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Nashville Covenants That Kill Your Airbnb Plans TL;DR: Many Nashville neighborhoods have HOA covenants or deed restrictions that flat-out prohibit short...
TL;DR: Many Nashville neighborhoods have HOA covenants or deed restrictions that flat-out prohibit short-term rentals—regardless of what Metro Nashville's permit system allows. Before you buy a property banking on Airbnb income, you need to read the actual covenant language, not just check the city's rules.
Nashville's short-term rental permit system gets all the attention. People study the zoning overlays, track the non-owner-occupied permit caps, and monitor Metro Council debates. But a city-issued permit doesn't mean your neighborhood will let you operate.
Homeowner association covenants and deed restrictions are private contracts. They run with the land, meaning they bind every future owner. If your subdivision's covenants say no rentals under 30 days, it doesn't matter that you qualified for a Metro permit. Your neighbors—or their HOA board—can enforce those covenants in court.
This trips up investors and relocating families constantly, especially in Spring 2026 as short-term rental demand around Nashville keeps climbing.
Westhaven in Franklin (technically Williamson County, but the Nashville metro market treats it as one ecosystem) has covenant language requiring a minimum 30-day lease term. The community's architectural review board and HOA actively monitor compliance.
Westhaven's appeal—walkable streets, community pool, proximity to downtown Franklin—makes it tempting for investors eyeing weekend rental income. But the covenant language is explicit, and the HOA has a track record of enforcement.
If you're buying in Westhaven for personal use and love the neighborhood, great. If your purchase math depends on short-term rental revenue, the numbers won't work here.
Several older East Nashville subdivisions have deed restrictions dating back decades that include rental duration minimums. These aren't always in a formal HOA structure—they're baked into the original plat restrictions.
The tricky part: these restrictions sometimes go unenforced for years, creating a false sense of permission. A neighbor runs an Airbnb for three years with no pushback, so you assume it's fine. Then a new resident moves in, reads the covenants, and files a complaint.
Deed restrictions without an active HOA are harder to enforce, but they're still legally valid. Tennessee courts have upheld decades-old deed restrictions when a property owner with standing brings a claim. "Nobody complained before" isn't a legal defense.
Gated communities like The Governors Club in Brentwood maintain some of the strictest covenant enforcement in the Nashville metro. Short-term rentals are prohibited, and the community's governance structure has the resources and motivation to act quickly on violations.
The logic makes sense from a resident's perspective. You're paying premium dues for privacy, security, and a controlled environment. Rotating weekend guests undermine all three.
Similar restrictions show up in communities like Annandale, Laurelbrooke, and several gated sections of Green Hills. The higher the price point, the more likely the covenants include rental restrictions—luxury buyers want predictability in who's coming and going.
Subdivision developers building in Nolensville, Mount Juliet, and other fast-growing corridors have gotten smarter about covenant language in recent years. Many developments platted after 2018 include specific short-term rental prohibitions written to address platforms like Airbnb and VRBO by name.
These newer covenants tend to be more airtight than older deed restrictions because attorneys drafted them with current rental trends in mind. They'll define "short-term rental" precisely (often anything under 30 days), reference digital platforms explicitly, and outline specific enforcement mechanisms including daily fines.
If you're looking at new construction in any Nashville-area suburb, request the full Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions (CC&Rs) before you make an offer. Not the summary. Not the HOA welcome packet. The actual recorded document.
Pull the property's deed restrictions from the Davidson County (or relevant county) Register of Deeds office. Every recorded covenant is public record.
The Tennessee Real Estate Commission provides resources on understanding property restrictions, and your agent should be flagging these issues before you're under contract—not after.
Your investment strategy is only as good as the restrictions you didn't read. Covenant language is boring until it costs you six figures in lost rental income.