The generic advice says young professionals should live in Nashville. More nightlife, more action, more "things to do." But a growing number of twenty and thirty-somethings are making a different calculation—and ending up in Franklin.
The math works differently when you factor in commute stress, rental quality, and the reality that "going out" three times a week becomes "going out" three times a month once you're actually building a career. Franklin offers proximity to Nashville's opportunities without the daily grind of living in the thick of it.
But Franklin isn't one neighborhood. Each area attracts a different kind of young professional, and choosing wrong means paying for amenities you won't use or commuting past everything you actually want.
Downtown Franklin puts you within walking distance of restaurants, coffee shops, and a genuine Main Street that doesn't feel manufactured. You can grab dinner at Gray's on Main, work remotely from Frothy Monkey, and never touch your car on weekends.
The trade-off? Housing stock skews older and pricier. Most rentals downtown are above retail spaces or in converted historic buildings. Square footage shrinks, parking gets complicated, and you'll pay a premium for the address.
This works best for young professionals who travel frequently for work (less time at home means smaller space matters less), prioritize social accessibility over home gym space, and genuinely use walkability rather than just liking the idea of it.
Rental availability downtown stays tight. When units open up, they move fast—often before hitting major listing sites. If downtown is your target, tell your property manager or agent to flag openings before they're publicly listed.
Westhaven was designed around the idea that you shouldn't need to leave your neighborhood for daily life. It has its own town center with restaurants, a salon, fitness studios, and regular community events. The homes look traditional but were mostly built in the last fifteen years, meaning updated systems and layouts.
For young professionals, Westhaven attracts a specific type: those who want community built into their living situation rather than having to manufacture it. The porches face the sidewalks intentionally. You'll know your neighbors whether you try to or not.
The downside? Westhaven sits further from I-65, so if your job takes you toward Nashville daily, your commute adds meaningful time. And the aesthetic is decidedly traditional—if modern minimalism is your style, you'll feel out of place.
Young professionals thriving in Westhaven typically work remotely at least part-time, want a dog-friendly neighborhood with built-in walking routes, and prefer planned community events over hunting down things to do.
Berry Farms developed more recently than Westhaven and sits directly off I-65 at the Goose Creek Bypass exit. For anyone commuting to Nashville or Cool Springs, the highway access changes your daily math significantly.
The neighborhood mixes single-family homes, townhomes, and apartments—more variety than you'll find in Westhaven's uniform aesthetic. The Town Center includes a Whole Foods, multiple restaurants, and enough retail that weekend errands don't require driving across town.
Construction quality varies by builder and phase, so if you're buying, dig into specifics rather than assuming all Berry Farms homes are equivalent. Newer phases are still completing, which means ongoing construction noise and evolving amenity access.
Berry Farms works well for young professionals whose jobs require regular Nashville presence, those who value newer construction and modern finishes, and anyone who wants suburban convenience without the isolated subdivision feel.
Some young professionals end up in Franklin primarily for job proximity—the Cool Springs business corridor employs thousands in healthcare, corporate offices, and tech. Living near Mallory Lane or McEwen Drive puts you minutes from work rather than fighting I-65 traffic.
The neighborhoods immediately around Cool Springs tend toward apartment complexes and townhome communities rather than established single-family neighborhoods. The upside: more rental inventory, newer construction, and amenities like pools and fitness centers included.
The atmosphere feels more transient than Franklin's established neighborhoods. You're not joining a community so much as living near your office. For some young professionals, that's exactly right—especially those who expect to relocate in a few years or who spend most leisure time in Nashville anyway.
Franklin's housing prices sit above the Nashville metro average, which creates a genuine decision point for young professionals with stable income. Buying builds equity, but it also anchors you geographically during career years when flexibility has real value.
The neighborhoods above each have different rent-to-buy dynamics. Downtown rentals can actually cost more monthly than mortgage payments on condos in Berry Farms, once you factor in all costs. But buying downtown means competing against investors and accepting older construction.
A few questions worth asking yourself: How confident are you that you'll stay in Franklin for at least three years? Does your career path require geographic flexibility? Would you rather build equity or maintain optionality?
The best neighborhood depends on variables that only you know: where you work, how often you go out, whether you need a home office, how you feel about planned communities versus organic ones, and whether you want to know your neighbors.
Drive each neighborhood on a Tuesday evening and a Saturday afternoon. Notice who's walking around, what's open, and whether the vibe matches how you actually live—not how you imagine living. The version of yourself that goes out every weekend and the version that watches Netflix most Friday nights need different neighborhoods.
Franklin has room for both.
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At Redbird Real Estate, we specialize in residential sales, property management, and commercial real estate services in and around Franklin,...
Franklin, Tennessee
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