriptions and plat maps. If a survey is needed for closing, we cover the cost.
What types of land do you buy in TN?
We buy virtually every type — raw acreage, vacant residential lots, farmland, commercial parcels, wooded tracts, landlocked parcels, and undeveloped land. Whether it's a quarter-acre lot or a 100-acre parcel, we can make an offer.
What Our Sellers Say
“My mom passed and I inherited her place in Antioch. It needed a ton of work and I live out of state so I couldn't deal with contractors or showings. They came out, looked at it, and had a number for me the next day. We closed in 9 days. The whole thing was so much easier than I expected.”
Inherited Property
“Honestly I was skeptical at first because I'd heard horror stories about cash buyers lowballing people. But they explained exactly how they came up with the number and it was fair. We were behind on payments and they got everything done in a week. No last-minute changes, no surprises at closing.”
Avoided Foreclosure
“My husband got transferred to Dallas and we had about three weeks to figure out the house. A friend told us about EasyOffer. They gave us a cash offer that same afternoon and worked around our move date. We closed 11 days later without having to do a single showing or open house.”
Job Relocation
