TL;DR: Before you close on a Nashville property, your title search can reveal ownership disputes that derail the entire transaction. Knowing what to look for — broken chains of title, unreleased liens, boundary overlaps, and heir property issues — gives you time to fix problems or walk away before you're stuck.
Most buyers treat the title search as a formality. Something the closing attorney handles in the background while you're picking out furniture. But in Nashville's Spring 2026 market, where competitive offers move fast and investors are snapping up properties across East Nashville, Germantown, and Antioch, skipping a careful review of what the title search actually reveals can cost you six figures — or the property itself.
A title search traces the ownership history of a property through Davidson County's public records. When that history is clean, closings happen smoothly. When it's not, you need to know exactly what you're looking at.
Here are four specific red flags that point to ownership disputes — and what each one means for your deal.
Every property has a chain of title — a sequential record of every transfer from one owner to the next. When a link in that chain is missing, it means there's a period where ownership can't be verified through recorded documents.
This happens more often than you'd think in Nashville, especially with properties in older neighborhoods like Sylvan Park, Salemtown, or parts of North Nashville where homes have changed hands multiple times over decades. Sometimes a deed was never properly recorded. Sometimes a transfer happened informally — a handshake deal between family members that never made it to the Register of Deeds office.
A gap doesn't always mean someone else has a claim. But it creates legal uncertainty. And legal uncertainty means a title company may refuse to insure the property, which means your lender won't fund the loan.
What to do: Ask your closing attorney specifically whether the chain of title is continuous. If there's a gap, a quiet title action through Davidson County courts can resolve it — but that process takes months, not days. Factor that timeline into your offer.
A lien that shows as active on a property — even if the underlying debt was paid off years ago — creates a cloud on the title. This is one of the most common issues in Nashville transactions, and it's almost always a clerical problem rather than an actual dispute.
Contractors who filed a mechanic's lien during a renovation but never released it after getting paid. A previous mortgage that was satisfied but the lender never recorded the release. A tax lien from the State of Tennessee that was resolved but still shows as outstanding in Davidson County records.
The problem: until that lien is formally released in the public record, it technically attaches to the property. A new buyer inherits the obligation to prove it's been resolved.
What to do: If your title search shows old liens, request payoff letters or lien release documents from the original creditor. Your title company can often track these down, but it takes time. Don't let anyone tell you it'll "get handled at closing" without documented proof the lien is being released simultaneously.
Nashville's growth has pushed development into areas where property boundaries were described in old survey language — metes and bounds descriptions that reference trees, creek beds, and stone markers that no longer exist. When two adjacent properties have legal descriptions that overlap, both owners may have a legitimate recorded claim to the same strip of land.
This comes up frequently with infill lots in areas like The Nations, Inglewood, and Madison, where older parcels are being subdivided for new construction. A developer splits a lot, the new survey doesn't perfectly match the neighboring property's recorded description, and suddenly there's a boundary dispute baked into the title.
What to do: Always get a current survey — don't rely on an old one the seller provides. Compare your survey against the legal description in your deed AND the neighbor's recorded deed. If there's an overlap, a boundary line agreement between both parties, recorded with the Register of Deeds, can resolve it before closing.
This is Nashville's most emotionally complicated title issue. When a property owner dies without a will — or with a will that was never probated — the property passes to heirs by Tennessee's intestacy laws. But without a probated estate, no single heir has clear authority to sell.
You'll see this across Nashville, particularly with properties that have been in the same family for generations. One heir lives in the house, decides to sell, and signs a contract. But three siblings, two cousins, and an estranged uncle all have fractional ownership interests under Tennessee law.
A sale with only one heir's signature doesn't transfer clean title. Period.
What to do: If the seller inherited the property, ask for probate court documentation showing they have legal authority to convey full ownership. If probate was never opened, it needs to happen before you close. No exceptions, no workarounds, no matter how motivated you are to lock down the deal.
Your title search is the one moment in a transaction where hidden problems become visible. Read it. Ask questions about anything that looks unusual. And give your closing attorney enough lead time to resolve issues — rushing a title clearance in a hot Nashville market is how buyers end up in courtrooms instead of living rooms.
Strategic Real Estate For Nashville And Middle Tennessee.
Arrt of Real Estate is a Nashville-based brokerage built on high standards, transparency, and results.
Brentwood, Tennessee
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