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    Tennessee · Nashville

    Buying Your First Home Near Nashville's Music Row and Tech Corridor: A 2026 Guide

    WeHo median (Mar 2026)

    $750,000

    SoBro YoY

    +17%

    Melrose condo median

    $262,000

    Oracle jobs by 2031

    8,500

    Data last updated:

    A Cisco data engineer picks up her laptop in the Amazon Operations Center tower at Nashville Yards. An Asurion product manager finishes a stand-up in Wedgewood-Houston. A songwriter puts down her guitar on 16th Avenue South and walks three blocks to a publishing-firm meeting. A Berry Hill recording engineer packs up at 2 a.m. and drives home to a $320,000 Melrose condo he closed on in March. Six years ago, only two of those four stories were possible. What changed between 2020 and 2026 is what economists call an industrial mix transition. Nashville stopped being the country-music-and-healthcare city and became the country-music-and-healthcare-and-operations-tech city. Oracle's $4 billion, 8,500-job East Bank campus. Amazon's twin-tower Operations Center of Excellence at Nashville Yards (5,000 jobs). Bridgestone, HCA, Asurion, AllianceBernstein, Mitsubishi Motors North America, UBS — the company list now runs fifteen deep. For a first-time buyer who works at any of those employers, 2026's music-row-and-tech-corridor housing market is the single most consequential buying window of the decade.

    Overview

    Music Row Meets the Tech Corridor: The 2026 Nashville Mid-Core Market

    Most Nashville coverage treats Music Row and the tech corridor as separate stories. They aren't — not anymore. The physical geography tells you why: Music Row sits between 16th and 17th Avenues South, a five-minute drive from Wedgewood-Houston (WeHo) and Berry Hill, ten minutes from SoBro and Nashville Yards, fifteen minutes from The Nations. This band of neighborhoods — call it the Music Row-and-Tech Mid-Core — is where Nashville's creative economy and its operations-tech economy physically overlap.

    The 2026 numbers for these six neighborhoods diverge sharply from the metro aggregates. Wedgewood-Houston hit a $750,000 March 2026 median after spending Q3 2025 in the high $500s. The Nations sits at $640,000, down roughly 1% YoY — a walkable West Nashville character play. SoBro runs $668,000 with +17% YoY — the strongest appreciation zone in urban Nashville, almost entirely driven by Amazon's Nashville Yards occupation. Music Row itself, mostly commercial, sits at $472,000 (-14% YoY). Berry Hill runs $699,000. Melrose condos — a distinct first-time buyer opportunity — trend around $262,000.

    What makes this market different from the Nashville Urban Core story is the employer-centric appreciation model. The appreciation case rests on a specific set of employer pipelines: Oracle's 8,500-job ramp to 2031, Amazon's 5,000-job target, Bridgestone's continued corporate presence, HCA's expansion, and the increasingly-blurred line between Music Row publishing and Berry Hill audio tech.

    What Makes a Mid-Core Neighborhood First-Time-Buyer-Friendly in 2026

    • Commute proximity to Nashville Yards / East Bank. Sub-15-minute access in either direction matters for resale.
    • Product-type arbitrage. Townhomes are the dominant first-time-buyer play — WeHo and The Nations have substantial townhome inventory in the $500K–$700K band. Condos in Melrose and lower Gulch offer sub-$400K entry.
    • New-construction vintage. WeHo has seen multiple 2022–2025 vintage deliveries. Buying from builder close-outs (common in late 2025–2026 as inventory rose) delivers structural value.
    • DPA compatibility. Price caps matter more here. THDA Great Choice has county-level sale-price caps; The Housing Fund's shared-equity model needs under-120% AMI qualification.
    • Music-industry affinity. If you work in A&R, publishing, recording, or music-tech, Music Row / Berry Hill proximity meaningfully affects your day-to-day.

    Mid-Core Nashville Local Language

    WeHo is Wedgewood-Houston. The Nations always takes the definite article. Music Row refers to the blocks along 16th and 17th Avenues South. Berry Hill is the incorporated city (separate from Metro Nashville, though surrounded by it). Melrose is at the 8th Ave / Craighead / Wedgewood intersection. SoBro is South of Broadway. The Gulch always takes "the." Nashville Yards is the Amazon/JW Marriott/Asurion mixed-use development.

    Supply & demand

    Supply, Demand, and Pricing in the Nashville Mid-Core

    Nashville's 2026 mid-core supply-and-demand pattern mirrors the metro-wide rebalancing, but with sub-market-specific variations. Metro-wide: 3.77 to 5.58 months of supply, DOM 56–77 days, sale-to-list ratio 96.4%, 39.1% of listings with price cuts.

    • WeHo-specific: DOM typically 42–58 days (faster than metro; new-construction pipeline drives this).
    • SoBro condo-specific: DOM running 60–85 days (condo sales generally lag SFH by 15–25 days).
    • The Nations-specific: 48–65 day DOM (slightly faster than metro).
    • Melrose condo-specific: 40–55 day DOM at lower price points (FTB-heavy demand keeps DOM brisk).

    The mid-core has a heavy new-construction pipeline — several thousand WeHo units, 1,000+ SoBro condo units in active development, and Oracle's campus construction pulling in additional residential development. 2026 entry captures (a) today's rebalanced pricing and (b) the coming years of absorption-driven stabilization — a two-factor tailwind.

    Forecasts

    Nashville Mid-Core: 3–5 Year Forecast

    Base case (60% probability, 2026–2030):

    • Overall appreciation 3–5% annualized. Oracle and Amazon demand overshadows 2025–2026 softening.
    • WeHo: near-flat through 2027 as new-construction inventory absorbs; 4–6% annualized 2028–2030 as Oracle ramp accelerates.
    • SoBro: 5–8% annualized 2026–2029 as Amazon occupancy fully settles.
    • The Nations: 3–5% annualized, stable character-driven demand.
    • Berry Hill / Music Row: 2–4% annualized.
    • Melrose: 4–6% annualized; first-time-buyer demand remains strong.

    Upside case (25% probability): Oracle hits 2,500 jobs ahead of schedule. Amazon expands beyond 5,000. Fed rate cuts to 3.5% by mid-2027. Mid-core appreciation runs 6–9% annualized.

    Downside case (15% probability): Oracle delays first-phase operational date past 2028. Amazon Nashville Yards absorbs less than 5,000 headcount. Condo new-construction inventory overwhelms demand in 2027–2028. Mid-core annualized -1% to +1% through 2028; recovery 2029–2030.

    Across all three cases, the 2026 entry window looks strong relative to 2024 or 2025 entry.

    Affordability & DPA

    Affordability and Down Payment Assistance Programs

    The full DPA stack — FHA 3.5% down + THDA $15K amortizing + Housing Fund $35K shared-equity + AHR $15K — theoretically delivers up to $65K in combined down-payment support on a sub-$599K property.

    Nashville Mid-Core DPA Stack (April 2026)

    • THDA Great Choice Plus. $6,000 deferred (0%) or $15,000 amortizing (2%, ~$138/month over 10 years). 640+ credit. Davidson County income limit ~$90,450.
    • THDA Heroes Rate. 0.5% rate reduction for military, veterans, first responders, teachers, healthcare workers.
    • The Housing Fund TN. Up to $35,000 shared-equity loan. 0% interest, due-on-sale. 25% lender equity stake, 50% homeowner appreciation capture. 120% AMI cap.
    • AHR NeighborhoodLIFT. $15,000 forgivable DPA. 80% AMI cap.
    • Tennessee Downpayment Partnership. $10K–$15K due-on-sale. 80% AMI cap.
    • Vanderbilt Faculty Housing Assistance. Up to $5,000 grant.
    • Federal programs. FHA 3.5% down (2026 Davidson County FHA limit $540,500 SFH); VA 0% down; HUD Good Neighbor Next Door.
    • Mid-core employer programs. Amazon relocation typically $10K–$25K; Oracle relocation $12K–$30K; Vanderbilt faculty as noted; HCA relocation varies.
    Program Level Amount Form
    THDA Great Choice Plus State $6K (0%) / $15K (2%) 2nd mortgage
    THDA Heroes Rate State 0.5% rate reduction Rate subsidy
    The Housing Fund TN Local CDFI Up to $35,000 Shared-equity
    AHR NeighborhoodLIFT Nonprofit $15,000 Forgivable
    TN Downpayment Partnership Nonprofit $10K–$15K Due-on-sale
    Vanderbilt Faculty Employer Up to $5,000 Grant
    Employer relocation (Amazon/Oracle/HCA) Employer $10K–$30K typical Taxable relocation
    FHA Federal 3.5% down Primary mortgage
    VA loan Federal 0% down Primary mortgage
    HUD Good Neighbor Next Door Federal 50% off list Eligibility-limited

    An Alternative: The Ownify Fractional Ownership Program

    Nashville mid-core buyers often fall into a specific gap: household income $120K–$220K (above THDA and Housing Fund caps, below conventional-20%-down-on-a-$650K-WeHo-townhome affordability). The Ownify Fractional Ownership Program is built for exactly this buyer. Ownify co-invests alongside you, meaning you own equity from day one and build ownership over time through structured monthly payments.

    Success stories

    First-Time Buyers Who Made the Leap in Nashville's Music Row and Tech Corridor

    Wedgewood-Houston new-construction townhome, Amazon analyst

    A 29-year-old Amazon Operations Center analyst (household income $115,000, with partner at Asurion) closed on a new-construction WeHo townhome in February 2026 for $545,000 — a builder close-out on a 2023-vintage project. Stack: conventional 97 financing ($16,350 down), Amazon relocation benefit $18,000, THDA Great Choice Plus $15,000 amortizing second. Out-of-pocket cash-to-close: approximately $2,500. Monthly all-in PITI: about $3,850. Commute to Nashville Yards: 7 minutes.

    Melrose condo, Berry Hill audio engineer

    A 34-year-old Berry Hill recording engineer (household income $72,000, solo buyer, under 120% AMI) purchased a Melrose 2-BR condo in January 2026 for $275,000. Stack: FHA 3.5% down ($9,625), THDA Great Choice Plus $15,000 amortizing second, The Housing Fund $18,000 shared-equity loan, plus $3,500 in seller-paid closing costs. Out-of-pocket cash-to-close: approximately $1,800. Monthly all-in PITI including $340 HOA: about $2,450.

    The Nations 1940s bungalow, Vanderbilt Medical data analyst

    A 31-year-old VUMC data analyst (household income $95,000) purchased a 1940s Nations bungalow for $498,000 in November 2025. Stack: conventional 95 financing ($24,900 down), Vanderbilt Faculty Housing Assistance $2,500 grant, THDA Great Choice Plus $10,000 deferred, seller concessions $4,200. Out-of-pocket cash-to-close: approximately $16,700.

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    Frank Rohde, Founder & CEO of Ownify

    By Frank Rohde · Founder & CEO, Ownify

    Frank Rohde is Founder and CEO of Ownify, the leading fractional homeownership platform in the U.S. Prior to Ownify, Frank was CEO of Nomis Solutions. He's a 3x fintech founder. Prior to Nomis, Frank was VP Product Management at FICO.

    About this report

    Not financial, legal, or real-estate advice. This report is published for informational purposes and does not constitute a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any real property, security, or financial product.

    Real estate investing involves risk. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Consult a licensed real estate professional, mortgage loan originator, or financial advisor before making a home purchase decision.

    Data last updated: April 20, 2026.

    Data last updated: .

    Photo credits

    Nashville Music Row & Gulch skyline image — original photography.