The short answer is yes—but not by as much as you probably spent on the pool. And in some Nashville neighborhoods, a pool can actually narrow your buyer pool significantly.
Before you write that $80,000 check to a pool contractor or walk away from a gorgeous listing just because there's no backyard oasis, you need to understand how pools actually affect resale in Middle Tennessee's market.
Pool homes in Nashville typically sell for 3-7% more than comparable non-pool properties in the same neighborhood. On a $600,000 home, that's roughly $18,000 to $42,000 in added value.
Here's where the math gets uncomfortable: a quality in-ground pool installation in Nashville runs anywhere from $50,000 to $120,000, depending on size, materials, and features. Gunite pools with custom finishes? You're looking at $80,000 minimum.
So you spend $80,000, and your home appraises for $30,000 more. That's not a great return if you're thinking purely about resale.
But resale value isn't the whole story.
Location matters enormously. In Brentwood, Franklin, and Green Hills—where family-oriented buyers expect resort-level outdoor living—pools add measurable value. Homes in the $900,000+ range with well-designed pools and outdoor entertaining spaces tend to sit on market fewer days than their pool-less counterparts.
In Belle Meade and Oak Hill, where lot sizes accommodate pools without sacrificing usable yard space, you'll see stronger premiums. Buyers in these areas often filter specifically for pool homes, which means you're competing against a smaller inventory when you sell.
The Davidson County suburbs tell a different story. In Antioch, Madison, or even parts of Donelson, pools don't command the same premium. Buyer demographics skew differently—more first-time buyers, more investors, more people calculating monthly costs down to the dollar. A pool becomes a maintenance liability rather than a luxury amenity.
Not every buyer wants a pool. In fact, plenty of buyers actively avoid them.
Parents of toddlers see a drowning risk, not a summer destination. Busy professionals see weekend maintenance, not relaxation. Empty nesters see liability insurance increases, not sunset cocktails.
In neighborhoods with smaller lots—think East Nashville infill construction or some of the tighter Sylvan Park properties—a pool can eat up the entire backyard. When buyers can't envision a dog running around or kids playing catch, you've just eliminated a significant chunk of your market.
Pool condition matters more than pool existence. A well-maintained pool with updated equipment adds value. A pool with cracked plaster, aging pumps, and cloudy water? That's a negotiating chip for the buyer, not you. Buyers will request $15,000-$25,000 in credits for pool renovations, sometimes wiping out any premium entirely.
Nashville's inventory has loosened compared to the frenzied 2021-2022 market, which means buyers have options. When buyers have options, they get picky.
Pool homes in the luxury segment ($1.2 million and up) are performing well this spring because that buyer profile expects outdoor amenities. These buyers aren't scared off by maintenance costs or insurance increases—they're already budgeting for landscaping crews and quarterly pool service.
In the $400,000-$700,000 range, pool homes are taking slightly longer to sell than comparable non-pool listings. The buyer math at this price point is tighter. An extra $300/month in pool maintenance, higher insurance premiums, and utility costs can push a buyer out of their comfortable payment range.
Pool homes in Tennessee require additional liability coverage. Most insurers require at least $300,000 in liability coverage specifically for the pool, and many recommend $500,000. That translates to $200-$500 more per year in premiums.
Some carriers require specific safety features—fencing, alarms, covers—before they'll write the policy at all. If you're buying a pool home with outdated safety features, factor renovation costs into your offer.
When you're selling a pool home, having documentation of regular maintenance, recent equipment updates, and safety compliance makes the insurance conversation easier for your buyers. Easier insurance means faster closing.
Real estate investors in Nashville generally avoid pool properties for rental portfolios. The liability, maintenance costs, and potential for expensive repairs cut into returns. A vacant pool in July is a green swamp by August.
For house hackers or investors planning to live in one unit of a duplex? A pool on a single-family conversion can actually work against you. It complicates tenant arrangements and increases your exposure.
If you're buying a primary residence and plan to stay seven-plus years, the pool math changes completely. You're not just paying for resale value—you're paying for summers at home, kids' birthday parties, and Sunday afternoons with friends. That lifestyle value doesn't show up in comps.
If you're buying: Don't pay a premium for a pool you won't use. Don't walk away from a perfect floor plan because you're worried about maintenance. Run the actual numbers—insurance, utilities, service contracts, eventual resurfacing—and decide if the lifestyle fits.
If you're selling: Invest in pool presentation. Fresh water chemistry, clean decking, and functional equipment photograph beautifully and eliminate buyer objections. If your pool needs significant work, consider getting repair estimates upfront so negotiations don't spiral.
If you're building: Design the outdoor space holistically. A $90,000 pool with a $5,000 concrete pad looks worse than a $70,000 pool with thoughtful landscaping, outdoor kitchen, and cohesive design. Buyers pay for the experience, not the water feature alone.
Real Estate
Arrt of Real Estate is a Nashville-based brokerage built on high standards, transparency, and results.
Brentwood, Tennessee
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