EasyOffer

Sell Landlocked Land in Williamson County, TN

Landlocked land in Williamson County, Tennessee with no deeded road access is nearly impossible to sell through traditional channels. EasyOffer buys landlocked parcels for cash, handling the access and easement complications so you do not have to.

No surveys, clearing, or prep needed
$0 fees, commissions, or closing costs
Close in as few as 14 days
4.9 rating
500+ properties purchased
Cash offers in 24hrs
$5,000 earnest money

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Market Snapshot: Williamson County, TN

Latest available data from public sources. Updated .

Median Home Value

$751,900

Census ACS 2024

Median Sale Price

$499,000

Redfin

Days on Market

115 days

Redfin

Population

269,136

+7.8% since 2020

U.S. Census

Home Price Index

+5.4% YoY

+5.4%

FHFA

Median Household Income

$135,594

Census ACS 2024

Land Area

583 sq mi

U.S. Census

Net Migration

+4,876 households

IRS SOI 2022

Sale-to-List Ratio

98.2%

Redfin

Unemployment Rate

2.4%

BLS

Property Tax

$3,004/yr

Census ACS 2024

Median Age

40.4 years

Census ACS 2024

Poverty Rate

4.6%

Census ACS 2024

Williamson County, TN Real Estate Market Data
MetricValueChangeSource
Median Home Value$751,900Census ACS 2024
Median Sale Price$499,000Redfin
Days on Market115 daysRedfin
Population269,136+7.8% since 2020U.S. Census
Home Price Index+5.4% YoY+5.4%FHFA
Median Household Income$135,594Census ACS 2024
Land Area583 sq miU.S. Census
Net Migration+4,876 householdsIRS SOI 2022
Sale-to-List Ratio98.2%Redfin
Unemployment Rate2.4%BLS
Property Tax$3,004/yrCensus ACS 2024
Median Age40.4 yearsCensus ACS 2024
Poverty Rate4.6%Census ACS 2024
Flood Risk: Relatively Moderate
Wildfire Risk: Very Low
Overall Risk: Relatively Moderate
Source: FEMA National Risk Index

Why Land Owners in Williamson County Choose EasyOffer

Williamson County spans 583 sq mi across Tennessee with a population of 269,136, growing 7.8% since 2020. The median home value is $751,900 (Census ACS 2024). properties sell in a median of 115 days on the open market. 4,876 more households moved into Williamson County than left in 2022 (IRS data). the county has unemployment at 2.4% (BLS) and a poverty rate of 4.6%. property taxes average $3,004/year (Census ACS).

Landlocked parcels in Williamson County present a unique challenge. Without legal road access, banks will not finance a purchase, title companies flag the issue, and most buyers walk away. Obtaining an easement from neighboring landowners can take months of negotiation or a costly lawsuit. Rather than fight for access you may never get, selling directly for cash lets you extract value from a property that is otherwise stuck in limbo.

We also serve property owners in nearby Davidson County, Maury County, Rutherford County, and throughout Tennessee.

About Williamson County

Williamson County was created by the Tennessee General Assembly on October 26, 1799, named for Revolutionary patriot and North Carolina statesman Dr. Hugh Williamson. Franklin, the county seat, was laid out in 1800. On November 30, 1864, the Battle of Franklin became one of the Civil War's bloodiest engagements.

Communities We Serve

Franklin

The county seat, a historic city of about 90,000 with a preserved Civil War-era downtown and the Cool Springs office and retail district.

Brentwood

An affluent residential city directly south of Nashville with large-lot zoning, corporate office parks, and high land values.

Spring Hill

A fast-growing city straddling the Williamson-Maury county line, anchored by the GM/Ultium auto and battery plant complex.

Nolensville

A small town on the county's eastern side that has grown rapidly, now home to the 372-acre Storyvale master-planned community.

Thompson's Station

A town south of Franklin where the large June Lake mixed-use development is rising along the I-65 corridor.

County Seat

Franklin

Major Employers

  • Williamson County Schools — the county's largest single employer, with roughly 8,000 staff
  • Community Health Systems — Fortune 500 hospital operator headquartered in Franklin
  • Nissan North America — North American headquarters in Franklin
  • Mars Petcare North America — pet-care division headquartered in Franklin
  • Tractor Supply Company — Fortune 500 farm and ranch retailer headquartered in Brentwood
  • GM and Ultium Cells — the Spring Hill auto assembly plant and adjacent EV battery joint venture

School Districts

Williamson County School District, Williamson County School District in Franklin

Getting Around Williamson County

Williamson County is split north-to-south by I-65, the primary corridor linking Brentwood, Cool Springs, Franklin, and Spring Hill. US 31 (Franklin Road), SR 96, and SR 840 (the southern interstate bypass) provide additional access, and CSX rail runs through Franklin. The county has no commercial airport, relying on Nashville International.

Land & Flood Risk

FEMA rates Williamson County's flood risk Relatively Moderate. The Harpeth River and West Harpeth wind through the county and create floodplain that constrains buildable land near Franklin and Bellevue. Middle Tennessee's broader tornado exposure applies, though the county sits south of the most destructive recent Nashville-area tracks.

Recent Developments

  • In July 2025, Ultium Cells announced it would upgrade its Spring Hill battery plant — a $2.3 billion joint venture that opened in 2024 and added about 1,300 jobs — to produce lower-cost EV battery cells.
  • In January 2025, a 587.6-acre tract around the June Lake community in Thompson's Station sold for $17 million ($28,931 per acre); the planned development includes 2,900 homes plus office and retail space.
  • The $500 million Aureum mixed-use development at Carothers Parkway and McEwen Drive in Franklin's Cool Springs broke ground, with the 296-unit Thatcher at Aureum apartments expecting first occupancies in Q3 2027.
  • Home sales began in early 2025 at Storyvale, a 372-acre, 700-home master-planned community at McFarlin and Fly roads in Nolensville.
  • Williamson County's six municipalities completed an updated countywide Growth Plan in mid-2024, redrawing urban growth boundaries that govern annexation and where rural land can be developed.

How It Works

Selling landlocked land in Williamson County does not require you to solve the access problem first. Here is how it works:

Day 1

Tell Us About Your Property

Enter your address and contact info. Takes 30 seconds.

Day 1-2

Get Your Cash Offer

We analyze your Williamson County property and send a fair, no-obligation offer.

Day 7-14

Close and Get Paid

Pick your closing date. We handle paperwork and pay all closing costs.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I sell land with no road access in Williamson County?

Yes. We buy landlocked parcels in Williamson County regardless of whether they have legal road access, a recorded easement, or public road frontage. We evaluate the property and make a cash offer based on its potential.

What makes land landlocked in Tennessee?

Land is considered landlocked when it is completely surrounded by other private properties with no deeded easement or public road providing legal access. This is common with older subdivisions and inherited parcels in Tennessee.

Do I need to get an easement before selling landlocked land?

No. Negotiating an easement with neighboring landowners can be time-consuming and expensive. We buy the property as-is and handle access considerations ourselves.

How much is landlocked land worth in Williamson County?

Landlocked land is typically valued below comparable parcels with road access, but it still has value based on size, zoning, surrounding development, and the feasibility of obtaining future access. We provide a fair, transparent offer.

Why will banks not finance landlocked land?

Lenders require legal ingress and egress as a condition of financing. Without recorded road access, the property does not meet underwriting standards, which eliminates most traditional buyers.

Can landlocked land ever be developed?

Yes. Access can often be obtained through easement negotiation, prescriptive use claims, or necessity easements granted by courts. We factor in these possibilities when evaluating the property.

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
Sarah M.
Sarah M.
Closed in 9 days · Houston, TX

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
Marcus T.
Marcus T.
Closed in 7 days · Atlanta, GA

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

EasyOffer is not a licensed real estate broker. We are a real estate investment company. All terms are disclosed upfront before you sign.

Nearby Counties We Serve

Also see:Sell My Land Fast in Williamson CountyWe Buy Land in Williamson CountyCash Land Buyers in Williamson CountyLand With Easement in Williamson CountyLand Without Utilities in Williamson CountyRural Land in Williamson County

Ready to Sell Your Williamson County Land?

Get a fair, no-obligation cash offer on your land today. No surveys needed, no fees, no hassle.

Or text us at (615) 920-9439

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