Tennessee NNN Properties for Sale: Zero-Tax Music City Boom Market
Tennessee NNN properties offer passive income investors the powerful combination of 0% state income tax, explosive Nashville metro growth (2M+ population, #3 fastest-growing major metro), Memphis logistics hub (FedEx World Hub processing 1.5M packages nightly), and affordable Southeast business climate attracting corporate relocations and making Tennessee the 4th zero-tax state for triple net lease investments.
American Net Lease specializes in Tennessee NNN investments across Nashville, Memphis, Knoxville, and growing markets statewide. Browse current listings or call 239.236.2626 to discuss exclusive Tennessee opportunities.
Why Invest in Tennessee NNN Properties?
Tennessee combines zero income tax with unprecedented growth in Nashville (music, healthcare, tech), established logistics infrastructure in Memphis (FedEx, Amazon), tourism economy, and pro-business policies creating exceptional conditions for long-term triple net lease appreciation and cash flow.
1. 0% State Income Tax — Keep Every Dollar of Net Income
Tennessee levies no state income tax on earned income, joining Florida, Texas, and Arizona as America’s most tax-advantaged NNN markets. This means your entire triple net lease cash flow—minus federal taxes—flows directly to you without state withholding.
Tax advantages:
- 0% tax on rental income (vs 4.75% NC, 5.75% Georgia, 13.3% California)
- $100,000 annual NOI = $4,750-$13,300 extra income (compared to taxed states)
- No state estate tax (generational wealth preservation)
- Low property taxes (0.56% effective rate, 9th lowest nationally)
- Sales tax only (9.55% average, funds state services)
Example: A Tennessee Walgreens generating $150,000 NOI saves $7,125-$19,950 annually compared to taxed states—compounding wealth over 15-20 year hold periods for dramatically higher total returns.
2. Nashville Boom — #3 Fastest-Growing Major Metro
Nashville metro has exploded to 2M+ population (+15% growth 2010-2020, outpacing national 7% growth) driven by music industry dominance (country music capital), healthcare corporate headquarters (HCA Healthcare, Community Health Systems), and technology sector expansion creating unprecedented demand for retail, QSR, and service-based NNN properties.
Nashville growth drivers:
- Music City USA: Country Music Hall of Fame, Grand Ole Opry, entertainment tourism
- Healthcare HQ: HCA Healthcare (#1 hospital operator, 60K+ employees)
- Tech expansion: Amazon Operations Center, Oracle, AllianceBernstein relocations
- Lower Broadway: $5B tourism economy (15M+ annual visitors)
- Real estate appreciation: +80% home values 2010-2020 (strongest metro)
Nashville suburbs leading NNN demand:
- Franklin: $120K median household income (highest in state)
- Brentwood: Healthcare executives, premium QSR demand
- Murfreesboro: 150K population, college town (MTSU 22K students)
- Mount Juliet/Lebanon: Fastest-growing counties (+25% 2010-2020)
3. Memphis Logistics Hub — FedEx World Headquarters
Memphis hosts FedEx World Hub (largest cargo airport globally, 1.5M packages sorted nightly), Amazon fulfillment centers (3 facilities, 5K+ jobs), and strategic Mississippi River location making Memphis America’s distribution capital with consistent demand for industrial NNN, c-stores, and service retail supporting logistics workforce.
Memphis infrastructure:
- FedEx SuperHub: 11,000 employees, $1B+ annual payroll
- Memphis International Airport: #1 cargo airport worldwide (10+ years running)
- I-40 corridor: Cross-country freight (East-West artery)
- Amazon logistics: 5,000+ distribution jobs
- Blue-collar workforce: Stable QSR, auto parts, c-store demand
Memphis NNN tenant performance:
- Dollar General/Family Dollar: Strong rural/suburban footprint
- AutoZone (HQ in Memphis): Hometown loyalty, corporate support
- Fast food: High-volume drive-through (shift workers)
- C-stores: 24/7 logistics worker traffic
4. Pro-Business Climate — Top 10 Business-Friendly State
Tennessee ranks #9 in Forbes Best States for Business with no corporate income tax on most businesses, right-to-work laws, low regulatory burden, and aggressive incentives attracting Fortune 500 relocations (Bridgestone Americas, Nissan North America, Smith & Wesson) strengthening NNN tenant creditworthiness and retail demand.
Business advantages:
- No corporate income tax (franchise/excise tax only 6.5%)
- Right-to-work state (lower labor costs for tenants)
- Competitive utility rates (TVA electricity, affordable operating costs)
- Job growth: +12% 2010-2020 (vs +7% nationally)
- Corporate relocations: 600+ companies since 2010
Recent relocations:
- AllianceBernstein: $70B asset manager, 1,050 jobs (Nashville)
- Oracle: East Coast operations hub, 8,500 jobs (Nashville)
- SmileDirectClub: Telehealth HQ, 2,000 jobs (Nashville)
- Smith & Wesson: Manufacturing HQ relocated from Mass. (Maryville)
5. Tourism Economy — Great Smoky Mountains + Music City
Tennessee attracts 100M+ annual visitors to Great Smoky Mountains National Park (most visited US national park, 14M visitors), Nashville entertainment district, Memphis Graceland/Beale Street, and Chattanooga outdoor recreation generating year-round traffic for hospitality-focused NNN properties (QSR, hotels, retail).
Tourism infrastructure:
- Great Smoky Mountains: Gatlinburg/Pigeon Forge (Dollywood 3M+ visitors)
- Nashville tourism: $7B annual economic impact, Broadway honky-tonks
- Memphis heritage: Graceland (650K visitors), Beale Street blues
- Chattanooga: Ruby Falls, Rock City, Tennessee Aquarium
NNN opportunities:
- Tourist corridors: QSR drive-through (I-40, I-75, US-441)
- Gateway markets: Sevierville, Pigeon Forge (year-round demand)
- Urban entertainment: Nashville Downtown, Memphis Beale Street
- Secondary markets: Chattanooga, Knoxville (outdoor recreation)
6. Affordable Cost of Living — Attracting Talent and Residents
Tennessee’s cost of living 11% below national average (lower than NC, FL, TX) with median home price $310K (vs $420K nationally) attracts young professionals, retirees, and families from high-cost markets (California, Northeast) expanding population base and supporting long-term NNN tenant sales growth.
Affordability metrics:
- Median home price: $310K (26% below national $420K average)
- No income tax: Effective 4-13% cost-of-living advantage over taxed states
- Utilities: TVA power rates competitive
- Gasoline: Typically $0.10-$0.20 below national average
- Groceries/services: 8-12% below coastal markets
Migration patterns:
- California exodus: +15K net in-migration 2020-2022
- Northeast relocations: New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania
- Retirees: No tax on Social Security, pensions, 401(k) withdrawals
- Remote workers: Tech professionals seeking affordability
Types of Tennessee NNN Properties
Tennessee’s diverse economy supports multiple NNN property categories across zero-tax advantage, logistics infrastructure, tourism economy, and business-friendly growth markets.
1. Quick-Service Restaurants (QSR)
Nashville and Memphis metros, tourist corridors (Gatlinburg, Pigeon Forge), and growing suburbs drive strong QSR performance with high-traffic locations supporting premium brands.
Top Tennessee QSR tenants:
- McDonald’s: 260+ Tennessee locations, interstate visibility
- Chick-fil-A: Nashville/Memphis premium suburbs ($8M+ sales/unit)
- Starbucks: Urban Nashville, Brentwood/Franklin affluent corridors
- Wendy’s, Burger King: Blue-collar Memphis, tourist markets
- Krystal: Southern regional favorite (Birmingham-based, TN stronghold)
Cap rates: 5.0-6.5% (premium brands), 6.0-7.0% (secondary brands)
Typical prices: $1.5M-$4M (single-tenant), $5M-$15M (ground lease flagship)
2. Dollar Stores
Tennessee’s rural footprint (95 counties, many under 50K population) makes it ideal for Dollar General (650+ stores), Dollar Tree (240+ stores), and Family Dollar (280+ stores) with recession-resistant essential retail and corporate-guaranteed leases.
Dollar store advantages:
- Rural dominance: 65+ rural counties = limited retail competition
- Corporate guarantees: Investment-grade credit (BBB)
- Expansion: 50-75 new Tennessee stores annually (continuous inventory)
- Cap rates: 7.0-8.0% (higher yields than urban retail)
Typical prices: $1M-$2M (corporate lease), $750K-$1.5M (franchise)
3. Pharmacy (Walgreens, CVS)
Nashville and Memphis anchor Tennessee’s Walgreens (170+ stores) and CVS (130+ stores) footprint with aging population (15.8% over 65, growing to 18% by 2030) driving prescription demand and healthcare-focused NNN stability.
Pharmacy tenant strength:
- Walgreens: 123-year history, 90-95% renewal rate
- CVS: $300B revenue, HealthHUB expansion (comprehensive care)
- Long-term leases: 15-25 years remaining typical
- Urban + suburban: Nashville/Memphis density, rural access
Cap rates: 5.5-6.5% (stable, institutional-quality)
Typical prices: $3M-$6M (freestanding), $4M-$8M (premium Nashville/Memphis)
4. Convenience Stores (C-Stores)
Tennessee’s logistics economy, tourist traffic, and rural geography support c-store dominance with Pilot Flying J (Knoxville HQ, 750+ locations nationally), Mapco Express (340+ stores Southeast), and Weigel’s (70+ East Tennessee) offering dual fuel/retail revenue and 24/7 demand.
C-store advantages:
- Pilot HQ: Knoxville-based (Haslam family, Cleveland Browns owners)
- Logistics traffic: I-40, I-75 corridors (long-haul truckers)
- Tourist routes: Great Smoky Mountains gateway (US-441)
- Rural necessity: 65+ counties with limited retail = c-store dominance
Cap rates: 6.0-7.0% (regional brands), 5.5-6.5% (national brands)
Typical prices: $2M-$4M (c-store/fuel), $3M-$6M (travel center flagship)
5. Auto Parts (AutoZone, O’Reilly, Advance Auto)
Tennessee’s logistics workforce, rural vehicle dependency, and AutoZone Memphis headquarters (6,000+ stores globally) make auto parts NNN properties recession-resistant with DIY demand and corporate support.
Auto parts tenant strength:
- AutoZone: Memphis HQ, 200+ Tennessee stores (hometown loyalty)
- O’Reilly Auto Parts: 130+ Tennessee stores, Southeast expansion
- Advance Auto Parts: 110+ Tennessee stores, commercial focus
Cap rates: 6.0-7.0% (established locations)
Typical prices: $1.5M-$3M (single-tenant freestanding)
6. Healthcare (Dialysis, Urgent Care, Dental)
Nashville’s healthcare corporate headquarters (HCA Healthcare, Community Health Systems) and Tennessee’s aging population drive medical office, dialysis (Fresenius, DaVita), and urgent care (FastMed, MedPost) NNN demand with long-term leases and essential-service stability.
Healthcare advantages:
- HCA Healthcare: 180+ hospitals, 2,000+ sites (Tennessee roots)
- Aging population: 15.8% over 65 (vs 16.8% nationally), growing 2.5%/year
- TennCare expansion: Medicaid coverage supporting dialysis demand
- Corporate support: HCA employee healthcare needs
Cap rates: 6.5-7.5% (dialysis, urgent care)
Typical prices: $2M-$5M (dialysis center), $1.5M-$3M (urgent care)
Key Tennessee Markets for NNN Investment
1. Nashville Metro (Davidson, Williamson, Rutherford, Wilson Counties)
Population: 2M+ (15% growth 2010-2020)
Median household income: $64K (Davidson), $120K (Williamson/Franklin)
Key advantages:
- Music City tourism ($7B annual economic impact)
- Healthcare HQ (HCA, Community Health, Vanderbilt Medical)
- Tech expansion (Amazon, Oracle, AllianceBernstein)
- Fastest-growing major metro (#3 nationally)
Top NNN opportunities:
- Franklin/Brentwood: Premium QSR, Starbucks, Chick-fil-A ($8M+ sales)
- Murfreesboro: College town (MTSU 22K students), QSR demand
- Mount Juliet/Lebanon: Fastest growth (+25% 2010-2020), Dollar General
- Downtown Nashville: Urban Walgreens, CVS, tourist-facing retail
2. Memphis Metro (Shelby, Fayette, Tipton Counties)
Population: 1.35M (stable)
Median household income: $52K
Key advantages:
- FedEx World Hub (1.5M packages/night, 11K employees)
- #1 cargo airport globally (distribution capital)
- I-40 cross-country corridor (freight logistics)
- Amazon fulfillment (3 centers, 5K+ jobs)
Top NNN opportunities:
- East Memphis: Walgreens, CVS, pharmacy-focused
- Southaven/Olive Branch (MS border): Dollar stores, QSR (tax-free TN side)
- Collierville/Germantown: Affluent suburbs, premium QSR
- Logistics corridors: C-stores, auto parts (24/7 shift worker demand)
3. Knoxville Metro (Knox, Blount, Anderson Counties)
Population: 880K
Median household income: $56K
Key advantages:
- Gateway to Great Smoky Mountains (14M+ annual visitors)
- University of Tennessee (30K students, SEC athletics)
- Pilot Flying J headquarters (750+ c-stores nationally)
- TVA energy hub (Oak Ridge National Laboratory)
Top NNN opportunities:
- Turkey Creek: Premium retail corridor (West Knoxville)
- Farragut: Affluent suburbs ($95K median income)
- Sevierville/Pigeon Forge gateway: Tourist-facing QSR, c-stores
- Downtown Knoxville: Urban revitalization, mixed-use retail
4. Chattanooga (Hamilton County)
Population: 560K
Median household income: $58K
Key advantages:
- Outdoor recreation economy (Ruby Falls, Rock City, Tennessee Aquarium)
- Gig City (1-gigabit municipal internet, tech startups)
- Volkswagen manufacturing (3,800 jobs, $2B+ investment)
- I-24/I-75 crossroads (Atlanta-Nashville corridor)
Top NNN opportunities:
- East Brainerd: Retail corridor (QSR, pharmacy)
- North Shore: Urban revitalization, Starbucks, trendy concepts
- Hixson/Soddy-Daisy: Growing suburbs, dollar stores
- Ooltewah: Volkswagen proximity, blue-collar QSR demand
5. Tourist Corridors (Sevier, Gatlinburg, Pigeon Forge)
Population: 100K (Sevier County)
Annual tourists: 14M+ (Great Smoky Mountains National Park)
Key advantages:
- Most visited US national park (14M+ visitors annually)
- Year-round tourism (Dollywood 3M+ visitors)
- Gateway position (I-40 access from Knoxville)
- High-traffic US-441 corridor
Top NNN opportunities:
- Pigeon Forge Parkway: QSR drive-through (Chick-fil-A, Wendy’s)
- Sevierville: C-stores (tourist fueling), dollar stores (local residents)
- Gatlinburg: Urban tourism retail (limited due to geography)
- I-40 exits: Travel plazas, c-stores (through-traffic)
How to Evaluate Tennessee NNN Properties
1. Verify Tenant Credit Strength
Confirm financial stability through:
- Credit ratings: S&P, Moody’s, Fitch (investment-grade preferred)
- Financial statements: Public companies (10-K, 10-Q filings)
- Store performance: Sales/sq ft, comparable store sales growth
- Lease guarantee: Corporate vs franchise (corporate = stronger)
Investment-grade tenants: Walgreens (BBB), CVS (BBB), Dollar General (BBB), McDonald’s (BBB+), Starbucks (BBB+)
2. Analyze Location Demographics
Tennessee demographics vary significantly by market:
Urban markets (Nashville, Memphis):
- Population density: 1,500-3,000/sq mi
- Median household income: $52K-$120K (neighborhood-dependent)
- Traffic: 20,000-40,000 vehicles/day (arterials)
- Competition: Higher (multiple comparable options)
Suburban growth markets (Franklin, Murfreesboro, Collierville):
- Population density: 800-1,500/sq mi
- Median household income: $70K-$120K
- Traffic: 15,000-30,000 vehicles/day
- Demographics: Families, young professionals
Rural markets (65+ counties):
- Population density: 50-200/sq mi
- Median household income: $40K-$55K
- Traffic: 5,000-15,000 vehicles/day
- Competition: Limited (dollar stores dominate)
3. Review Lease Terms Carefully
Scrutinize:
- Lease term remaining: 10+ years preferred (financing, stability)
- Rent escalations: 1.5-2% annual increases (inflation hedge), 10-15% every 5 years
- Renewal options: 2-4 renewal periods (40-60 year total potential)
- Lease type: Absolute NNN (tenant pays ALL), ground lease (land only)
- Corporate guarantee: Parent company backing (vs franchise)
Red flags:
- Short remaining term (<5 years) = refinancing risk
- No escalations = inflation erosion
- Franchise guarantee only (corporate preferred)
- Excessive landlord responsibilities (not true NNN)
4. Understand Tennessee Market Risks
Tennessee-specific considerations:
Tornado risk:
- Nashville tornado (March 2020): $1.6B damage (East Nashville, Mount Juliet)
- Middle Tennessee “Tornado Alley” (most active in state)
- Mitigation: Require comprehensive property insurance (wind, tornado coverage)
Flood risk:
- Nashville flood (May 2010): $2B damage (Cumberland River)
- Memphis riverfront (Mississippi River floodplain)
- Mitigation: FEMA flood zone verification, flood insurance
Economic concentration:
- Nashville: Healthcare/music dependence (HCA, entertainment)
- Memphis: Logistics concentration (FedEx, Amazon)
- Mitigation: Diversify across markets (Nashville + Memphis + Knoxville)
No state income tax = sales tax reliance:
- 9.55% average sales tax (2nd highest nationally)
- Recession impact on state revenue (sales tax-dependent)
- Mitigation: Long-term leases (20+ years) stabilize cash flow
5. Perform Property Due Diligence
Standard commercial real estate inspections:
- Phase I Environmental Assessment: Required (all properties)
- Property Condition Report (PCR): Roof, HVAC, parking lot (deferred maintenance)
- Survey: Boundary verification, easements, encroachments
- Title review: Liens, judgments, deed restrictions
Tennessee-specific:
- Tornado/wind damage history: Prior claims, structural repairs
- Flood zone verification: FEMA maps (Nashville/Memphis riverfront)
- Sales tax compliance: Verify tenant current on remittance (state audit risk)
Tennessee NNN Property Case Study
Dollar General — Murfreesboro, Tennessee
Purchase price: $1,350,000
Cap rate: 7.25%
Annual NOI: $97,875
Lease term: 12 years remaining
Tenant: Dollar General (NYSE: DG, BBB credit)
Why this property works:
- Zero income tax advantage:
- $97,875 NOI with 0% state tax
- Saves $4,894/year vs North Carolina (5%)
- Saves $7,329/year vs Georgia (5.75%)
- Compounded savings: $73K over 12-year hold (5% discount rate)
- Murfreesboro growth market:
- 150K population (+20% 2010-2020)
- MTSU college town (22K students)
- Nashville bedroom community (30 miles south I-24)
- Median household income $58K (above state $56K average)
- Dollar General strength:
- Corporate guarantee (BBB credit rating)
- 650+ Tennessee stores (statewide footprint)
- Recession-resistant (2008-2009: +7% same-store sales)
- Essential retail (groceries, household items)
- Lease structure:
- 12 years remaining (2037 expiration)
- 1.5% annual rent increases (inflation hedge)
- Two 5-year renewal options (22 years total potential)
- Absolute NNN (tenant pays taxes, insurance, maintenance)
Investor outcome:
- $97,875 annual cash flow (0% state tax)
- $73K+ tax savings vs taxed states (12-year hold)
- Property appreciation potential (Murfreesboro growth +20%)
- Total return: 8-10% IRR projected (cash flow + appreciation)
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Is Tennessee really a zero-tax state for NNN investors?
Yes. Tennessee levies 0% state income tax on earned income, including rental income from triple net lease properties. This means NNN investors keep their entire cash flow (minus federal taxes) without state withholding. Tennessee previously taxed interest/dividend income (Hall Tax) but eliminated it in 2021, making Tennessee one of only 9 zero-tax states nationally.
Tax comparison:
- Tennessee: 0% state income tax on $100K NOI = $100K to you
- North Carolina: 4.75% state tax = $4,750 withheld = $95,250 to you
- Georgia: 5.75% state tax = $5,750 withheld = $94,250 to you
- California: 13.3% state tax = $13,300 withheld = $86,700 to you
Over a 15-year hold, Tennessee’s zero tax saves $71K-$200K compared to taxed states—compounding wealth for dramatically higher total returns.
How do Tennessee property taxes compare to other states?
Tennessee property taxes average 0.56% effective rate (9th lowest nationally), making Tennessee one of America’s most tax-friendly NNN markets for total tax burden (income + property combined).
Property tax comparison:
- Tennessee: 0.56% effective rate ($5,600 on $1M property)
- Florida: 0.83% effective rate ($8,300 on $1M property)
- Texas: 1.60% effective rate ($16,000 on $1M property)
- Arizona: 0.51% effective rate ($5,100 on $1M property — lowest)
Key consideration: Tennessee’s zero income tax + low property tax = lowest total tax burden among zero-tax states except Arizona.
Is Nashville overheated or still a growth market?
Nashville remains a strong growth market with fundamentals supporting continued appreciation despite rapid 2010-2020 expansion (+15% population). Corporate relocations (Oracle 8,500 jobs, AllianceBernstein 1,050 jobs), healthcare dominance (HCA 60K+ employees), and tech sector growth create ongoing demand supporting NNN tenant sales and property values.
Growth sustainability:
- Corporate relocations: 600+ companies since 2010 (ongoing)
- Job growth: +12% 2010-2020 (vs +7% nationally), continued momentum
- Affordability: $310K median home (vs $420K nationally) attracts talent
- Infrastructure investment: $9B transit referendum, airport expansion
Investor strategy: Nashville premium suburbs (Franklin, Brentwood, Cool Springs) and secondary markets (Murfreesboro, Mount Juliet) offer better cap rates (6-7% vs 5-6% urban core) with similar growth exposure.
What are the risks of Memphis NNN properties?
Memphis presents higher crime rates (2x national average) and population stagnation (-0.5% 2010-2020) compared to Nashville, but Memphis NNN properties perform well when focused on affluent suburbs (Germantown, Collierville), logistics corridors (FedEx-adjacent), and Mississippi border markets (Southaven tax arbitrage).
Risk mitigation strategies:
- East Memphis: Poplar Avenue corridor (Walgreens, CVS, pharmacy)
- Germantown/Collierville: $100K+ median income suburbs
- Southaven, MS: Tennessee border (sales tax advantage on TN side)
- Corporate-guaranteed tenants: Dollar General, CVS, McDonald’s (credit strength)
Avoid: Downtown Memphis, high-crime neighborhoods (North Memphis), declining corridors
Memphis advantages: FedEx World Hub (11K jobs, $1B payroll), #1 cargo airport globally, and I-40 logistics create consistent c-store, auto parts, and QSR demand supporting NNN tenant performance despite population challenges.
How do Tennessee tornado risks affect NNN insurance costs?
Tennessee ranks #6 nationally in tornado frequency (especially Middle Tennessee “Tornado Alley”), but NNN properties carry wind/tornado insurance as standard coverage with premiums 0.5-1.0% of property value annually ($5K-$10K on $1M property)—comparable to Florida hurricane insurance and materially lower than earthquake-prone California.
Insurance considerations:
- Tenant responsibility: Absolute NNN leases require tenant pays insurance
- Landlord verification: Confirm tenant maintains adequate coverage ($1M+ liability)
- Catastrophic risk: Nashville tornado (March 2020) caused $1.6B damage but most NNN tenants rebuilt (Dollar General, CVS, QSR chains)
Investor protection: NNN leases typically include “damage or destruction” clauses requiring tenant continue paying rent even if property damaged—landlord receives insurance proceeds + rent during rebuild (minimal cash flow disruption).
What cap rates should I expect for Tennessee NNN properties?
Tennessee cap rates range 5.0-8.0% depending on tenant credit, location, and lease term:
| Tenant Type | Nashville/Memphis | Secondary Markets | Rural |
|---|---|---|---|
| Premium QSR (Chick-fil-A, Starbucks) | 5.0-5.5% | 5.5-6.0% | 6.0-6.5% |
| Pharmacy (Walgreens, CVS) | 5.5-6.0% | 6.0-6.5% | 6.5-7.0% |
| Standard QSR (McDonald’s, Wendy’s) | 5.5-6.5% | 6.0-7.0% | 6.5-7.5% |
| Dollar Stores (Dollar General, Dollar Tree) | 7.0-7.5% | 7.0-8.0% | 7.5-8.0% |
| Auto Parts (AutoZone, O’Reilly) | 6.0-6.5% | 6.5-7.0% | 7.0-7.5% |
| C-Stores (Pilot, Mapco, Weigel’s) | 6.0-7.0% | 6.5-7.5% | 7.0-8.0% |
Tennessee premium: Zero income tax adds 0.25-0.50% value (lower cap rate = higher price) compared to taxed states—investors pay more for tax advantages but total returns equivalent or better due to tax savings.
Should I invest in Nashville or Memphis NNN properties?
Choose Nashville if:
- You want maximum appreciation potential (+15% population growth)
- You prefer premium demographics ($120K+ Franklin/Brentwood)
- You’re targeting QSR, Starbucks, Chick-fil-A (affluent suburbs)
- You’re willing to accept lower cap rates (5.0-6.5%) for growth
Choose Memphis if:
- You want higher cap rates (6.0-7.5%) with stable cash flow
- You prefer logistics-driven demand (FedEx, Amazon workforce)
- You’re targeting c-stores, auto parts, dollar stores (blue-collar)
- You’re comfortable with flat/modest appreciation (stable population)
Diversification strategy: 60% Nashville (growth), 40% Memphis (yield) balances appreciation potential with current cash flow—both markets benefit from Tennessee’s 0% income tax advantage.
Can I use a 1031 exchange to buy Tennessee NNN properties?
Yes. Tennessee’s 0% state income tax makes it an ideal 1031 exchange destination for investors selling high-tax-state properties (California, New York, New Jersey) who want to eliminate state income tax on future rental income while deferring capital gains from sale.
1031 exchange advantages:
- Defer federal capital gains (15-20% + 3.8% NIIT)
- Eliminate Tennessee state tax on future cash flow (0% vs 4-13% other states)
- Maintain wealth in real estate (no liquidity event)
- Estate planning: Step-up in basis at death (heirs inherit tax-free)
Example: California seller with $500K gain on multifamily:
- Taxable sale: $75K federal capital gains + $66.5K California state tax = $141.5K tax
- 1031 to Tennessee: Defer all taxes, future cash flow 0% Tennessee tax (vs 13.3% CA)
- Lifetime savings: $141.5K deferred + $5K-$15K/year state tax elimination
Requirements: 45-day identification, 180-day close, like-kind property (commercial NNN qualifies)
Ready to Invest in Tennessee NNN Properties?
American Net Lease specializes in Tennessee triple net lease investments across Nashville’s booming metro, Memphis logistics hub, Knoxville Great Smoky Mountains gateway, and growing markets statewide. Our zero-tax advantage, corporate relocations, and tourism economy create exceptional conditions for passive income investors seeking appreciation + cash flow.
Browse our current inventory of Tennessee NNN properties or call 239.236.2626 to discuss exclusive opportunities.
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