Nashville real estate has been on a hot streak, but closings are beginning to cool.
Nashville closed out 2023 with its lowest number of commercial real estate closings in over a decade. Last year, the city saw a total of 424 closings — its lowest number since 2011, according to Metro research.
“When you’ve had a really good long bull run like we’ve had where prices keep increasing, rents keep going up and, all of a sudden, you have a pretty rapid rise in rates — in order to make the same deal work today that you did two years ago, you can’t pay those same prices,” Stephen Prather, vice president at Charles Hawkins Co., told the Business Journal.
Over the past decade, the city has seen a mad dash from both local and out-of-town investors for Nashville property. Despite a few outlier years, there has been steady increase in both the number of closings and dollar volume of transactions since 2012.
2022 was a record year for Music City with nearly $6.5 billion in transactions. The transaction volume fell more than half in 2023, coming in at $2.8 billion at the end of the year, according to Metro research.
“That was such a unique period of so much money coming to Nashville, so many people moving to Nashville — that may be hard to replicate again,” Prather said. Nashville Business Journal


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