If you’ve been searching sell my house fast Nashville, you probably don’t need a pitch — you need someone who picks up the phone and gives you a real number. I’m Tasha, and I buy houses for cash here in Davidson County. Whether your place is a brick ranch off Nolensville Pike, a craftsman in East Nashville that needs more work than you want to pour into it, or an inherited home sitting empty across the river, I can give you a fair cash offer and close on your timeline.

I’m not a national hotline routing your info to whoever bids highest for the lead. I live and work in Middle Tennessee. When you call (615) 496-2237, you’re talking to me.

How I buy houses in Nashville

I keep the process simple because most sellers calling me are already dealing with enough — a job transfer, a tired rental, a parent’s estate, a divorce. The last thing you need is a 40-page listing agreement and a stranger walking through your house every weekend.

Here’s how it works:

  1. You call or fill out the form. Tell me about the house — address, condition, what’s going on. Five minutes, tops.
  2. I do my homework and bring you a number. I look at recent Nashville sales, the condition of your property, and what it’ll cost me to fix it up. Then I give you a written cash offer, usually within 24-48 hours.
  3. You pick the closing date. Need cash in seven days? I can do that. Need 45 days to sort out where you’re moving? That works too. We close at a local title company, and you walk out with a check or a wire.

No repairs. No cleaning. No showings. If there’s stuff in the house you don’t want to deal with, leave it. I’ll handle it.

Why sellers in Nashville choose me over a realtor

Listing with an agent is the right call for some houses. If your place is move-in ready in Green Hills or 12 South and you’ve got three months to wait, an agent will probably net you more money. I’ll tell you that straight up.

But here’s where I usually come in:

  • The house needs work you can’t afford or don’t want to do. Foundation issues, old roof, knob-and-tube wiring, a kitchen from 1978 — none of that scares me.
  • You don’t have time for a 60-90 day listing. Job starts in Atlanta in three weeks. The divorce decree has a deadline. The bank sent another letter.
  • You don’t want strangers in your house. Open houses, lockboxes, last-minute showings — not everyone wants that, especially if you’re still living there.
  • You want to know the actual number going into your pocket. No 6% commission. No buyer asking for $8,000 in repair credits after the inspection. No deal falling apart because their lender pulled financing two days before closing.

When I make an offer, that’s the number you get at closing. I pay standard closing costs. You bring an ID and walk out with the funds.

What kinds of houses I buy in Nashville

I’m not picky about condition or situation. Some of what I’ve bought or am actively buying in the Nashville area:

  • Inherited houses, including ones still in probate
  • Houses with fire, water, or storm damage
  • Rentals with tenants you’re tired of chasing
  • Properties behind on taxes or facing foreclosure
  • Homes with foundation or roof issues
  • Hoarder situations — I’ve seen it, I’m not judging
  • Divorce sales where both parties just want it done
  • Out-of-state owners who never wanted to be landlords in the first place
  • Older homes that need full gut renovations
  • Vacant houses that have been sitting

If you’re not sure whether your situation fits, call me. The worst answer you’ll get is “that one’s not a good fit for me, but here’s what I’d do if I were you.”

Neighborhoods in Nashville I’ve bought in

I work all over Davidson County and the surrounding counties. Some of the Nashville areas I’m regularly buying in:

  • East Nashville — Inglewood, Lockeland Springs, and the pockets near Riverside Drive
  • Madison — older ranches and split-levels, lots of inherited properties
  • Antioch — both the older sections and homes off Bell Road
  • Donelson — close to the airport, a lot of estate sales here
  • Hermitage — out past Old Hickory Lake
  • Bordeaux and Whites Creek — north of the river
  • Joelton and Goodlettsville — the more rural edges of the county
  • South Nashville — around Nolensville Pike and Harding Place

If your house isn’t in one of these specific areas, that doesn’t mean I’m not interested. I look at every property that comes in.

A recent example

A woman called me a few months back. Her mom had passed, and she’d inherited a small three-bedroom on the east side of town. She lived in Memphis and didn’t want to drive to Nashville every weekend to clean it out, mow the yard, and deal with the rusted-out water heater in the basement. An agent told her she’d need to spend around $15,000 cleaning it up and updating the bathroom before listing.

She didn’t have $15,000 sitting around, and she didn’t want to mess with it. I looked at the house, gave her a cash number that took the repairs into account, and closed in 11 days at a title company off Old Hickory Boulevard. She brought one box of family photos with her. The rest, I handled.

That’s the kind of work I do.

What you walk away with

When you sell to me, here’s what’s actually in the deal:

  • A cash offer with no financing contingency — the deal doesn’t depend on a bank
  • No agent commissions (that’s typically 5-6% of the sale price you keep)
  • No repair credits or renegotiations after inspection
  • I pay normal seller-side closing costs
  • Closing in as little as 7 days, or longer if you need time
  • You leave behind anything you don’t want — furniture, junk, paperwork
  • A real human you can call directly if anything comes up before closing

You’ll get a written purchase agreement that spells all of this out. Have your attorney look it over if you want. I’d rather you feel solid about the deal than rush you into something.

Frequently asked questions about selling fast in Nashville

How fast can you actually close?
Seven days is realistic if the title is clean and you’re ready to go. I’ve done it faster. If there are title issues — liens, probate, missing heirs — it takes longer, but I can usually work through those.

Do I have to clean the house or do any repairs?
No. Take what you want, leave the rest. I mean it.

Will your offer be a lowball?
My offer reflects what the house is actually worth in its current condition, minus what I’ll spend fixing it up and the cost of carrying it while I do that. It’s not retail. It’s a fair cash number for an as-is, fast sale. If retail is what you need, list it.

What if I’m behind on the mortgage or facing foreclosure?
Call sooner rather than later. I’ve helped sellers close before a foreclosure sale date, but it takes coordination with your lender. The earlier we start, the more options you have.

I inherited a house with my siblings. Can you still buy it?
Yes. We just need everyone with an ownership interest to sign. If the estate is still in probate, I can work with your probate attorney to get it to the finish line.

Do I need a real estate agent for this?
No. You can have one represent you if you want, but most sellers I work with don’t. I pay closing costs either way.

Is this legit?
Fair question. I close at established title companies in the Nashville area — the same ones used by traditional buyers and sellers. The title company holds the funds and handles the paperwork. Nothing changes hands until everything checks out.

Ready to get your cash offer?

If you’ve been putting this off because you didn’t know where to start, here’s the easiest first step: call me at (615) 496-2237, or fill out the short form on the homepage at sellmyhousefasttn.com. Tell me about the house. I’ll give you a real number, and you decide what to do with it.

No pressure, no follow-up spam, no high-pressure closer calling you back three times a day. Just a straight conversation with a local buyer who can actually close!