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Middle Tennessee Land Guide

Smith County Land for Sale — Buyer's Guide

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Smith County — Closed Transaction Data

Based on verified closed land transactions in Smith County. Pulled live from the Scenic Land Intelligence database — updates automatically as new closings are recorded.

Median $/Acre
Typical Range (P25–P75)
Median Tract Size
Median Days on Market
Closed Transactions

Live data — pulled at page load from the Scenic Land Intelligence transaction database. Median $/acre is the midpoint of all qualified closings (tracts 1+ acres); P25–P75 is the typical range (middle 50%). Outliers above $5M/acre and below $100/acre excluded.

Smith County sits northeast of Nashville where the Cumberland River meets the Caney Fork at Cordell Hull Lake — a landscape of river bluffs, rolling farmland, and one of the more significant reservoir systems in Middle Tennessee. The county is 52 miles from Nashville, deeply rural in character, and underappreciated as a land market. For buyers who want lake and river frontage, genuine agricultural tracts, or the unique opportunity created by the county's Agri-Tourism Overlay District, Smith County rewards those willing to look beyond the more-crowded Nashville suburban counties.

This guide covers the zoning framework under the Smith County Zoning Resolution, minimum lot sizes, TDEC septic requirements, greenbelt enrollment, utilities, and the waterfront market dynamics that make this county distinctive. All data is drawn from verified county sources and direct market experience. For questions about a specific parcel, reach out directly.

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Terrain at a Glance

What the land itself is telling you.

Smith County occupies 314 square miles at a significant physiographic transition in Middle Tennessee — the eastern portion of the county rises into the rugged limestone terrain of the Highland Rim, while the western county flattens into the Nashville Basin, producing a landscape with meaningful elevation variation across a compact area. Average elevation runs around 675 feet, but the ridges and river bluffs of the eastern county can exceed 900 feet while the Cumberland River valley drops considerably lower. Cordell Hull Lake, formed by the Corps of Engineers dam on the Caney Fork, dominates the central and eastern parts of the county, creating miles of irregular shoreline that defines both the recreational character and the premium land market in Smith County. The Cumberland River forms the county's western boundary before joining the Caney Fork near Carthage, and this river geography — bluffs, bottomlands, and lake shores — is the single most important driver of land value variation across the county. Upland agricultural land away from the water offers a more modest price picture but solid soils and the rolling hills typical of the Highland Rim transition zone.

Smith County — Quick Facts

Physiographic Region
Transition zone — rugged Highland Rim (east) meets Nashville Basin (west)
Elevation Range
~400–900+ ft · Average approximately 675 ft above sea level
Area
314 sq mi · County seat: Carthage · Population: ~20,800
Dominant Landforms
Cordell Hull Lake (Corps of Engineers reservoir on the Caney Fork); Cumberland River bottomlands and bluffs; rolling Highland Rim uplands in the east; flatter Nashville Basin terrain in the west
Major Waterways
Cumberland River, Caney Fork River, Cordell Hull Lake
Land Use
Mix of agricultural (cattle, hay), forested uplands on the Highland Rim, significant lake frontage and river corridor properties, and the rural communities of Carthage, Gordonsville, and South Carthage
Distance from Nashville
~52 miles northeast of Nashville via US-70 / I-40 corridor
Jump to Section
SECTION 01

Minimum Lot Sizes & Zoning Districts

Verified Data

Smith County operates under a countywide land use zoning framework administered by the Smith County Land Use Administrator (615-735-3418). The zoning resolution, available at smithcotn.com, establishes minimum lot sizes that vary significantly depending on available infrastructure — specifically, whether public water and fire protection are available at the parcel. This tiered system means the same zoning district can have very different minimum lot size requirements depending on a parcel's location and utility service availability, which makes infrastructure verification an essential first step in any Smith County lot size analysis.

In the A-1 Agricultural district — the dominant classification for rural land in the unincorporated county — the minimum lot size is 1 acre where both public water and fire protection are available, rising to 3 acres where neither is present. In the R-1 Residential district, lots with both public sewer and fire protection require 15,000 square feet; lots with public water only (no sewer) require 30,000 square feet; lots with public water only require 1 acre minimum. The absolute floor across all Smith County zoning districts is 10,000 square feet with a minimum 100-foot lot width. Municipalities within the county — Carthage, Gordonsville, and South Carthage — maintain their own zoning codes separate from county land use regulations, and the county standards do not apply within incorporated limits.

Smith County Lot Size Quick Reference

A-1 Agricultural: 1 acre (with public water + fire protection) · 3 acres (without). R-1 Residential: 15,000 sq ft (with sewer + fire protection) · 30,000 sq ft (with public water only) · 1 acre (public water, no sewer). Absolute minimum countywide: 10,000 sq ft with 100 ft width. Municipal zoning (Carthage, Gordonsville, South Carthage) applies within incorporated limits — confirm jurisdiction before assuming county rules.

The infrastructure-dependent lot size structure creates meaningful due diligence requirements: before analyzing a parcel's subdivision potential or minimum lot size compliance, confirm whether public water is available at the road, whether fire protection service extends to the parcel's location, and whether any sewer service exists nearby. The Smith County Land Use Administrator can confirm current zoning and the applicable minimum for a specific parcel. The Smith County Development Guide is also a useful reference document for buyers navigating the regulatory framework.

SECTION 02

Septic & Sewer

Verified Data

Septic systems in Smith County are regulated and permitted by TDEC (Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation). The county's TDEC environmental contact is Mark Webster at 615-735-3785. Septic approval is required before building permits can be issued for any residential construction where public sewer is not available, which is the case for the vast majority of rural land in Smith County. Smith Utility District provides limited sewer service in and around Carthage and along select corridors, but rural parcels — particularly those in the Highland Rim terrain of the eastern county and in the agricultural communities east and north of Carthage — are septic-only.

The county's tiered minimum lot size structure directly reflects the septic constraint: the A-1 district requires 3 acres where no public water or fire protection is available, in part because larger lot areas are often necessary to accommodate a conventional septic system, its setbacks, and a repair area on soils that may be more challenging in the rolling Highland Rim terrain. In areas with better soil profiles and public water available, smaller lots are permitted — but a successful perc test remains non-negotiable before any rural Smith County purchase intended for residential use. Budget for a TDEC site evaluation and soil analysis as part of your standard due diligence contingencies.

Sewer Availability in Smith County

Smith Utility District provides limited municipal sewer coverage in the Carthage area and along specific corridors. Outside this service area — which covers most of the county's rural land area — septic is the only option. Always confirm sewer availability directly with Smith Utility District (smithud.com) before assuming service at a specific address. Do not rely on maps alone; call and verify. On rural tracts intended for residential use, run a TDEC perc test contingency in your offer as standard practice.

For buyers evaluating Cordell Hull Lake frontage properties and Cumberland River corridor parcels specifically: water proximity creates both scenic value and septic complexity. Required setbacks from the ordinary high-water mark, Corps of Engineers shoreline restrictions, and the variability of soils near river and lake banks can make septic installation on waterfront parcels more complicated and costly than on comparable upland properties. Waterfront buyers in Smith County should factor septic feasibility analysis — including confirmation of required setbacks from the water — into their due diligence before placing offers on lake and river frontage tracts.

SECTION 03

Greenbelt Tax Assessment

Verified Data

Tennessee's Greenbelt program applies in Smith County under the same statewide framework as all 95 counties: agricultural and forest land is assessed at use value rather than market value, which can produce a meaningful reduction in annual property taxes on qualifying tracts. The standard income test requires $1,500 average annual gross agricultural income over a 3-year period, and this figure serves as a presumption of eligibility in Smith County — if a landowner can document this level of income from the land (hay sales, cattle, timber, crops), Greenbelt enrollment should follow. The statewide 15-acre minimum for agricultural and forest enrollment applies, and applications are processed through the Smith County Property Assessor's office.

Smith County recognizes a distinctive exemption not available in all Tennessee counties: the 25-year farmed homestead exemption. Under this provision, a family homestead that has been actively farmed for 25 or more consecutive years may qualify for Greenbelt assessment without meeting the standard income test. This is a meaningful provision for the county's multi-generational farm families — many of whom hold land along the Cumberland River and Caney Fork corridors that has been in continuous agricultural production for decades. Buyers acquiring land with existing Greenbelt status should confirm the basis for enrollment (income test or homestead exemption) and the enrollment history, as this affects both the continuity of the tax benefit and the potential rollback exposure at sale.

Rollback Tax Calculation at Sale

When Greenbelt-enrolled land is sold for development or converted to a non-qualifying use, rollback taxes are assessed for the 3 most recent tax years at full market-assessed value. In Smith County, where waterfront and river frontage properties have appreciated substantially, rollback exposure on enrolled lakefront tracts can be a meaningful number. Negotiate responsibility for rollback taxes explicitly in the purchase agreement — this is a point of real negotiation on larger tracts with confirmed appreciation, and leaving it unaddressed until the closing table creates unnecessary conflict.

The Greenbelt's practical effect on Smith County's land market is to preserve the agricultural character of the county's interior by reducing the annual carrying cost for farm families — lessening the financial pressure to sell land in a market where values have increased. For land buyers, Greenbelt enrollment is generally a positive indicator of the land's agricultural viability and the seller's stewardship history. It also means that when Greenbelt-enrolled land does come to market, it often represents genuinely productive agricultural ground rather than land that was enrolled for tax reasons alone.

SECTION 04

Zoning Districts & Special Provisions

Verified Data

Smith County's land use regulations are administered by the Smith County Land Use Administrator (615-735-3418), with variance requests heard by the Board of Zoning Appeals. The county zoning resolution (last substantively updated through 2018 amendments) establishes the district structure for unincorporated areas. The primary districts relevant to rural land buyers are: A-1 (Agricultural), which covers the majority of rural farmland; R-1 (Residential), for lower-density residential areas; R-C (Residential-Commercial), for transitional areas near communities; C-1 and C-2 (Commercial), concentrated near Carthage and along major corridors; and I-1 (Industrial), for limited manufacturing uses. The full zoning resolution is available at smithcotn.com.

The most strategically interesting zoning feature in Smith County is the Agri-Tourism Overlay District (ATOD). This overlay, applicable to properties that meet the base A-1 agricultural criteria, permits a range of farm-based commercial activities that would not be allowed under standard agricultural zoning — including event venues, agricultural tourism operations, farm stands, and related activities. As agri-tourism has grown as both a lifestyle and an economic model across Tennessee, Smith County's explicit overlay framework provides a regulatory pathway for buyers interested in operating a farm event venue, a farm stay, or similar operations without the uncertainty of seeking a rezoning or variance. This is a material differentiator for a specific buyer profile and worth understanding before comparing Smith County to adjacent counties where such operations face more regulatory friction.

Agri-Tourism Overlay District (ATOD): What It Enables

The ATOD allows farm-based commercial activities on qualifying agricultural properties in Smith County — including event venues, wedding facilities, farm stays, agricultural tourism operations, and related uses. For buyers who want to operate a productive farm that also generates event or hospitality revenue, the ATOD provides an established regulatory pathway. This is a significant advantage over counties where agri-tourism operations require case-by-case variance approval. Confirm current ATOD eligibility requirements and permitted uses directly with the Land Use Administrator (615-735-3418) before relying on this framework in an acquisition analysis.

For buyers focused strictly on agricultural land acquisition, the A-1 district's minimum lot sizes, setbacks, and use permissions are the controlling framework — and the rules are comparatively simple and buyer-friendly relative to more heavily regulated counties in the Nashville metro area. The Smith County regulatory environment rewards buyers who read the resolution carefully and ask the right questions of the Land Use Administrator, rather than making assumptions based on general rural zoning norms from other counties.

SECTION 05

Utilities & Infrastructure

Verified Data

Smith County's utility landscape is typical of a smaller rural Tennessee county: reliable electric service from multiple cooperative providers, public water available in much of the settled county through utility districts, limited natural gas in rural areas, and internet access that ranges from solid to challenging depending on the specific location. Electric service is provided by three cooperatives depending on location within the county — Upper Cumberland EMC, Middle Tennessee Electric, and Tri-County EMC — each serving a defined territory. Line extension costs for remote parcels vary by provider and distance, so confirming service territory and any extension fees with the relevant EMC is a standard step in rural land acquisition budgeting.

Public water in Smith County is provided by Smith Utility District (smithud.com) and Cordell Hull Utility District, which together cover significant portions of the county's populated areas. However, rural parcels — particularly in the more sparsely settled Highland Rim terrain of the eastern county and in the smaller communities like Brush Creek, Pleasant Shade, and Dixon Springs — may be outside utility district coverage and require private wells. Natural gas is available through Middle Tennessee Natural Gas in portions of the county, but propane is standard for rural heating and cooking across most of the county's agricultural land base.

Internet Access in Smith County

Broadband options in Smith County include Spectrum (cable, available along major corridors), AT&T (fiber in select areas, DSL more broadly), and DTC Communications (a regional provider serving parts of the county). Rural internet quality in Smith County is meaningful as a due diligence item — remote workers or buyers planning to operate a business (including an agri-tourism operation) from a rural property should verify specific availability and speeds at the address before closing. Coverage maps overstate actual availability in many rural Middle Tennessee counties; call the provider and confirm service at the specific address.

For buyers evaluating Cordell Hull Lake frontage properties, utility access along the lake corridor varies. Smith Utility District service extends to portions of the lake area, but specific availability depends on the parcel's road frontage and proximity to existing distribution infrastructure. The Corps of Engineers also imposes shoreline management requirements on Cordell Hull Lake properties that are relevant to dock installation, shoreline alteration, and certain development activities — these are separate from county utility considerations but equally important in the due diligence process for lakefront acquisitions.

SECTION 06

Sub-Areas & Key Corridors

Area Guide

Smith County's land market divides meaningfully across two axes: the urban-rural axis running through Carthage/Gordonsville versus the surrounding agricultural communities, and the water-versus-upland axis separating the premium Cordell Hull Lake and Cumberland River corridor properties from the more moderately priced agricultural interior. For land buyers, understanding which sub-market you're shopping in is the first step in interpreting pricing and availability data correctly.

Carthage (county seat, population ~2,500) sits at the confluence of the Cumberland and Caney Fork rivers and is the commercial and governmental center of the county. Gordonsville and South Carthage are smaller incorporated communities with their own municipal zoning. Beyond the incorporated areas, the county's rural communities span a wide geographic and character range: Brush Creek and Chestnut Mound in the northern county; Defeated and Rome in the east (along the Highland Rim); Dixon Springs, New Middleton, and Pleasant Shade in the central county; Riddleton in the west. Each of these communities has a distinct character and utility access profile. The most rural and most agricultural land tends to be in the eastern county communities closest to the Highland Rim, where rolling terrain, mature timber, and cattle operations are more common than in the flatter western county.

Cordell Hull Lake and River Frontage

Cordell Hull Lake is the defining premium real estate feature of Smith County. Properties with direct lake frontage, lake access, or Cumberland River bluff frontage command the highest per-acre prices in the county — often by a wide margin over comparable inland tracts. For recreational buyers, retirement buyers, and buyers seeking a private lake retreat within an hour of Nashville, the Cordell Hull corridor is the primary target area. Corps of Engineers permits are required for dock installation and certain shoreline activities. Due diligence on lake frontage properties should include confirmation of current Corps permit status, any existing dock rights, and the applicable setback requirements from the ordinary high-water mark.

For buyers focused on agricultural land rather than water frontage, the interior communities — particularly in the Brush Creek, New Middleton, and Pleasant Shade corridors — offer the most relevant inventory at moderate pricing. These areas sit in the rolling terrain of the Highland Rim transition zone, with cattle and hay production as the primary agricultural uses and timber operations on the less productive upland soils. The Agri-Tourism Overlay District applies in qualifying A-1 areas throughout the county, including in these interior communities, which means agricultural land buyers with agri-tourism aspirations are not restricted to any specific geographic submarket — the regulatory pathway exists countywide where the base A-1 criteria are met.

SECTION 07

Market Overview & Buyer Considerations

Active Market

Smith County's land market is bifurcated in a way that is more pronounced than most Middle Tennessee counties: a premium waterfront and river frontage market, and a moderate-priced agricultural and rural land market. Cordell Hull Lake frontage and Cumberland River bluff properties are the county's highest-value land category — when lake lots and river frontage parcels trade, they do so at per-acre figures that can be multiples of what comparable-acreage inland tracts command. This waterfront premium reflects the genuine scarcity of lake-access land in a county where the Corps of Engineers controls significant shoreline, limiting the supply of privately held lake frontage available for sale.

Away from the water, Smith County's agricultural land market offers moderate-priced rural tracts at prices that reflect the county's distance from Nashville (52 miles) and its limited suburban development pressure compared to the inner-ring counties. Hay ground, cattle pasture, and timber tracts in the interior communities are priced to reflect genuine agricultural use value rather than a development premium, which makes Smith County competitive with comparable rural counties in the Nashville orbit for buyers who don't need immediate proximity to the city. The county's modest overall population (~20,800) and limited commercial development create the rural character that many buyers are specifically seeking when they look beyond the urban counties.

The Agri-Tourism Opportunity

Smith County's Agri-Tourism Overlay District creates a market opportunity that is largely absent in counties without a similar regulatory framework. Buyers who acquire qualifying A-1 land and activate the ATOD can operate event venues, farm stays, and agricultural tourism businesses without the uncertainty of seeking variance approval or rezoning. As the farm wedding and agri-tourism market in Middle Tennessee has grown, properties positioned to operate under the ATOD have a potential revenue stream that non-ATOD counties cannot easily replicate. For buyers evaluating Smith County land through this lens, the overlay district status of a specific parcel — confirmed with the Land Use Administrator — becomes a material feature of the acquisition.

For buyers comparing Smith County to adjacent counties: DeKalb County (Center Hill Lake, no countywide zoning) and Trousdale County (Cumberland River, smallest county in TN by area) are both worth considering for buyers whose priorities include waterfront access or a simple regulatory environment. Wilson County offers greater Nashville proximity but at significantly higher land prices. Smith County's combination of Cordell Hull Lake access, the Agri-Tourism overlay, moderate agricultural land pricing, and reasonable Nashville proximity (52 miles, approximately 55–65 minutes drive) makes it a distinctive option in the northeast quadrant of the Nashville orbit. See our full Middle Tennessee land buyer's guide for county-by-county context.


Neighboring County Guides

Comparing options? Explore our guides for neighboring counties: Wilson County, Sumner County. Or see all counties in our complete buyer's guide.

For a broader overview of the Middle Tennessee land market across all counties, visit our complete land buyer's guide. Ready to discuss specific parcels or get our current inventory in Smith County? Contact us directly — we respond within one business day.

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