TL;DR: Property taxes in Franklin vary by neighborhood because of differences in assessed home values, special assessment districts, and which taxing jurisdictions overlap your parcel. Understanding how these layers work helps you budget accurately before you buy—or challenge your bill if something looks off.
Two homes on the same street in Franklin can carry different property tax amounts, and it has nothing to do with one owner being luckier than the other. Tennessee calculates residential property taxes based on a percentage of your home's appraised value, and that appraisal is driven by comparable sales, lot size, improvements, and the specific overlay of taxing districts your property falls within.
In Williamson County, the county assessor reappraises properties on a cycle (currently every four to five years), and market movement between those cycles can create significant variation. A neighborhood like Westhaven, where homes have appreciated sharply, will see assessed values climb faster than a subdivision where prices have been more stable.
The result: your tax bill is a reflection of your home's market position, your lot's geography, and a stack of overlapping jurisdictions—not a single flat rate applied evenly across Franklin.
Tennessee uses what's called an assessment ratio. For residential property, only 25% of your home's appraised value is considered "assessed." Your tax bill is that assessed value multiplied by the combined tax rate from every jurisdiction that covers your parcel.
Here's a simplified example:
| Step | Calculation | |---|---| | Appraised value | $750,000 | | Assessment ratio (25%) | $187,500 | | Combined tax rate (hypothetical $2.50 per $100) | $4,687.50 annual tax |
The combined tax rate is where neighborhood-level differences get real. Depending on where your property sits, you might be paying into the county general fund, the City of Franklin, a special school district, or other overlay districts. A home inside Franklin city limits carries a different combined rate than a home just outside city limits in unincorporated Williamson County—even if both homes are worth the same amount.
This is the single biggest driver of tax variation that catches buyers off guard. Franklin city limits don't follow neat lines. Some neighborhoods that feel like they're "in Franklin" are technically in unincorporated Williamson County, and vice versa.
If your home is inside city limits, you pay both the Williamson County property tax rate and the City of Franklin's municipal rate. If you're outside city limits, you skip the city portion—but you may also miss out on city services like Franklin's trash pickup, certain road maintenance, and city parks access.
Neighborhoods like McKay's Mill, parts of Fieldstone Farms, and some sections along Mack Hatcher sit squarely inside city limits. Meanwhile, properties south toward Arrington or east toward Thompson's Station may fall outside the city, producing a noticeably lower tax bill on a similarly priced home.
Before you assume that lower taxes outside city limits are automatically a better deal, weigh what services come with that city rate. Many homeowners find the tradeoff worthwhile.
Some Franklin neighborhoods carry additional assessments that fund specific infrastructure or services—things like stormwater management, road improvements, or community amenities built as part of a master-planned development.
These assessments don't always appear on a standard property tax search. They might show up as a separate line item on your bill or as a recorded obligation tied to the lot. If you're buying in a newer development or a planned community, ask specifically about special assessment districts or community facility districts before you finalize your budget.
The Williamson County Property Assessor's office maintains records on parcel-level data, and it's worth checking your specific lot rather than relying on neighborhood averages.
Williamson County's most recent reappraisal updated assessed values to reflect current market conditions. In neighborhoods where home prices surged—think Berry Farms, downtown Franklin condos, or established areas like Governors Club—owners saw their assessed values jump significantly.
A reappraisal doesn't automatically mean your taxes go up by the same percentage. Tennessee law requires local governments to calculate a "certified tax rate" that would generate the same total revenue as before the reappraisal. But governing bodies can vote to adopt a rate higher than the certified rate, and individual homeowners in hot neighborhoods often see their share of the total tax burden increase even if the headline rate stays flat.
If your neighborhood appreciated faster than the county average, your slice of the pie got bigger.
You have the right to appeal. Williamson County accepts informal appeals first—usually a conversation or documentation submitted to the assessor's office showing that your appraised value doesn't reflect reality. If that doesn't resolve it, a formal appeal to the County Board of Equalization is the next step.
Strong appeals typically include recent comparable sales that suggest a lower value, documentation of property conditions the assessor may not have accounted for (foundation issues, outdated interiors, easement restrictions), or evidence of an error in the property record like incorrect square footage.
The window to appeal is limited each year, so mark the deadline as soon as your assessment notice arrives—typically in spring.
If you're shopping for a Franklin home this spring, don't estimate taxes based on what the seller currently pays. Their assessed value may be outdated, and a sale at a new price can trigger an adjustment. Ask your agent to pull the actual tax history for the parcel, confirm whether it's inside or outside city limits, and check for any special assessments.
A $50 difference in monthly taxes might not change your decision. A $300 difference absolutely could—and that gap is common between Franklin neighborhoods that are only a few miles apart.
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