Your kids' bedrooms haven't been slept in regularly for three years. The upstairs guest bath gets cleaned more than used. And last winter, you caught yourself thinking about how much you'd pay someone else to deal with that leaf situation in the backyard.
But then you walk past the doorframe where you marked their heights every birthday, or you wave to the neighbor who brought soup when you had surgery, and suddenly selling feels impossible.
This is the conversation Franklin homeowners over 55 are having right now—not with their agents, but with themselves. Downsizing versus aging in place isn't really about square footage. It's about how you want to live the next chapter.
Most downsizing conversations start with "think of all the money you'll save," but the actual numbers tell a more complicated story.
Selling your four-bedroom Colonial in Fieldstone Farms or McKay's Mill might net you significant equity—homes in established Franklin neighborhoods have appreciated considerably over the past decade. But here's what catches people off guard: buying a smaller, single-story home in a desirable Franklin location doesn't necessarily cost less than you'd expect.
Ranch-style homes and single-level patio homes command premium prices here. Demand outpaces supply because, well, you're not the only one thinking about stairs. That three-bedroom ranch in Sullivan Farms or a patio home in Westhaven might cost more per square foot than your current place.
The real financial calculation involves:
Sometimes downsizing creates breathing room in your budget. Sometimes it's close to a wash. And occasionally, staying put and investing in modifications makes more financial sense than people assume.
The phrase "aging in place" sounds peaceful until you start listing what it might involve.
For a two-story home in a neighborhood like Avalon or Legends Ridge, truly preparing to stay long-term could mean: widening doorways to accommodate mobility aids, installing a stair lift or converting a main-floor room into a bedroom, adding grab bars and walk-in showers, improving lighting throughout, potentially adding a main-floor laundry if yours is upstairs or in the basement.
These modifications range from minor (a few hundred dollars for grab bars) to major (a main-floor addition with an accessible bathroom can run $75,000 to $150,000 or more, depending on your home's layout and lot).
The question isn't whether you can afford to modify your home. It's whether your specific home is a good candidate for modification—and whether you want to live through a renovation in your sixties or seventies.
Some Franklin homes adapt easily. Single-story sections, wide hallways, first-floor bedrooms with nearby bathrooms—these features make aging in place more practical. Others would require such significant changes that the investment doesn't pencil out.
Here's what rarely makes it into the downsizing articles: moving across town in Franklin can feel surprisingly disorienting.
You've spent fifteen years learning which grocery store has the best produce, which dry cleaner actually follows your instructions, which route avoids school traffic. Your doctor's office is convenient. Your book club meets nearby. The barista at your coffee shop knows your order.
Moving from Cool Springs to Westhaven isn't like moving across the country, but it's also not nothing. You're rebuilding routines, finding new service providers, learning new traffic patterns.
Some people find this energizing—a fresh start. Others underestimate how much those small familiar rhythms contribute to their daily comfort.
If you're considering downsizing, spend real time in the neighborhoods you're eyeing. Not just driving through, but actually walking, eating at local spots, sitting in the coffee shops. Does the pace feel right? Are people your age visible in the community?
Skip the generic "where do you see yourself in ten years" conversation. Instead:
How do you currently use your home? Walk through room by room and note what actually happens in each space daily, weekly, monthly. Be honest. If the dining room only gets used twice a year, that's data.
What would you miss most? Not theoretically—specifically. Your screened porch? The garden you've tended for a decade? The proximity to your grandchildren's school?
What's already hard? Stairs you avoid? A yard that's become a burden? A kitchen layout that frustrates you?
What's your support network here? Neighbors who check on you? Family nearby? Church community? These connections have real value that doesn't show up on a spreadsheet.
What's your timeline tolerance? Aging-in-place modifications can take months to complete, and you'll live through construction. Selling and buying in Franklin's market also takes time and involves uncertainty.
Some Franklin homeowners find a middle path: selling their larger home and renting for a year or two before buying again.
This approach lets you test a neighborhood or housing type before committing. It also lets you watch the market without pressure. The downside is moving twice, storing belongings, and the uncertainty of renting in a market where inventory for renters over 55 isn't exactly abundant.
Others explore selling to family members, adding an accessory dwelling unit for future caregivers, or other creative arrangements that don't fit neatly into "downsize" or "stay."
This decision isn't really about optimizing square footage or maximizing equity. It's about how you want to spend your time and energy in the years ahead.
Some people genuinely want less house to maintain, a fresh community to explore, and liberation from decades of accumulated stuff. That's not running away from their life—it's choosing something different.
Others find deep meaning in the home where their family grew, the garden they've cultivated, the neighborhood where they know everyone. Staying isn't stubbornness—it's a valid choice too.
The best decision is the one that matches your actual life, not the one that looks best on paper.
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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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