Montgomery County's land market is not uniform — the distinction between Clarksville's urban and suburban fringe and the county's more rural eastern and southern communities is sharper here than in most Middle Tennessee counties. Clarksville itself is a major city with the full complement of urban infrastructure, services, and prices to match. For land buyers, the real opportunity lies outside the city proper: in the agricultural communities of Cunningham, Palmyra, and Woodlawn where the land character, the regulatory environment, and the price points still reflect the county's rural heritage more than its urban growth story.
The Sango and St. Bethlehem corridors sit at the urban-rural interface — close enough to Clarksville to access services while still offering larger lot sizes and a transitional character. Rossview has developed substantially as a suburban residential community. Cunningham (northeast of Clarksville) and Palmyra (southeast, along the Cumberland River) are the communities where rural land buyers focused on genuine agricultural acreage will find the most relevant inventory, typically in the 20 to 100+ acre range at prices that reflect the county's rural market rather than its suburban premium. Woodlawn, along the US-41A corridor toward the Kentucky line, offers similar rural character with slightly different utility access profiles.
Fort Campbell's Role in the County Economy
Fort Campbell straddles the Tennessee-Kentucky border in the western part of the county and is the economic engine of Clarksville's growth. The installation's presence drives significant military and civilian employment, creating sustained housing demand that has made Montgomery County one of the fastest-growing in the state. For land buyers, this matters primarily as a long-term demand signal — the structural drivers of growth are not speculative but are anchored by a permanent federal installation. The flip side is that Fort Campbell's footprint constrains the supply of available agricultural land in the western county, focusing rural land activity on the eastern and southern portions.
The Cumberland River corridor within Montgomery County offers waterfront and near-water properties with recreational value — similar to the dynamic in Cheatham County to the east, but with different soil and access profiles. River and creek frontage along the Cumberland, Red River, and West Fork Red River carries a premium over comparable inland tracts. Karst geology in riverside areas creates additional septic due diligence requirements, but the scenic and recreational value of these properties supports higher per-acre pricing in a market where agricultural land generally trades at $11,000–$13,000 per acre.