865 Real Estate

East Tennessee Real Estate & Neighborhood Source

  • Home
  • Search Property
    • Search ALL East Tennessee Real Estate Listings
    • Search East Tennessee Lots & Land for sale
    • East Tennessee Homes for Sale with Acreage (5+ acres)
    • East Tennessee Land for Sale with Acreage (5+ Acres)
    • Search Homes For Sale by Zip Code
    • SEARCH Homes for Sale In Farragut TN
      • Homes for sale in Farragut under $150,000
      • Homes for sale in Farragut $150,000-$275,000
      • Homes for sale in Farragut $275,000-$325,000
      • Homes for sale in Farragut $325,000-$425,000
      • Homes for sale in Farragut $425,000-$550,000
      • Homes for sale in Farragut $550,000-$700,000
      • Homes for sale in Farragut $700,000 – $1 Million
      • Homes for sale in Farragut $1 Million and up
      • Condos for sale in Farragut
    • Farragut Homes For Sale By Neighborhood
      • Homes for sale in Altamira Subdivision
      • 5 Bedroom Homes For Sale in Farragut TN
      • Homes for sale in Andover Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Baldwin Park Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Berkeley Park Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Bridgemore Subdivision
      • Homes for Sale in Brixworth Subdivision
      • Homes for Sale in Chapel Glen Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Concord Hills Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Cottage Creek Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Farragut Crossing Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Farragut Intermediate School Zone
      • Homes for sale in Farragut Primary School Zone
      • Homes for sale in Fort West Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Fox Den Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Fox Run Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Glen Abbey Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Hickory Woods Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Inverness Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Kingsgate Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in McFee Manor Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Northshore Elementary School Zone in Knoxville, TN
      • Homes for sale in Oakley Downs Subdivision
      • Homes for Sale in Old Stage Hills Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Rockwell Farm Subdivision
      • Homes for Sale in Saddle Ridge Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Saint Charles at Grigsby Chapel Subdivision
      • Homes for Sale in Sedgefield Subdivision
      • Homes for Sale in Sheffield Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Smithfield Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Sugarwood Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Sweet Briar Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in The Cove at Turkey Creek Subdivision
      • Homes for Sale in Turkey Creek Woods Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Vista Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Weatherly Hills Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Wentworth Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Wood Harbor Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Woodchase Subdivision
      • Homes for sale in Wyndham Hall Subdivision
    • Homes Recently Sold in Farragut, TN
    • Search Knoxville Area Neighborhoods
      • Knoxville Homes For Sale By Neighborhood: Autumn Place Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes For Sale By Neighborhood: Bakertown Village Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes For Sale By Neighborhood: Ball Ridge Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes For Sale By Neighborhood: Bent Creek Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes For Sale By Neighborhood: Bent Tree Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes For Sale By Neighborhood: Bentley Park Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Admiral’s Landing
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Alderwood Court Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes For Sale in Amberleigh Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Amberwood Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes For Sale in Andover Court Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes For Sale in Andrews Landing Subdivision
      • Knoxville homes for sale in Ansley Woods Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes For Sale in Arbor Gate Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Atlee Fields
      • Knoxville Homes for sale in Augusta Hills
      • Knoxville homes for sale in Autumn Ridge
      • Knoxville homes for sale in Bailey Park
      • Knoxville homes for sale in Bakertown Woods
      • Knoxville homes for sale in Bayou Bend
      • Knoxville homes for sale in Bayview West
      • Knoxville homes for sale in Belmont West
      • Knoxville homes for sale in Benington
      • Knoxville homes for sale in Bennett Place Subdivision
      • Knoxville homes for sale in Bexhill
      • Knoxville homes for sale in Bishops Court
      • Knoxville homes for sale in Braddocks Place
      • Knoxville homes for sale in Brandywine at Turkey Creek
      • Knoxville homes for sale in Breakers at Riversound
      • Knoxville homes for sale in Campbell Station Villas
      • Knoxville homes for sale in Cascade Falls
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Cavet Station
      • Knoxville homes for sale in Cherokee Springs
      • Knoxville homes for sale in Chesney Hills
      • Knoxville homes for sale in Chestnut Grove
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Choto Fields Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Copperstone
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Cottington Court
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Cove Point
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Craig Cove
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Crestwood Hills
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Deane Hill
      • Knoxville homes for sale in Denton Place
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Dogwood Cove
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Dogwood Trails
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Dunbarton Oaks
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Duncans Glen
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Eagle Glen Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Echo Valley Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Falcon Pointe
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Falling Waters
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Farrington
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Forest Brook
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Fox Creek
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Foxfire
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Foxvue
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Franklin Hill
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Galewood
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Gallaher Station
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Gettysvue
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Glen Arden
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Glenview
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Gulf Park
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Gulfwood Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Hamilton Place Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Hampton Hall Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Harrison Keepe Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Hawks Landing Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Herons Point Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Hidden Glen Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Highlands at Northshore Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Hunter Estates Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Hunters Creek Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Jefferson Park Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Jenkins Creek Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Kensington Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Kenwood Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Kingston Hills Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Kingston Woods Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Knollwood Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Knottingwood Forest Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Lake Cove Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Lake Ridge Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Lakeshore Meadows Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Lakewood Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Legacy Park Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Lewisbrooke Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Lovell Hills Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Lyons Bend Subdivision
      • Knoxville Homes for Sale in Lyons Crossing Subdivision
    • New Homes for Sale in Knoxville, TN
    • Waterfront Properties in the Knoxville, TN Area
    • Lakefront Land For Sale in the Knoxville, TN area
    • Waterfront Condos for sale in the Knoxville, TN Area
    • Search Knoxville Foreclosures/Short Sales
    • Search Homes For Sale in Clinton, TN
  • Buy
    • Welcome Knoxville Home Buyers
    • Pre-Approval
    • Buyer Representation
    • Why use a REALTOR?
    • VIDEO: Learn The Home Buying Process
    • Real Estate Glossary
  • Sell
    • What Is My Home Worth?
    • Greater Knoxville Housing Market Snapshot by Zip Code
    • The Selling Process – Selling a Home in Knoxville
    • How To Get Your Knoxville Home Sold – The Marketing Plan
    • Choosing an Agent
    • Why use a REALTOR?
  • BLOG
    • Home Selling
    • Home Buying
    • Home Market News
    • Featured Property
    • Home Owner Advice
    • Things To Do in Knoxville
  • Our Team
  • Contact
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Phone
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

East Tennessee Housing Market Update – April 2026: County-by-County Breakdown

May 18, 2026 By Troy Stavros


The East Tennessee housing market in April 2026 is not telling one story. It is telling nine very different stories depending on which county or sub-market you are looking at. Some areas are seeing record-level demand with homes flying off the market in under three weeks. Others are sitting on nearly ten months of inventory with prices sliding year over year. If you are buying, selling, or investing anywhere between Knoxville and the Smoky Mountains, understanding the nuances between these micro-markets has never been more important.

I put together this monthly breakdown to give you the clearest possible picture of where things stand right now across Knox County, Blount County, Anderson County, Loudon County, Roane County, Sevier County, and three of the most actively watched sub-markets in the region — Farragut, Tellico Village, and Lenoir City.

Let’s get into the numbers.


Knox County — Steady Activity but the Pace Is Slowing

Knox County remains the anchor of the East Tennessee real estate market, and April delivered solid numbers on the surface. Closed sales came in at 677, which represents a 10.6% increase compared to the same month last year. Pending sales were even stronger at 840, up 12.1% year over year. The median sale price held essentially flat at $400,000, ticking up just 0.03%.

But the story underneath the headlines reveals a shift. Days on market climbed to 18 days, a 50% increase from last April. Active listings rose 11% to 1,686, and months of supply sits at 2.72. The sold price to original list price ratio came in at 96.8%, which tells us sellers are making concessions more often than they were a year ago.

What does this mean if you are a Knox County homeowner thinking about selling this summer? It means the demand is still there, but buyers have more choices now and they are taking their time. Pricing your home correctly from the start is more important today than it has been in the last three years. Overpricing by even five to ten percent is enough to push your days on market well beyond that 18-day median and into territory where buyers start wondering what is wrong with the property.

If you are a buyer in Knox County, the leverage is slowly moving in your direction. Unless a home is highly desirable, you are not likely to face the blind bidding wars of 2022 and 2023, and you have room to negotiate — especially on homes that have been sitting for more than three weeks.


Blount County — Mixed Signals but Possibly Finding a Floor

Blount County delivered a mixed bag in April. The median sale price dipped to $385,000, down 5.1% from last year, and closed sales slipped 2.8% to 171 transactions. Days on market more than doubled to 56 days, which is one of the more dramatic year-over-year shifts in the region.

However, there are signs that the market may be finding a floor. Pending sales rose 10.9%, suggesting that buyer interest is picking back up even as the headline numbers look soft. Inventory actually shrank by 12.4%, which means the supply side is tightening even as demand recovers. The sold price to original list price ratio of 96.2% indicates that well-priced homes are still trading close to their asking price.

For Blount County sellers, the key takeaway is patience and pricing discipline. The days of listing high and waiting for a bidding war are over in this part of the market. But if you price your home in line with recent comparable sales, the buyers are there and the shrinking inventory works in your favor.

For buyers considering Blount County, this is one of the more interesting opportunities in the region right now. Prices have come down, competition has eased, and you have significantly more time to make decisions than you would in Knox County or Farragut.


Anderson County — Low Volume Amplifies the Swings

Anderson County posted the sharpest decline in closed sales across the region in April, with just 71 transactions representing a 16.5% year-over-year drop. That number sounds alarming until you consider the context. Anderson County is a lower-volume market, and small changes in the number of transactions can create outsized percentage swings.

The median sale price actually rose to $330,000, up 10% from last April, which suggests that the homes that are selling are selling well. New listings dropped 15%, which is keeping supply tight at 2.69 months. Pending sales dipped a modest 5.7%, which does not signal a market in distress.

Anderson County continues to appeal to buyers who want more space and lower price points compared to Knox County while still maintaining reasonable access to Knoxville and Oak Ridge. If you are considering this market, the tight supply means you should be prepared to move quickly when the right property comes along.


Loudon County — Price Correction Stimulates Real Demand

Loudon County is one of the most encouraging stories in the region this month. The median sale price adjusted downward to $485,000, a decline of 8.06% from last year, but that correction did exactly what price corrections are supposed to do. It brought buyers back to the table.

Closed sales jumped 16.5% to 113 transactions. Pending sales surged 31.3% to 130 contracts. Homes are moving in a median of 34 days, and months of supply sits at 3.56. The sold price to original list price ratio of 95.8% tells us that sellers are accepting slightly below their initial ask, but the volume and velocity of sales more than compensates for the per-unit price adjustment.

This is a textbook example of what happens when a market finds its equilibrium. Sellers who were holding out for peak 2024 pricing have adjusted their expectations, and buyers who were sitting on the sidelines responded immediately. If you own property in Loudon County and have been waiting to list, the data suggests that the demand is there if the price is right.


Roane County — Surging Pendings but Watch the Inventory

Roane County posted one of the most dramatic pending sales increases in the entire region. Pending contracts hit 107, a staggering 78.3% jump from April 2025. The median price rose to $345,000, up 8%, and closed sales held steady at 72 with no year-over-year change.

But there is a counterweight to that enthusiasm. New listings surged 42.5% and active inventory climbed 14.5%. Days on market doubled to 40 days, and the sold price to original list price ratio of 94.3% is the second lowest in the region behind Sevier County. That means sellers are leaving more money on the table compared to their original asking price.

The question for Roane County heading into summer is whether the surge in pending activity can absorb the flood of new listings. If it can, this market stabilizes at a healthy pace. If it cannot, we could see months of supply creep upward and put additional downward pressure on pricing. I will be watching this one closely over the next 60 to 90 days.


Sevier County — A Full Buyer’s Market

There is no way to sugarcoat the Sevier County numbers. This is a buyer’s market by every traditional metric, and it has been trending in this direction for several months.

The median sale price dropped to $484,000, down 7.81% from last April. Closed sales fell 16.18% to 171 transactions. Pending sales declined 15.57% to 309 contracts. Days on market stretched to 60 days, up 76% year over year. Active listings sit at 1,950, and months of supply has ballooned to 9.40 — well above the four to six month range that defines a balanced market. The sold price to original list price ratio of 92.6% is the lowest in the region, meaning sellers are accepting prices that average more than seven percent below their original asking price.

The investment-heavy nature of Sevier County real estate is a major factor here. Short-term rental properties, cabins, and vacation homes make up a significant portion of the inventory, and many of those owners are testing the market at aspirational price points. The buyers who are active in this market know they have leverage, and they are using it.

If you are a buyer who has been eyeing Sevier County — whether for a primary residence, a second home, or an investment property — this is the most favorable buying environment the area has seen in years. If you are a seller, the most important thing you can do right now is look at what has actually closed in the last 30 to 60 days and price accordingly. The properties that are selling in Sevier County are the ones priced at or below recent comparable sales. Everything else is sitting.


Farragut — The Tightest Market in the Region

Farragut continues to operate in a category of its own within the East Tennessee real estate landscape. The median sale price surged to $769,950, up approximately 16% year over year, making it the strongest price appreciation in any market I track. Months of supply sits at just 2.28, the tightest in the region, and the median days on market came in at only 17 days.

Closed sales totaled 44, up roughly 10% from last April. Pending sales came in at 50, down 10.7% compared to last year, which suggests that while the market remains competitive, there are slightly fewer contracts being written than at this time in 2025.

Farragut’s combination of top-rated schools, proximity to Turkey Creek and West Knoxville amenities, and limited buildable land continues to drive premium pricing. Even as other markets in the region soften, Farragut sellers are still commanding near full asking price and moving their homes in under three weeks.

For buyers targeting Farragut, the sub-three-month supply means you still need to come prepared. Work with an agent who knows the neighborhood-level dynamics, get your financing fully underwritten before you start making offers, and be ready to move quickly when the right home hits the market.


Tellico Village — Slow but Strengthening

Tellico Village is a study in contradictions this month. At 79 days, it has the longest median days on market of any area in this report. Closed sales fell to 35, down 18.6% from last April. The list price to original list price ratio of 95.2% suggests that sellers are negotiating more than they would like.

But the forward-looking indicators tell a different story. Pending sales jumped to 45, a 50% increase year over year. Active inventory declined more than 20%, and new listings dropped 23%. The median sale price rose to $665,000, up 6.42%, which means the homes that are closing are closing at higher values.

What this tells me is that Tellico Village buyers are taking their time — which makes sense given the price point and the demographic profile of the community — but they are showing up in significantly larger numbers than they were a year ago. The shrinking inventory combined with rising pendings is a leading indicator that the market is tightening, even if the days on market number has not caught up yet.

If you are selling in Tellico Village, the data says your buyer pool is growing. The challenge is bridging the gap between what buyers want to pay and what you want to accept. Homes that are priced realistically and show well are getting under contract. Homes that are priced based on what the neighbor’s house sold for in 2023 are not.


Lenoir City — The Comeback Story of the Month

Lenoir City delivered the strongest closing performance in the region in April. Closed sales hit 49, a 36.1% surge compared to last year. Pending sales rose 18.8% to 57 contracts. The median days on market came in at just 16 days, tied with Farragut for the fastest pace in the area. Months of supply sits at 3.27, and the sold price to original list price ratio of 96.2% is solid.

The catalyst behind this surge is clear when you look at the median price. It came in at $420,000, down 11.06% from last April. Sellers adjusted their pricing, and buyers responded with overwhelming demand. This is the same dynamic playing out in Loudon County, and it is the single best proof point in this entire report that realistic pricing is the most powerful tool a seller has in this market.

Lenoir City’s proximity to Tellico Lake, access to Loudon County schools, and relative affordability compared to Farragut and West Knoxville make it an increasingly attractive option for families and retirees alike. If you have been considering a move to this part of Loudon County, the current pace of sales suggests that the best-priced homes are not lasting long.


The Bigger Picture — Rates, Oil, and Inflation

No local market analysis is complete without understanding the macro forces at play. As of late April 2026, the 30-year fixed mortgage rate sits at approximately 6.65%. Crude oil is trading above $110 per barrel, driven in large part by geopolitical tension in the Strait of Hormuz, which handles roughly 20% of global oil supply. The Consumer Price Index shows inflation running at 3.8%, still well above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target.

These three numbers matter enormously for the East Tennessee housing market. Elevated mortgage rates continue to create a lock-in effect where existing homeowners who secured rates in the 3% to 4% range during 2020 and 2021 are reluctant to sell because buying their next home means nearly doubling their monthly payment. This suppresses listing volume. At the same time, those same high rates reduce purchasing power for buyers, particularly first-time buyers who do not have equity from a previous sale to offset the higher borrowing costs.

Until mortgage rates move meaningfully below 6%, the East Tennessee market is likely to remain in this state of compressed volume — fewer sellers willing to list and fewer buyers able to qualify — with pockets of intense competition in the most desirable sub-markets and growing buyer leverage in areas with higher inventory.


What This Means for You

The April 2026 data makes one thing abundantly clear. There is no single East Tennessee housing market. There are multiple markets operating under very different conditions within the same metropolitan area. Farragut and Lenoir City are humming. Knox County is steady but slowing. Sevier County is firmly in buyer territory. And several markets in between are in various stages of finding their footing.

Whether you are buying or selling, the most important thing you can do right now is work with someone who understands these micro-market dynamics and can help you make decisions based on current data rather than last year’s headlines.

If you have questions about what your home is worth today, what the right offer strategy looks like in your target neighborhood, or how to position your property to sell in the current environment, I am here to help. I track these numbers every single month because I believe informed clients make better decisions — and better decisions lead to better outcomes.

Troy Stavros
CornerStone Realty Associates, 865-999-0925
Serving Knox, Blount, Anderson, Loudon, Roane & Sevier Counties


Want to receive this market update in your inbox every month? Reach out to Troy Stavros at CornerStone Realty Associates to get on the list. Whether you are actively searching, casually exploring, or just want to stay informed about East Tennessee real estate, these insights are always free.

Filed Under: Blog, Farragut TN, Home Buying, Home Market News, Home Owner Advice, Home Selling, Tellico Village Tagged With: Anderson County housing market, Anderson County TN real estate, Blount County homes for sale, Blount County housing market 2026, Blount County real estate, buyer's market East Tennessee, Buying a home in Knoxville, Clinton TN real estate, east tennessee home prices, East Tennessee home values, east tennessee housing market, East Tennessee MLS data, East Tennessee real estate 2026, East Tennessee real estate agent, first time home buyer Knoxville, Gatlinburg real estate, Harriman TN homes for sale, housing market crash 2026, housing market update March 2026, is the housing market slowing down, Knox County homes for sale, Knox County housing market, Knox County real estate trends, Knoxville homes for sale, Knoxville housing market 2026, Knoxville real estate, Knoxville real estate agent, Knoxville real estate market update, Knoxville TN housing data, Lenoir City TN real estate, Loudon County real estate, Loudon County TN homes for sale, Maryville TN real estate, mortgage rates 2026, Oak Ridge TN homes for sale, Pigeon Forge real estate, Roane County real estate, Roane County TN real estate, seller's market Knoxville, selling a home in east tennessee, Sevier County housing market, Sevier County short term rental, Sevierville TN homes for sale, should I buy a house in 2026, Tellico Lake homes for sale, Tennessee real estate market

East Tennessee Housing Market Update — March 2026: What Buyers and Sellers Need to Know Right Now

April 22, 2026 By Troy Stavros


If you’re thinking about buying or selling a home in Knoxville, Knox County, or anywhere in the greater East Tennessee region, the March 2026 numbers deserve your attention. The market is shifting … not crashing, not booming, but recalibrating in ways that create real opportunities if you know where to look and real risks if you don’t.

Every month, we pull the latest data from the East Tennessee MLS across our six-county service area: Knox, Blount, Anderson, Loudon, Roane, and Sevier counties, and break down what the numbers actually mean for people making real decisions about real estate. This month’s data tells two very different stories depending on where you’re looking and whether you’re on the buying or selling side of the transaction.

Here’s everything you need to know.


The Big Picture: East Tennessee Real Estate in March 2026

Across the six-county East Tennessee market, the headline numbers look soft. Closed sales are down year-over-year in most counties, and inventory continues to build in some of the outlying markets. If you stopped there, you might think the market is in trouble.

But the story underneath the surface is more nuanced. Pending sales — which are the best leading indicator we have of where the market is heading over the next 30 to 60 days — are climbing in nearly every county. In some cases, they’re climbing significantly. That disconnect between closings and pendings tells us something important: buyer activity is picking up, but the deals haven’t hit the closing table yet. The spring market may be arriving late, but it appears to be arriving.

At the same time, the macroeconomic backdrop is putting pressure on affordability that wasn’t there a year ago. Mortgage rates remain stubbornly above 6.3%, oil prices have pushed past $100 per barrel for the first time since 2022, and real wages — when adjusted for inflation — are actually declining. All of that matters because it shapes what buyers can afford and what sellers can realistically expect.


Knox County Housing Market: The Engine of the Region

Knox County remains the largest and most closely watched market in East Tennessee, and the March numbers reflect a market that’s cooling on the surface but heating up underneath.

Closed sales in Knox County fell 16.7% year-over-year in March. That’s a meaningful decline, and it’s the kind of number that grabs headlines. But context matters. Part of that decline is a comparison issue — March 2025 was an unusually strong month. And more importantly, pending sales in Knox County rose 10.5% over the same period. That means more buyers are going under contract now than they were a year ago, even if fewer deals closed last month.

For sellers in Knox County, this means the market still has demand, but you need to be realistic about pricing. Overpriced homes are sitting. Homes priced correctly for the current rate environment are still moving, and in many neighborhoods, they’re moving with multiple offers. The days of listing 10% above comps and expecting a bidding war are behind us for now, but the days of well-priced homes selling quickly are not.

For buyers in Knoxville and Knox County, the math is actually improving. You have more inventory to choose from than at any point in the last three years, and the urgency that defined the 2021–2023 market has faded. That gives you negotiating leverage that simply didn’t exist before. If you’ve been waiting for a window, this may be it — especially if rates ease later this year.


Blount County Real Estate: Still One of the Tightest Markets in the Region

Blount County continues to be one of the most competitive markets in East Tennessee, and the March data reinforces that. While inventory has loosened slightly compared to the peak tightness of 2022 and 2023, Blount County still operates with relatively low months of supply compared to its neighbors.

Maryville and Alcoa remain popular with buyers who want proximity to Knoxville without Knoxville price tags, and the school systems in Blount County continue to be a draw for families relocating to the area. Demand here hasn’t softened as much as in some of the other counties, which means sellers in Blount County are in a relatively strong position — particularly if they own homes in the sub-$400,000 range where buyer activity is most concentrated.

If you’re looking to buy in Blount County, be prepared for a market that feels slightly more competitive than what you’ll find in Knox or Anderson County right now. Good homes in desirable neighborhoods are still generating interest quickly, and while you have more room to negotiate than you did two years ago, you may not have as much room as you’d find in some of the outer-ring counties.


Anderson County Housing Market: Pending Sales Surge 15.7%

Anderson County is quietly having one of the stronger springs in the region. Pending sales jumped 15.7% year-over-year in March — a number that stands out across the entire six-county area. Communities like Oak Ridge, Clinton, and Norris are seeing renewed buyer interest, and the county’s relative affordability compared to Knox and Blount is a significant factor.

For buyers who are priced out of West Knoxville or South Knoxville but still want to commute into the city, Anderson County offers a compelling value proposition. Median home prices here remain well below the Knox County median, and the inventory situation gives buyers more options and more time to make decisions without the pressure of immediate competition.

Sellers in Anderson County should take note of the pending sales momentum. If you’ve been on the fence about listing, the data suggests that buyer activity is accelerating here. Homes that are clean, well-maintained, and priced appropriately for the Anderson County market are finding buyers — and the spring selling season appears to be gaining traction.


Loudon County Real Estate: A 35% Jump in Pending Sales

The standout number in the entire six-county region this month belongs to Loudon County, where pending sales surged 35% year-over-year. That’s not a typo, and it’s not a small-sample-size anomaly. Something is happening in Loudon County.

Lenoir City and the lakefront communities along Tellico Lake and Fort Loudoun Lake continue to attract retirees, second-home buyers, and remote workers who want a more rural lifestyle within striking distance of Knoxville. The county’s combination of natural beauty, relative affordability, and lifestyle appeal is resonating with a buyer pool that appears to be growing.

For sellers in Loudon County, this pending sales surge is a strong signal. Demand is building, and if you’ve been waiting for the right time to list, the spring market is shaping up favorably. For buyers, the opportunity here is getting in ahead of what could be a tightening market later in the year. If pending sales continue at this pace, inventory will start to compress, and the leverage buyers currently enjoy may not last through summer.


Roane County: The Sleeper Market Nobody’s Watching

Roane County rarely makes headlines in East Tennessee real estate conversations, and that’s precisely why it deserves attention. The county — anchored by Harriman, Kingston, and Rockwood — offers some of the most affordable housing in the region, and the March data shows a market that is quietly healthy.

For buyers looking for value, Roane County is where you’ll find it. Median prices remain significantly below the regional average, and the inventory situation is favorable for buyers who want time and options. This is not a market defined by bidding wars or waived inspections. It’s a market where you can buy a solid home at a reasonable price with room to negotiate.

For investors, Roane County’s price-to-rent ratios are among the most attractive in the region. If you’re building a rental portfolio in East Tennessee and you’re finding Knox County cap rates too compressed, Roane County warrants a serious look.

Sellers in Roane County should understand that this is a more patient market. Homes take longer to sell here than in Knox or Blount, and pricing precision matters more. But the fundamentals are stable, and well-priced properties are transacting.


Sevier County Housing Market: 9 Months of Supply and a Shifting Landscape

If there’s one county in our service area where the data raises real questions, it’s Sevier County. Months of supply have pushed past 9 months — a level that, by traditional real estate metrics, places the county firmly in buyer’s market territory. Closings are down, and the overall trajectory has been softening for several consecutive months.

The Sevier County market is unique because of its heavy dependence on short-term rental investment properties. Gatlinburg, Pigeon Forge, and Sevierville have been among the hottest short-term rental markets in the country for the past five years, and the influx of investor capital drove prices to levels that look stretched by almost any conventional metric. Now, as short-term rental revenue softens in some segments and regulatory conversations continue at the local and state level, some of that investment thesis is being tested.

For buyers interested in Sevier County — whether for a primary residence, a vacation home, or an investment property — the leverage has shifted meaningfully in your favor. There are more options, more negotiating room, and more motivated sellers than at any point since the pandemic began. If your investment underwriting works at current prices, the buying environment is favorable.

For sellers in Sevier County, the message is straightforward: price matters more here than anywhere else in the region right now. With 9 months of supply on the market, overpriced listings are being ignored entirely. The properties that are selling are the ones priced to reflect current conditions, not conditions from 2022 or 2023. If you need to sell, work with an agent who understands the current Sevier County data and can position your property to stand out in a crowded market.


Core Markets vs. Outer Ring: Two Very Different Stories

One of the most important themes in this month’s data is the divergence between what we call the core markets — Knox and Blount counties — and the outer ring markets of Anderson, Loudon, Roane, and Sevier counties.

The core markets are performing with more resilience. Demand remains relatively stable, inventory is manageable, and the fundamental drivers of value — jobs, schools, healthcare, infrastructure — continue to attract buyers. Knox and Blount counties benefit from the gravitational pull of Knoxville’s economy, the University of Tennessee, and a healthcare sector that employs tens of thousands of people. These are markets where demand has a floor because people need to live near where they work.

The outer ring tells a more varied story. Anderson and Loudon counties are seeing surging buyer interest, driven largely by affordability migration from the core. Roane County is stable but quiet. And Sevier County is dealing with the consequences of a short-term-rental-driven price expansion that is now correcting.

This divergence matters because it means there is no single “East Tennessee housing market.” There are multiple markets operating under the same regional banner, each with its own dynamics, its own supply-demand balance, and its own set of opportunities and risks. The worst mistake you can make — whether you’re buying or selling — is assuming that the conditions in one county apply to another.


The Macro Picture: Why It Matters for East Tennessee Home Buyers and Sellers

Real estate is local, but it doesn’t operate in a vacuum. Several macroeconomic factors are shaping the environment for home buyers and sellers in East Tennessee right now, and ignoring them would be a mistake.

Mortgage rates remain above 6.3% as of mid-April 2026. For a buyer purchasing a $350,000 home with 10% down, that translates to a monthly principal and interest payment of approximately $1,960 — a number that is meaningfully higher than it would have been at the sub-3% rates available in 2021. Rates are the single biggest factor affecting affordability right now, and until they come down materially, the buyer pool for higher-priced homes will remain constrained.

Oil prices have pushed above $100 per barrel, driven in part by geopolitical tension surrounding Iran and broader supply concerns. Energy prices feed into everything — transportation costs, construction material costs, and the general inflationary environment that has kept the Federal Reserve cautious about cutting rates. Higher oil prices are not directly a housing market story, but they contribute to the cost-of-living pressure that limits how much buyers can stretch for a home purchase.

Real wages — what workers earn after adjusting for inflation — are declining. According to the latest BLS data, the purchasing power of the average paycheck is lower today than it was a year ago. For a region like East Tennessee, where median household incomes are below the national average, this is a significant headwind. Buyers are feeling squeezed from multiple directions: higher rates, higher prices, and stagnant or falling real purchasing power.

The wildcard remains Iran and the broader geopolitical situation. Any escalation that further disrupts global energy markets could push oil higher, which would put upward pressure on inflation, which would keep the Fed from cutting rates, which would keep mortgage rates elevated. It’s a chain reaction that starts far from Knoxville but ends at the closing table.


What This Means If You’re Buying a Home in East Tennessee

If you’re a buyer in today’s East Tennessee market, here is where you stand. You have more inventory than at any point in the last three to four years. You have negotiating leverage that didn’t exist during the pandemic market. And you have time — in most markets, the frantic pace of 2021 through 2023 has given way to a more measured, more rational process where you can conduct inspections, negotiate repairs, and make informed decisions without feeling like the house will be gone by tomorrow.

The trade-off is affordability. Rates above 6.3% mean your monthly payment is higher than it would have been in a lower-rate environment, even if the purchase price hasn’t changed. The question every buyer has to answer is whether today’s combination of better inventory, better negotiating position, and better terms outweighs the higher monthly cost of financing.

Our view is that for buyers who plan to own for five or more years, the current environment is favorable — particularly in Knox, Blount, Anderson, and Loudon counties where the fundamental demand drivers are strong. If rates decline in the future, you can refinance. What you can’t do is go back in time and buy at today’s prices if the market tightens.


What This Means If You’re Selling a Home in East Tennessee

If you’re a seller, the message depends heavily on where your property is located and how it’s priced. In Knox and Blount counties, well-priced homes are still selling within reasonable timeframes, and the pending sales data suggests that buyer activity is increasing heading into the spring. If you price correctly and present well, you’re in a solid position.

In the outer-ring counties, patience and pricing are even more critical. Anderson and Loudon counties have strong pending momentum, but Roane and especially Sevier counties require careful strategy. If you’re selling in Sevier County right now, you’re competing against a significant amount of inventory, and the only way to stand out is to be the best value in your price range.

Across the board, the sellers who are succeeding in this market share a few characteristics: they price based on current data rather than peak prices, they invest in presentation before listing, and they work with agents who understand the hyperlocal dynamics of their specific market. The sellers who struggle are the ones still anchored to 2022 expectations in a 2026 market.


Looking Ahead: April and May 2026

Based on the pending sales data, we expect April and May closings to improve across most of the six-county region. The pending-to-closing pipeline suggests that the spring market is gaining momentum, and if that momentum holds, we should see better year-over-year comparisons in the months ahead.

The unknowns are on the macro side. If geopolitical events push oil and inflation higher, that could keep rates elevated and dampen the spring surge. If the situation stabilizes and the Fed signals any movement toward rate cuts, buyer confidence could accelerate quickly. We’re watching both scenarios closely and will update the data every month.


Work With an Agent Who Knows the Numbers

At the end of the day, data doesn’t buy or sell houses — people do. But the people who make the best decisions are the ones working with the best information. Whether you’re buying your first home in Knoxville, selling a property in Blount County, investing in Loudon County, or trying to make sense of the Sevier County market, we’re here to help you understand what the numbers mean for your specific situation.

If you found this market update helpful, subscribe to our monthly updates so you never miss the latest data. And if you’re ready to have a conversation about buying or selling in East Tennessee, reach out to our team today. No pressure, no obligation — just honest, data-driven guidance from people who live and breathe this market every day.

Troy Stavros, CornerStone Realty Associates – 865-999-0925 – Troy@865realestate.com






Filed Under: Blog, Home Buying, Home Market News, Home Owner Advice, Home Selling Tagged With: Anderson County housing market, Anderson County TN real estate, Blount County homes for sale, Blount County housing market 2026, Blount County real estate, buyer's market East Tennessee, Buying a home in Knoxville, Clinton TN real estate, east tennessee home prices, East Tennessee home values, east tennessee housing market, East Tennessee MLS data, East Tennessee real estate 2026, East Tennessee real estate agent, first time home buyer Knoxville, Gatlinburg real estate, Harriman TN homes for sale, housing market crash 2026, housing market update March 2026, is the housing market slowing down, Knox County homes for sale, Knox County housing market, Knox County real estate trends, Knoxville homes for sale, Knoxville housing market 2026, Knoxville real estate, Knoxville real estate agent, Knoxville real estate market update, Knoxville TN housing data, Lenoir City TN real estate, Loudon County real estate, Loudon County TN homes for sale, Maryville TN real estate, mortgage rates 2026, Oak Ridge TN homes for sale, Pigeon Forge real estate, Roane County real estate, Roane County TN real estate, seller's market Knoxville, selling a home in east tennessee, Sevier County housing market, Sevier County short term rental, Sevierville TN homes for sale, should I buy a house in 2026, Tellico Lake homes for sale, Tennessee real estate market

East Tennessee Housing Market Update February 2026 | Iran Conflict, Rates UP, Oil Over $100 — What It Means for Buyers & Sellers

March 12, 2026 By Troy Stavros


Between Two Storms: What February 2026 Reveals — and Conceals — About East Tennessee Real Estate



If last month’s analysis was a story about contradictions, this month’s is a story about distortions. The February 2026 data for the Knoxville and East Tennessee housing market landed carrying a heavy asterisk — the late-January winter storm that delayed closings, inspections, and appraisals pushed a measurable volume of activity into February, inflating some numbers and obscuring others. And just as that first storm’s effects begin to clear, a second one — this time geopolitical — appeared on the last day of the month. The United States’ entry into armed conflict in Iran, which began on February 28th, introduces a new variable into the spring housing outlook that did not exist 30 days ago. And that variable is already showing up in the numbers that matter most to homebuyers: mortgage rates have climbed to 6.29% as of mid-March, and crude oil has surged past $100 a barrel for the first time in over a year.

But storms pass. Data accumulates. And when you strip away the noise and look at what February is actually telling us about this market, the signals are remarkably clear — and remarkably different depending on which county you’re standing in.

Across the six core counties — Anderson, Knox, Blount, Loudon, Roane, and Sevier — 955 homes closed in February 2026, a 9.9% increase over February 2025 and a notable acceleration from January’s 5.3% growth. But before you read that as unambiguous good news, understand that a meaningful portion of those closings were deals that should have finalized in January but were pushed into February by the storm. The true underlying pace of the market is somewhere between January’s weather-suppressed numbers and February’s weather-inflated ones. Neither month, in isolation, tells the whole story.

The Storm Effect: Why Some Counties Look Artificially Strong

The fingerprints of the late-January storm are all over February’s county-level data, but they show up unevenly.

Anderson County’s closings surged 39.5% year over year — from approximately 43 homes in February 2025 to 60 in February 2026. Loudon County jumped 37.9%, from 58 closings to 80. Those are eye-popping numbers in isolation, but both counties operate at volumes where a dozen delayed closings sliding from January into February can dramatically swing the year-over-year comparison. In Anderson’s case, the entire 39.5% increase amounts to roughly 17 additional sales. In Loudon, it’s 22. These are markets where the weather delay alone can plausibly account for most, if not all, of the year-over-year increase.

Knox County’s 14.8% increase — from approximately 440 closings to 505 — is large enough that the storm effect alone cannot explain it. At Knox’s volume, even a meaningful number of delayed closings wouldn’t produce a nearly 15% swing. Knox’s growth reflects genuine demand, confirmed by the broader suite of metrics we’ll examine below.

Then there’s Blount County, where closings fell 25% year over year — from 152 to 114. In a market where every other demand indicator is pointing in the right direction, that decline requires a different explanation entirely.

Pending Sales: The Deceleration That Isn’t a Red Flag — With One Exception

In January, the pending sales data was the headline story. Knox County pending sales had surged 38.3%, and the broader East Tennessee regional figure was up 24.7%. Those numbers pointed unmistakably toward a spring surge in activity.

February’s pending data looks tamer by comparison. Across the broader East Tennessee region — encompassing all counties, not just our six-county service area — pending sales totaled 1,654 contracts, up 7% year over year. Knox County pending sales grew just 1.9%, a sharp deceleration from January’s explosive growth. On the surface, you might wonder whether the buyer momentum is fading.

It isn’t. What you’re seeing is normalization after an anomalous January. Last month’s pending surge was partly driven by storm-delayed contracts being executed once weather cleared and activity resumed. February’s numbers represent a return to a more sustainable growth trajectory — one that still points decisively upward. A 7% increase in regional pending activity, in a market that spent much of the past two years in contraction, is healthy and constructive. You don’t need 25% growth every month for the trend to be bullish. You need consistent positive direction, and that’s what February delivered.

Knox County’s 577 pending contracts account for roughly 35% of the entire East Tennessee regional pending total — a reflection of the outsized role Knox plays as the economic and population center of the region. That share has held remarkably consistent, reinforcing Knox’s position as the market’s gravitational center.

The exception, as always, is Sevier County. And this month, the exception got worse.

Sevier County’s Pending Sales Collapse: From Concerning to Critical

In January, Sevier County’s pending sales declined 11.15% year over year. That was bad. February’s number is worse — significantly worse. Pending sales in Sevier County fell 31% compared to February 2025.

Read that again: while every other county in the dataset posted flat or positive pending activity, and while the broader East Tennessee region as a whole grew 7%, Sevier County saw nearly a third of its buyer pipeline evaporate. This is not a data quirk. This is not a storm effect. This is a market telling you — loudly and clearly — that its correction is accelerating, not stabilizing.

The forward implications are stark. Pending sales are the most reliable leading indicator we have. If the pending pipeline is contracting by 31%, the closed sale numbers two and three months from now are going to reflect that contraction. The 16% increase in February closings — likely a byproduct of storm-delayed January deals finally reaching the closing table — should not be mistaken for evidence of a turnaround. The leading indicator is moving in the wrong direction, and it’s moving there faster than it was a month ago.

Mortgage Rates: The Tailwind Is Fading

As of mid-March 2026, the 30-year fixed mortgage rate has climbed to 6.29% — a 20-basis-point jump from the roughly 6.09% level that prevailed just weeks ago, and a meaningful departure from the sub-6% territory that many market participants had been hoping for by spring. The rate stability that served as a tailwind for the market through January and February is no longer something we can take for granted.

The catalyst is not a mystery. Crude oil has surged past $100 a barrel in the wake of the U.S. entry into the Iran conflict, and energy prices at that level feed directly into inflation expectations. Bond markets are repricing accordingly, and mortgage rates — which track the 10-year Treasury yield — are moving higher in response. Two weeks ago, the question was whether rates might drift back toward 5.75% by summer. Today, the question is whether they’ll hold below 6.5%.

To put the 6.29% rate in perspective: the demand recovery documented in January and February was built on rates near 6%. Every tenth of a percentage point above that level shrinks the qualified buyer pool. On a $350,000 home with 10% down, the difference between a 6.0% rate and a 6.29% rate adds roughly $60 to the monthly payment. That may sound modest in isolation, but for buyers at the margins of qualification — and there are many of them in East Tennessee — that $60 can be the difference between an approval and a denial. Scale that across thousands of potential buyers, and you begin to see how a seemingly small rate move can meaningfully alter market dynamics.

The volume and demand improvements we’ve documented over the past two months were real. But they were also rate-dependent. If rates continue climbing — and with oil above $100 and a military conflict showing no signs of rapid resolution, there is a credible path to 6.5% or higher — the spring market’s trajectory could look very different from what the February data was projecting.

The Three-Tier Framework: Same Structure, Shifting Dynamics

The three-tier classification of the East Tennessee market that we established in January still holds in February, but the internal dynamics within each tier are evolving.

The seller’s markets — Knox County at 2.37 months of supply, Blount County at 2.58, and Anderson County at 2.86 — remain firmly below the three-month threshold. Knox tightened from 2.63 months in January to 2.37 in February, reflecting both the surge in closings and the robust demand pipeline underneath.

The balanced markets — Loudon County at 3.43 months and Roane County at 3.45 — continue to sit in that equilibrium zone. But within this tier, Roane County delivered the single biggest surprise of the entire February dataset, which we’ll explore in detail below.

The buyer’s market — Sevier County at 7.72 months of supply — worsened from January’s already elevated 7.35 months. With pending activity collapsing and supply continuing to accumulate, Sevier remains in a category by itself, and the gap between it and the rest of the region is widening.

Knox County: The Engine Keeps Running

Knox County continues to be the gravitational center of the East Tennessee real estate market. The 505 closings in February represent a 14.8% year-over-year increase, the strongest growth rate of any county at meaningful volume. Absorption tightened to 2.37 months — the tightest level in at least a year, down from 2.63 months in January.

The pending-to-active ratio of 39.1% means that for every ten active listings, roughly four already have buyers under contract. That ratio has held remarkably consistent over the past two months, signaling sustained demand rather than a one-time spike. Knox accounts for approximately 35% of all pending activity across the broader East Tennessee region, continuing its role as the dominant engine of East Tennessee real estate.

Median days on market improved from 52 in January to 40 in February, indicating that well-priced homes are moving faster as spring approaches. The sold-to-original list price ratio of 95.9% is the second-best in the region, trailing only Blount, and the 2.2-percentage-point gap between original and final list price ratios tells us Knox sellers are generally pricing within a reasonable range of market value.

Knox’s pending growth did decelerate from January’s 38.3% to 1.9% in February, but as discussed above, this represents normalization, not retreat. The absolute volume of pending contracts — 577 — remains strong, and Knox’s spring is on track to be substantially more active than a year ago. The question now is whether the rate climb to 6.29% — and potentially higher — begins to erode that buyer momentum heading into April and May.

Blount County: Strongest Fundamentals, Most Puzzling Headline

If you only looked at one number, you’d think Blount County had a terrible February. Closings dropped 25% year over year, from 152 to 114. That’s the worst closed-sale performance of any county in the dataset.

And yet, by virtually every other metric, Blount County is the best-performing market in East Tennessee — just as it was in January.

The median days on market in Blount is 28 days, the fastest of any county by a wide margin. The sold-to-original list price ratio of 96.1% is the highest in the region, meaning Blount sellers are pricing their homes more accurately than sellers in any other county. The gap between original list price and final sale price is just 1.9 percentage points — the tightest in the dataset — confirming that sellers here are not engaging in the list-high-and-cut strategy that inflates days on market and erodes negotiating leverage. Absorption sits at 2.58 months, the second-tightest in the region behind Knox.

So why did closings fall 25%? The same explanation applies here that it did in January, only more emphatically: Blount County does not have a demand problem. It has a supply problem. When homes are selling in 28 days and sellers are receiving 96.1% of their original asking price, the constraint is not on the buy side. The constraint is that there simply aren’t enough homes coming to market to sell. The 7.5% decline in pending sales — the only county besides Sevier to show a pending decline — further supports this interpretation. If there aren’t enough active listings, there can’t be enough pending contracts, and there can’t be enough closings. It’s a supply bottleneck, not a demand shortfall.

For Blount County sellers who have been waiting for the right time to list, the data is sending a clear message: the market wants your home.

Anderson County: Strong Numbers, Storm-Sized Asterisk

Anderson County’s 39.5% increase in closed sales — from approximately 43 to 60 — is the largest year-over-year percentage gain of any county. Combined with a 10.7% increase in pending sales and 2.86 months of supply, the fundamental picture is solidly in seller’s market territory.

However, at Anderson’s volume, the storm effect is nearly impossible to separate from the underlying trend. The entire year-over-year gain is roughly 17 sales. If even half of those are January closings that were delayed by weather, the organic growth rate falls to approximately 20%, which is still strong but tells a meaningfully different story. Trend data in Anderson will become more reliable once we have a month of closings that isn’t contaminated by storm-delayed activity.

The metric that continues to demand attention in Anderson is the pricing gap. Sellers are receiving 92.9% of their original asking price — a 7.1-percentage-point discount from where they started. That’s the second-worst performance on this metric in the dataset, trailing only Sevier. Anderson sellers are still overpricing, and in a market that processes only 60 sales a month, an overpriced listing doesn’t just sit — it becomes stale. Pricing discipline matters everywhere, but it matters more in Anderson than in Knox or Blount because the margin for error is so much thinner.

Loudon County: Storm-Inflated Closings, but the Foundation Is Solid

Loudon County’s 37.9% jump in closings — from 58 to 80 — is almost certainly amplified by storm-delayed January activity. Pending sales were perfectly flat year over year, and absorption at 3.43 months sits squarely in balanced territory, essentially unchanged from January’s 3.58 months.

The outlier metric in Loudon this month is the 65-day median days on market, a significant increase from January’s 42 days. Storm-delayed closings are the most likely culprit here as well. Homes that should have closed in late January but didn’t finalize until February would naturally carry a longer days-on-market figure, dragging up the county median. This should normalize in March as the storm’s ripple effects fully clear the pipeline.

The pricing data reveals a growing gap between seller expectations and buyer reality. The sold-to-original list price ratio of 93.4% means Loudon sellers are surrendering 6.6 percentage points from their original asking price — a gap exceeded only by Anderson and Sevier. The 4.1-percentage-point spread between original and final list price ratios indicates that much of this discount is happening through price reductions before offers are even received. Loudon sellers should take note: in a balanced market with adequate supply, overpricing doesn’t create leverage. It creates days on market.

Roane County: The Turnaround Nobody Saw Coming

Last month, I wrote that Roane County was the market that most concerned me heading into the second quarter. The data supported that concern — Roane had the worst sold-to-original list price ratio in the entire region at 91.5%, a weak pending-to-active ratio of 25.8%, and a trajectory that suggested it could slip from balanced territory into something less favorable.

One month later, Roane County has delivered the single most dramatic turnaround in the February dataset.

Pending sales surged 48.4% year over year — not only the largest increase of any county, but nearly seven times the broader regional average of 7%. The pending-to-active ratio jumped from 25.8% to 40.1%, which is now the highest in the entire six-county dataset — higher than Knox, higher than Blount, higher even than Anderson. The sold-to-original list price ratio improved from 91.5% to 95.2%, a 3.7-percentage-point leap that moves Roane from worst in the region to third-best. Absorption tightened from 3.68 to 3.45 months.

The one lagging indicator is closed sales, which grew only 1.8% year over year — the weakest growth in the dataset. But that’s the nature of leading versus trailing indicators. The pending surge hasn’t had time to flow through to closings yet. If March and April closings reflect even a fraction of February’s pending pipeline, Roane’s closed-sale trajectory is about to inflect sharply upward.

So what happened? The most likely explanation is that the demand wave from lower mortgage rates, which first hit Knox and Blount, has now reached Roane with a lag. Roane’s lower price points make it particularly sensitive to rate changes — the same monthly savings that brings a Knox buyer off the sidelines can make the difference between qualifying and not qualifying for a Roane buyer. It’s also possible that sellers in Roane have begun pricing more realistically, as the significant improvement in sold-to-original list price ratio suggests. Better pricing attracts more offers, which shortens days on market, which improves every downstream metric.

One month does not make a trend, and I want to be clear-eyed about that. Roane’s closed-sale growth is still the weakest in the region at 1.8%, and the county’s relatively small volume makes it susceptible to month-to-month noise. But the direction of every leading indicator shifted decisively positive in February, and that is a material change from where Roane stood 30 days ago. The concern now is that Roane’s rate sensitivity cuts both ways — the same affordability dynamics that pulled buyers in at 6% could push them back out if rates continue climbing toward 6.5%.

Sevier County: The Correction Deepens

If Roane County is the story of a market finding its footing, Sevier County is the story of a market still losing its grip.

Every critical forward-looking indicator moved in the wrong direction in February. Active listings climbed to 1,606. The absorption rate worsened to 7.72 months, up from January’s already elevated 7.35 — now approaching eight months of supply. The pending-to-active ratio collapsed to 14.8%, meaning that for roughly every seven listings on the market, only one has a buyer under contract.

The 31% decline in pending sales is the number that should define how we think about Sevier County’s trajectory heading into spring. In January, pending activity was down 11.15%. Now it’s down 31%. The decline is not flattening. It is accelerating. And this is happening in a rate environment that is pulling buyers off the sidelines everywhere else in the region.

The 16% increase in February closings — 140 sales versus approximately 121 a year ago — will tempt some to find a silver lining. Don’t. Those closings represent contracts that were written weeks or months ago, many of which were likely delayed from January by the winter storm. They tell us about the past. Pending sales tell us about the future. And the future that the pending data is pointing toward is more supply, fewer buyers, and continued downward pressure on pricing.

Sevier County sellers are currently receiving 92.1% of their original asking price, with a 3.1-percentage-point gap between original and final list price ratios. On a $500,000 cabin listing — a common price point in the Sevier market — that translates to selling for roughly $460,500, nearly $40,000 below the original asking price. And with pending activity in freefall, the sellers who are still holding firm on aspirational pricing are going to find themselves waiting well beyond the current 92-day median.

The structural oversupply problem identified in January — driven by the unwinding of the short-term rental investment boom — has not improved. Sevier County continues to carry nearly as much active inventory as Knox County despite a fraction of the population and a fraction of the organic housing demand. Until either supply contracts significantly through price reductions that attract bargain-hunting buyers, or a genuinely new source of demand materializes, this market has further to fall.

The Iran Variable: What Conflict Means for East Tennessee Real Estate

On February 28th, the United States entered into armed conflict in Iran, introducing a significant new variable into the economic and housing outlook. While the conflict had no impact whatsoever on February’s housing data — it began on the month’s final day — its potential to reshape the spring market is no longer theoretical. It is already happening.

Crude oil has surged past $100 a barrel, a level not seen in over a year, and the ripple effects are arriving exactly where economists predicted they would. Energy prices at this level feed directly into inflation expectations across the economy — from transportation costs to manufacturing inputs to the price of groceries. Bond markets, which price in future inflation, have responded by pushing yields higher. And mortgage rates, which are tethered to the 10-year Treasury yield, have followed: the 30-year fixed rate has jumped to 6.29%, up 20 basis points in a matter of weeks.

This is how geopolitical conflict transmits into your monthly mortgage payment.

The concern is not just the rate move that has already occurred, but where rates go from here. If crude oil remains above $100 — and with an active military conflict in a major oil-producing region, there is no obvious catalyst for a rapid decline — inflationary pressure will persist. If inflation expectations continue to rise, the Federal Reserve’s path toward further rate cuts becomes more constrained, and mortgage rates could push toward 6.5% or beyond. The rate environment that fueled the demand recovery of late 2025 and early 2026 is not guaranteed to hold.

Beyond rates, there is the confidence channel. Consumers facing geopolitical uncertainty tend to defer large financial commitments. A home purchase is the largest financial commitment most people will ever make, and even if rates stabilize at 6.29%, a prolonged conflict could introduce the same kind of buyer hesitation that characterized the rate-shock period of 2023 and 2024 — not because the math doesn’t work, but because the uncertainty makes people reluctant to act.

There is a counterargument worth acknowledging. Real estate has historically been viewed as a tangible, inflation-hedging asset during periods of geopolitical instability. Some buyers may accelerate their purchase timelines specifically because they want the perceived safety and stability of homeownership during uncertain times. And the East Tennessee market, with its relatively affordable price points and strong population growth fundamentals, is better positioned than many regions to weather external shocks.

The honest assessment is this: nobody knows how the conflict will unfold, how long it will last, or how deeply it will affect domestic economic conditions. What we know right now is that rates have already moved against buyers, oil prices have already moved against inflation expectations, and the comfortable assumptions of 30 days ago — that rates would hold near 6% or drift lower — are no longer operative. The data from February still tells us this market was on solid footing heading into spring. The question is how much of that footing erodes if the macroeconomic ground keeps shifting.

What This Means for Sellers in the Knoxville and East Tennessee Market

The message to sellers this month is both encouraging and urgent — and the urgency has increased since last month.

Encouraging because demand is real. Across most of the region, buyers are active, pending sales are growing, and absorption rates are tightening. If you’re in Knox, Blount, or Anderson, you are in a seller’s market with genuine competitive dynamics working in your favor.

Urgent because the window may be closing faster than expected. Mortgage rates have already climbed 20 basis points in a matter of weeks. Oil is above $100. A military conflict is underway with no clear timeline for resolution. None of this means the market is about to collapse — the supply fundamentals in the core counties are too tight for that. But it does mean that the conditions sellers are enjoying right now — strong buyer demand, favorable rates, and positive momentum — are not guaranteed to persist through the summer. Sellers who have been waiting for prices to climb higher are making a bet that the favorable conditions of the past few months will continue despite a fundamentally altered macroeconomic backdrop. That is a riskier bet today than it was 30 days ago, and it was a riskier bet 30 days ago than it was 60 days ago.

If you’re planning to sell in 2026, there’s a strong argument that the spring window — right now — offers the most favorable combination of demand, rates, and buyer activity that you’re likely to see this year.

Pricing discipline remains paramount. The spread between the best and worst sold-to-original list price ratios in February is 4.0 percentage points — Blount’s 96.1% versus Sevier’s 92.1%. On a $400,000 home, that gap represents $16,000. The counties where sellers price accurately — Blount and Knox — are the counties where homes sell fastest and where sellers retain the most value. That correlation has been consistent across every month of data I’ve analyzed, and it is not a coincidence. In a rate environment that is moving against buyers, pricing accuracy becomes even more critical — an overpriced listing that might have eventually attracted an offer at 6% may simply expire at 6.5%.

What This Means for Buyers in the Knoxville and East Tennessee Market

For buyers, February’s data reinforces the geographic divergence that has defined this market for months — but the rate move adds a new layer of urgency across the board.

In Knox County and Blount County, you are competing for limited inventory in a tightening market. Sub-three-month supply, fast days on market, and strong pending pipelines mean that hesitation costs you homes. Come prepared, come pre-approved, and come realistic about pricing. A market with 2.37 months of supply and a 39% pending-to-active ratio is not the market for contingency-laden, below-asking offers.

In Sevier County, the negotiating leverage continues to shift in the buyer’s direction — and the shift is accelerating. With pending activity down 31%, supply approaching eight months, and sellers already accepting 92.1% of original asking prices, the room to negotiate is significant and growing. For buyers with a long-term investment horizon and the patience to weather a market that has likely not yet bottomed, Sevier County’s pricing becomes more compelling with each passing month. But enter with eyes wide open — the pending data is telling us this correction has further to run.

Roane County, which looked like a cautionary tale four weeks ago, is now worth a second look. The 48.4% surge in pending activity and improved pricing metrics suggest that Roane may be entering a more competitive phase. Buyers who were enjoying relatively relaxed conditions in Roane should be aware that the dynamics are shifting — though rising rates could moderate that shift if they begin to push Roane’s rate-sensitive buyers back to the sidelines.

The wildcard for buyers across all markets is the rate trajectory. At 6.29% and climbing, the math is getting tighter for many households. Waiting for rates to fall further — a strategy that worked beautifully in late 2025 — now carries substantially more risk. With oil above $100 and a military conflict introducing persistent inflationary pressure, the next move in rates is more likely to be up than down in the near term. Buyers who are qualified and ready today should weigh the cost of waiting not just against the possibility of lower rates, but against the increasingly real possibility of higher ones. Locking in at 6.29% may feel disappointing compared to the 6% that was available weeks ago, but it could look attractive compared to what’s available in June.

Spring 2026 Forecast: The Window Narrows

Heading into January, the story was straightforward: rates were improving, buyers were returning, and the spring setup looked favorable across most of the region. Heading into March, the story has grown considerably more complicated — and the complications are arriving faster than anticipated.

The domestic fundamentals of the East Tennessee housing market have not changed. Demand is positive. Absorption is healthy in most counties. Pending activity is growing. The seller’s market counties are tightening. Even Roane County, last month’s biggest concern, is showing genuine signs of life.

But the external environment is deteriorating in real time. Crude oil above $100. Mortgage rates at 6.29% and rising. An active military conflict in a major oil-producing region with no clear exit strategy. The housing market doesn’t exist in a vacuum, and macroeconomic shocks have a way of rippling through real estate markets with a lag of roughly 60 to 90 days. The shock began on February 28th. By late April or May, we’ll know whether it was a temporary disruption or a structural shift in the rate and inflation landscape.

The spring forecast, then, is this: if rates stabilize near 6.29% and do not climb meaningfully higher, the East Tennessee market — outside of Sevier County — still has the fundamentals to deliver a solid spring. The pending data supports that. The absorption data supports that. The supply constraints in Knox, Blount, and Anderson are real enough to prevent a significant slowdown even with modestly higher rates.

If rates push past 6.5% — which is a realistic scenario if oil remains above $100 and inflation expectations continue to rise — the spring could look very different. Not a collapse in the core counties, where supply is too tight for that, but a meaningful deceleration of the momentum that has been building since late 2025. The buyer pool that returned to the market at 6% is not the same buyer pool that remains at 6.75%. Every quarter-point increase thins the herd.

Sevier County’s spring is going to be difficult regardless of what happens with rates or geopolitics. A market with nearly eight months of supply and an accelerating decline in buyer activity does not need an external shock to continue correcting. It’s doing that on its own. Rising rates only make it worse, as they erode the purchasing power of the bargain hunters and investors who represent Sevier’s best near-term hope for demand.

The advice for everyone operating in this market — buyers, sellers, agents, and investors — is the same as it’s been, just with added emphasis: know which market you’re in, price to reality, and don’t build your strategy on assumptions that require everything to break in your favor. The February data tells us where this market was heading. The March rate environment tells us that the path just got steeper. The window for action hasn’t closed — but it is narrower than it was a month ago, and it may be narrower still a month from now.






Filed Under: Blog, Farragut TN, Home Buying, Home Market News, Home Selling, Tellico Village Tagged With: Anderson County TN homes, Blount County real estate, Buying a home in Knoxville, east tennessee homes for sale with acreage, East Tennessee market update, east tennessee real estate, Farragut, Housing Market, is now a good time to buy a house, Knox County homes for sale, Knoxville housing market 2026, Knoxville real estate agent, Knoxville TN, Loudon County real estate, mortgage rates 2026, oil prices housing market, Roane County TN property, Sevier County housing market, Sevier County short term rentals, spring housing market 2026, Tellico Village, tennessee home prices, Tennessee housing market update, Troy Stavros

CALL or TEXT 865-999-0925

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Phone
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
Create A Real Estate Portal
Register today for better user experience! With a portal you are able to:
  1. Save your searches
  2. Get updates on listings
  3. Track listings
  4. Add notes and messages
  5. Personalize your dashboard
Search Knoxville Real Estate

RECENT BLOG POSTS

  • East Tennessee Housing Market Update – April 2026: County-by-County Breakdown
  • Just Listed: 315 Bigtree Drive, Farragut, TN — A Sugarwood Gem Zoned for All Farragut Schools
  • Discover the Clinch River Lodge: An Extraordinary East Tennessee Riverfront Property
  • 711 Hunting Fox Lane, Farragut, TN: A Luxury Listing in Fox Run with Smoky Mountain Views, High-End Updates, and a Private Wooded Retreat
  • East Tennessee Housing Market Update — March 2026: What Buyers and Sellers Need to Know Right Now

CALL / TEXT ME @ 865-999-0925

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Privacy Policy

Copyright 2024 - Troy Stavros - CornerStone Realty Associates, LLC - 865-966-9700 - 12748 Kingston Pike Suite 206, Knoxville, TN 37934 *Some or all of the listings displayed on this site may not belong to CornerStone Realty Associates, LLC. IDX information is provided exclusively for consumers’ personal, non-commercial use, and may not be used for any purpose other than to identify prospective properties consumers may be interested in purchasing. All data is deemed reliable, but is not guaranteed.