A townhome sounds perfect until you realize you can hear your neighbor's teenager practicing drums at 9 PM on a Tuesday. Or it sounds terrible until you realize you haven't touched a lawnmower in three years and spent that time actually enjoying Franklin instead.
The townhome question isn't really about square footage or HOA fees. It's about how you actually live your life—and whether the tradeoffs work in your favor or against you.
Franklin's townhome communities aren't the cookie-cutter developments you might picture from other cities. Areas like Westhaven, Berry Farms, and newer sections of Cool Springs offer townhomes that range from 1,400 to over 3,000 square feet, with architectural details that fit Franklin's aesthetic.
Your morning might start with a short walk to grab coffee at a nearby shop, no yard work calling your name. Your evening might involve hearing footsteps upstairs from your neighbor's unit—or enjoying a rooftop deck with downtown Franklin views, depending on your specific building and location.
The daily reality comes down to proximity. You're sharing at least one wall (often two) with neighbors. You're parking in a garage that fits two cars if you're lucky, one if you're not. You're living vertically, with bedrooms typically on upper floors and living spaces below or in the middle.
For some people, this feels cozy and efficient. For others, it feels cramped after six months.
Before diving into financials or specific communities, consider these scenarios:
You might thrive in a townhome if:
A townhome might frustrate you if:
Neither list is about right or wrong. It's about self-awareness.
Franklin townhomes currently range from the mid-$400s to over $800,000, depending on location, size, and finishes. That's a significant spread, and it reflects how varied the townhome market has become here.
Compare that to single-family homes, where entry points in desirable Franklin neighborhoods often start in the $600s and climb quickly. The townhome option creates a path to homeownership in Franklin that doesn't require waiting another three years to save for a larger down payment.
But here's where buyers sometimes miscalculate: HOA fees.
Franklin townhome HOAs typically run between $200 and $450 monthly, though some luxury communities charge more. That covers exterior maintenance, landscaping, sometimes amenities like pools or fitness centers, and occasionally certain utilities.
When you factor HOA fees into your monthly payment, the gap between townhome and single-family ownership narrows. A $475,000 townhome with a $350 monthly HOA might cost roughly the same monthly as a $525,000 single-family home with no HOA—once you account for the yard maintenance, exterior repairs, and other costs you'd handle yourself.
Run the real numbers for your situation. The townhome premium for convenience only makes sense if you'll actually use that freed-up time and energy.
This is where townhome conversations get honest or stay politely vague. Let's go with honest.
Shared walls mean shared sounds. Modern construction has improved significantly—newer Franklin townhomes built in the last five years often have solid sound mitigation between units. Older conversions or budget builds from the mid-2000s? Not always.
During your search, ask specifically about wall construction. Look for terms like "double-stud walls" or "sound-dampening insulation." Better yet, visit the property at different times of day. A Saturday afternoon viewing won't reveal what Thursday night sounds like.
Your neighbors matter more in a townhome than in a single-family home with a quarter-acre buffer. HOA rules can help—many Franklin communities have quiet hours and restrictions on short-term rentals—but enforcement varies. Ask about the HOA's track record, not just their rules.
Beyond standard home inspection items, townhome buyers should dig into:
HOA financial health: Request the reserve study and recent meeting minutes. Underfunded reserves mean special assessments in your future.
Rental percentage: Some communities cap how many units can be renter-occupied. Higher owner-occupancy typically means more stable, invested neighbors.
Upcoming assessments: Is the community planning major repairs? Roof replacements and siding projects get divided among owners.
Insurance specifics: Your HOA's master policy covers certain things; you're responsible for others. Know exactly where that line falls before closing.
Parking realities: If you have two cars and one garage spot, where does the second car go? Visitor parking? Is it enforced?
The townhome buyer in Franklin has evolved beyond first-time purchasers. We're seeing active retirees who want walkability without yard burden. Remote workers who prioritize location over space. Investors looking for rental income in high-demand areas. Second-home buyers who want a Franklin base without full-time maintenance.
What connects them isn't demographics—it's priorities. They've decided that proximity, convenience, and lower maintenance outweigh maximum square footage and complete privacy.
That tradeoff works beautifully for the right person. It creates daily frustration for the wrong one.
The townhome question isn't really about townhomes. It's about knowing yourself well enough to choose housing that supports how you actually want to live in Franklin—not how you think you should live or how you lived ten years ago.
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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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