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Cowboy Boots in Nashville: The Complete Buyer's Guide 2026

  • Writer: Chase Gillmore
    Chase Gillmore
  • May 15
  • 17 min read
Woman in stitched leather cowboy boots walking Broadway street in Nashville toward a downtown boot shop entrance

Cowboy boots in Nashville are everywhere, but knowing where to buy them, how much to spend, and which style actually works for a night on Broadway is a different question entirely. Whether you want a $164 pair of Laredo boots from a big-box retailer or a $5,000 pair of fully handcrafted bespoke boots from a Nashville artisan, Music City has every tier covered. This guide walks you through the real options, the honest trade-offs, and what nobody else tells you before you walk into a store.


  • Boot Barn at 318 Broadway is the most convenient downtown option, open until 10pm on Fridays and Saturdays, with services like complimentary boot stretching and same-day delivery.

  • Boot Country (Two Free Boots) runs a buy-one-get-two-free deal year-round, with no restrictions on mix-and-match, making it the best value play for groups buying together.

  • Lucchese and The Frye Company both have full retail stores in The Gulch neighborhood, covering the premium mid-range to luxury tier without going fully custom.

  • For true custom boots, Planet Cowboy starts at around $900 with a 2-5 month lead time; Music City Leather produces fully bespoke boots at $2,000-$5,000 with roughly a one-year wait.

  • Square toe styles hold up better on crowded Broadway sidewalks than snip toe; a lower walking heel (under 1.5 inches) is the practical choice if you plan to cover distance on foot.

  • Nashville welcomed 11.55 million overnight visitors in 2026, according to the Nashville Convention and Visitors Corp, making boot shopping one of the city's most consistent visitor experiences.


Western-themed home office with cacti wallpaper, cowboy boots decor, black desk, and neon signage

Is It Expensive to Buy Cowboy Boots in Nashville?


Cowboy boots in Nashville span a price range from under $165 to well over $5,000, depending on materials, craftsmanship, and where you shop. Budget-conscious shoppers can find genuine leather boots from brands like Laredo starting at $159.95 at Nashville Boot Co., while mid-range options from Dan Post run $224.95 to $469.85. Premium brands like Lucchese and custom makers like Music City Leather sit at the top, where handcrafted bespoke pairs cost $2,000-$5,000.


The buy-one-get-two-free promotion at Boot Country (Two Free Boots) is the most talked-about deal in Nashville boot shopping. Founded in 1978, the store runs this promotion with no restrictions on mixing men's and women's styles, which makes it genuinely useful for groups. Individual pair prices at Boot Country range from $229.99 to $399.99 for their best-sellers, so the effective per-pair cost drops significantly when three people shop together.


Boot Barn's Broadway location offers competitive pricing on Dan Post, Abilene, and Laredo lines, with the added convenience of complimentary boot stretching and hat shaping in-store. For visitors who want professional American brands without paying luxury prices, this is the most practical starting point.


The short answer: Nashville is not cheap for boots, but it is not a rip-off either. You pay for what you get. A $165 Laredo boot is a real leather boot. A $2,000 Music City Leather boot is a piece of American craft heritage. The spread between those two options reflects genuine differences in materials, construction, and longevity, not just brand markup.


Price Tiers at a Glance


Tier

Price Range

Where to Shop

Best For

Budget

$159-$230

Nashville Boot Co. (Laredo), Boot Barn

First-time buyers, short trips

Mid-Range

$230-$470

Boot Barn, Boot Country, Nashville Boot Co. (Dan Post)

Quality leather, everyday wear

Premium

$470-$900

Lucchese, The Frye Company, Planet Cowboy

Investment pieces, serious boot wearers

Custom/Luxury

$900-$5,000+

Planet Cowboy, Music City Leather

Bespoke fit, heirloom quality


Is It Okay to Wear Cowboy Boots in Nashville?


Wearing cowboy boots in Nashville is not just acceptable, it is practically the city's unofficial dress code. Lower Broadway, the stretch of honky-tonks between 1st and 5th Avenue anchored by venues like Tootsie's Orchid Lounge (where sawdust-floor country music has been a fixture since 1960), draws a crowd that ranges from first-timers in brand-new boots to regulars who have been wearing the same pair for a decade. Nobody looks twice at cowboy boots here. The more relevant question is which style works for how you plan to spend your day.


For Broadway specifically, comfort and grip matter more than aesthetics. Leather-soled boots look traditional but get slippery on wet pavement and bar floors. A rubber-soled option, or a boot with a crepe sole, gives you traction without sacrificing the look. Shaft height is another practical concern: a taller shaft (13 inches is standard for many Dan Post styles) can feel restrictive after several hours of walking, while a shorter bootie style trades authenticity for comfort.


Heel height is worth thinking through before you buy for a Nashville trip. A traditional western heel of 1.5 to 2 inches looks correct but adds real fatigue over a long day. The Abilene Women's AB-9054 Carson boot, for example, uses a 1.5-inch western heel, which sits at the practical edge of comfortable for all-day walking. If you are planning to cover the 12 South neighborhood, the Gulch, and Lower Broadway in a single day, that extra height accumulates.


The cultural short answer: boots are not a costume in Nashville. They are workwear with a long history in the city's music scene, and wearing them with jeans or a dress is entirely normal across every venue type, from a dive bar on Printer's Alley to a rooftop restaurant in SoBro.


Modern living room with Nashville-themed chalkboard accent wall and entertainment setup in Nashville, TN

Where to Buy Used Cowboy Boots in Nashville?


Used cowboy boots in Nashville are most reliably found through consignment shops and vintage clothing stores scattered across East Nashville and the Hillsboro Village neighborhood, though none of the retailers named in authoritative Nashville boot guides focus primarily on pre-owned inventory. The stores covered in sources like Moon Travel Guides, written by Nashville author Margaret Littman, focus on new boots ranging from entry-level to fully custom. For used options, East Nashville's vintage retail strip and the flea markets that set up periodically near the fairgrounds are the practical alternatives.


That said, buying used cowboy boots carries real risks that buying new does not. Cowboy boots mold to the foot of the original wearer over time. A pair that is slightly too narrow or has an irregular break-in pattern from someone else's gait can cause problems that new boots would not. If budget is the main concern, the Laredo line at Nashville Boot Co. (starting at $159.95) or Boot Barn is a more reliable starting point than a used pair of unknown provenance.


Planet Cowboy Nashville occasionally stocks pre-owned or sample pieces alongside its new and custom inventory, so it is worth asking when you visit. The store relocated from New York to Nashville in 2020 and carries Rios of Mercedes and Stallion brands alongside owner Jaylin Ramer's own designs, roughly a third of the store's total stock. Custom boots from Planet Cowboy start at approximately $900 with a 2-5 month production window, but the in-store inventory includes more accessible price points.


Where to Buy Cowboy Hats and Boots in Nashville?


Buying cowboy hats and boots together in Nashville is straightforward: Boot Barn's Broadway location sells both, and hatWRKS Nashville specializes in custom-made signature hats as a dedicated complement to your boot purchase. The Gulch neighborhood is the strongest single destination for a complete western look, with Lucchese handling boots and The Frye Company covering leather goods at street-level retail.


Boot Barn at 318 Broadway offers complimentary hat shaping in-store, making it the most convenient one-stop shop for both items downtown. Hours run until 10pm on Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays, which matters for visitors whose schedules fill up with Broadway time in the evening. The store also has four other Nashville-area locations: 144 2nd Avenue North, Opry Mills at 405 Opry Mills Drive, West Nashville at 6622 Charlotte Pike, and Goodlettsville at 240 Long Hollow Pike, so there is likely a location near wherever you are staying.


For a more curated experience, pairing a visit to Lucchese (open since 2012 in The Gulch) with a stop at hatWRKS creates a high-quality western outfit shopping experience without the big-box atmosphere. Manuel Exclusive Clothier, run by Manuel Cuevas, rounds out The Gulch western wear ecosystem with stage-worthy cowboy shirts starting at $750 and jackets above $2,000, positioned at the celebrity-clientele end of the market.


Nashville Boot and Hat Store Directory


Store

Location

Sells Hats?

Specialty

Boot Barn (Broadway)

318 Broadway, Downtown

Yes, + hat shaping

Full western department store

Boot Country / Two Free Boots

Multiple Nashville locations

Selected styles

Buy-one-get-two-free boots

Lucchese

The Gulch

No

Premium American boots since 1883

The Frye Company

The Gulch

No

Leather boots and goods since 1863

Planet Cowboy

Nashville (relocated from NYC 2020)

No

Custom and boutique boots from $900

hatWRKS

Nashville

Yes, custom only

Custom signature western hats

Music City Leather

By appointment only

No

Fully bespoke boots, $2,000-$5,000


How Do You Choose the Right Cowboy Boot Style for Nashville?


Choosing cowboy boots for Nashville specifically means thinking about three variables that most generic boot guides ignore: toe shape for crowded venues, heel height for extended walking, and shaft height for comfort over a long night out. The right boot for a weekend on Broadway is not necessarily the same boot that works for daily wear at home.


Toe Shape: Square vs. Snip vs. Round


Square toe boots are the practical recommendation for Broadway. The squared front distributes weight more evenly, makes walking in tight spaces more comfortable, and holds up better when you are standing on a crowded bar floor for hours. Several Dan Post styles at Nashville Boot Co. use a square toe, including the DP3077 Full Quill Ostrich at $469.85, which sits at the upper end of what you would spend for a production boot.


Snip toe boots look sharp and are popular in Nashville's best-seller lists. Boot Country's top women's sellers, including the Black Inlay with Sequins at $349.99 and the Ponderosa Tan Snip Toe at $349.99, both use the snip profile. The narrowed point adds style but reduces comfort over long distances. If your Nashville itinerary is mostly riding and less walking, snip toe is fine. If you plan to walk from SoBro to The Gulch and back, square or round is smarter.


Shaft Height and Circumference


Dan Post men's boots typically feature a 13-inch shaft height with a 12-13 inch circumference. That proportioning works well for slimmer legs but can feel tight on wider calves. Nashville Boot Co. lists shaft circumference in its product specs, which is a detail worth checking before ordering online. In-store at Boot Barn, the staff can measure and recommend accordingly, and the complimentary boot stretching service helps with minor width adjustments after purchase.


Shorter shaft styles, sometimes called booties, have become more common in Nashville's retail mix. These trade the traditional silhouette for practical comfort and pair easily with dresses or jeans without requiring a full break-in period. For a weekend visit, this trade-off often makes sense.


Heel Type for Broadway Walking


The traditional cowboy heel, typically 1.5-2 inches and angled, was designed for stirrup riding, not city sidewalks. For Nashville specifically, look for boots that use a walking heel, which is slightly lower and more vertical, or confirm the sole material before buying. A leather sole looks authentic but offers minimal grip on the painted floors of Lower Broadway's bars. If the boot you love has a leather sole, Boot Barn's boot stretching and modification services can sometimes add rubber heel caps, so ask before you leave the store.


Modern master bedroom with coral patterned wallpaper, white upholstered bed, and cognac leather armchair with warm wood

What Is the Shopping Experience Like at Each Type of Nashville Boot Store?


Cowboy boot shopping in Nashville divides into three distinct experiences: big-box retail, boutique specialty, and fully custom artisan. Each serves a different buyer, and understanding the differences before you visit saves both time and money. At Maverick STR, we work closely with Nashville's visitor economy, and our guests consistently ask about boot shopping, so we have compiled the honest breakdown below.


Big-Box Retail: Boot Barn


Boot Barn's Broadway store at 318 Broadway is the most visitor-friendly option in Nashville. The location steps from the Ryman Auditorium means you can work a shopping stop into almost any downtown itinerary. The store stocks a wide range of brands at multiple price points, offers in-store services like complimentary hat shaping and boot stretching, and provides same-day delivery within a 20-mile radius for guests staying outside walking distance. Weekend hours (9am-10pm Thursday through Saturday) accommodate Nashville's late-starting visitor schedule.


The trade-off at Boot Barn is selection depth over curation. You get volume and accessibility, not a personalized boot fitting experience or access to limited-production styles. For visitors who want to walk in, try on several pairs, and leave with boots the same day, Boot Barn is the right answer.


Boutique Specialty: Lucchese, The Frye Company, and Planet Cowboy


Lucchese has maintained its Gulch retail location since 2012. The brand was founded in 1883 and makes boots, belts, and clothing in the United States, with custom orders available from the Nashville shop. The experience is quieter and more deliberate than Boot Barn, with staff who know the product deeply and can discuss construction details, leather grades, and custom specifications.


The Frye Company, founded in 1863, operates a 3,000-square-foot Gulch store that also hosts live music events. The space itself is worth the visit for anyone interested in American leather goods history. Frye's Nashville prices position the brand in the mid-to-premium range, accessible enough for serious buyers who are not ready for full custom pricing.


Planet Cowboy Nashville, relocated from New York in 2020, sits in its own category. Owner Jaylin Ramer designs approximately a third of the store's inventory, and the boutique stocks Rios of Mercedes and Stallion alongside Ramer's own designs. Custom boots start at around $900 with a 2-5 month production window. This is the right stop for buyers who want something genuinely distinctive without the year-long wait of a fully bespoke pair.


Custom Artisan: Music City Leather


Music City Leather, run by Wes Shugart, has no public storefront. An appointment is required. Fully handcrafted bespoke boots cost $2,000-$5,000 and take approximately one year to complete. This is not a tourist stop; it is a destination for serious boot enthusiasts who want a pair built specifically to their foot measurements, with complete control over leather selection, toe shape, shaft height, and decorative stitching. If you are buying boots as a long-term investment rather than a Nashville souvenir, this is where the conversation starts.


What Are the Best Practices for Boot Care After Buying in Nashville?


Boot care after buying cowboy boots in Nashville is a topic no competitor guide covers, but it matters more than most buyers realize. A night of dancing on Broadway's bar floors exposes new boots to spilled drinks, scuffed concrete, and humidity that can permanently damage untreated leather. Knowing what to do in the first 48 hours after purchase protects the investment.


Breaking In New Boots


New cowboy boots are stiff. This is normal and not a sign of poor quality. The break-in period for a well-made leather boot typically runs 10-20 wears before the shaft softens and the insole conforms to your foot. For a Nashville trip where you buy boots and immediately wear them to Broadway, wear thick socks for the first night, focus on keeping the fit snug without being painful at the heel, and plan for some initial stiffness in the shaft.


Boot Barn's complimentary boot stretching service is worth using before you leave the store if a pair fits almost right but feels tight in the toe box or shaft. Asking for minor stretching on a new pair prevents the blistering that comes from forcing a stiff boot to conform overnight.


Waterproofing and Leather Protection


Nashville's weather in spring and early fall can bring rain without warning, and Lower Broadway's bar-hopping culture means navigating wet sidewalks and slick entry steps. A basic mink oil or leather conditioner application before your first full day of wear provides water resistance and keeps the leather supple. Boot Barn and most Nashville boot stores carry conditioning products at the register. It takes five minutes and prevents cracking from moisture exposure.


For exotic leathers, including ostrich and python options available at several Nashville stores, the care requirements differ. Ostrich leather is naturally porous and benefits from a product specifically formulated for exotic skins rather than standard mink oil. If you are spending $400 or more on a pair with exotic leather panels, ask the store staff for the specific care recommendation before you leave.


What to Do After a Night of Dancing


After a night on Broadway, wipe down the shaft and toe box with a damp cloth while the leather is still warm from wear. This removes surface dirt before it sets. Allow the boots to dry at room temperature, not near a heat source, which can cause leather to crack. Insert cedar boot trees if you have them, or stuff the shaft loosely with tissue to hold the shape while the leather cools and dries. This single routine extends boot life significantly.


Why Do Cowboy Boots Matter to Nashville's Identity?


Cowboy boots in Nashville carry cultural weight that predates the city's current tourism boom. The boot's connection to Nashville runs through the country music industry, where artists from Hank Williams to Garth Brooks treated boots as functional stage wear and personal signature simultaneously. The Ryman Auditorium, which served as the Grand Ole Opry's home from 1943 to 1974, built its performance tradition around artists who dressed the part, and boots were central to that visual identity.


The result is that Nashville developed a genuine boot retail ecosystem, not a tourist trap version of one. Lucchese's presence in The Gulch since 2012 reflects real demand from musicians, industry professionals, and serious enthusiasts, not just souvenir shoppers. Music City Leather's appointment-only model and year-long production timelines exist because there is sustained local demand for fully handcrafted American bootmaking, not because tourists are willing to wait twelve months for a souvenir.


For visitors, this context matters because it explains why Nashville's boot stores are better stocked and more varied than boot retail in most other American cities. The expertise level at boutique stores like Planet Cowboy and Lucchese reflects a local market that actually knows boots. You are not buying from staff who learned boot basics from a training manual; you are buying from people who grew up in the culture.


In 2026, Nashville's visitor numbers continue to support this ecosystem. The Nashville Convention and Visitors Corp reported 11.55 million overnight visitors in 2026, with total visitor spending reaching $11.64 billion, a 3.7% increase year-over-year. That level of sustained visitor traffic keeps specialized retailers viable at multiple price tiers, which ultimately benefits the buyer.


At Maverick STR, our team manages vacation rental properties across Nashville's most boot-friendly neighborhoods, from properties minutes from Broadway to homes near The Gulch. Our guests ask about boot shopping in almost every stay, which is part of why we put this guide together with specific, current store details rather than generic recommendations.


Frequently Asked Questions About Cowboy Boots in Nashville


What is the best boot store on Broadway in Nashville?


Boot Barn at 318 Broadway is the most accessible and comprehensive boot store directly on Broadway. The store stocks multiple brands across price points from Laredo to Dan Post, offers complimentary boot stretching and hat shaping, and stays open until 10pm on Fridays and Saturdays. For visitors who want the easiest single-stop shopping experience close to downtown's honky-tonks, Boot Barn Broadway is the practical first choice.


How much should I budget for cowboy boots in Nashville?


Budget at least $160-$250 for a genuine leather boot from brands like Laredo or entry-level Abilene. Mid-range quality in Dan Post styles runs $225-$470. If you want premium production boots from Lucchese or The Frye Company, plan for $400-$700 or more. Custom boots from Planet Cowboy start at approximately $900, and fully bespoke pairs from Music City Leather reach $2,000-$5,000.


Is the buy-one-get-two-free deal at Boot Country legitimate?


Yes. Boot Country, also known as Two Free Boots, has operated this promotion since its founding in 1978 with no restrictions on mixing men's and women's styles. The catch is that the per-pair price for individual purchases ranges from $229.99 to $399.99, so the deal delivers its best value when multiple people shop together and split the savings across all three pairs.


How long does it take to get custom cowboy boots in Nashville?


Lead times vary significantly by maker. Planet Cowboy Nashville produces custom boots in approximately 2-5 months, with prices starting around $900. Music City Leather, run by Wes Shugart, requires an appointment and produces fully bespoke handcrafted boots over approximately one year at $2,000-$5,000. Neither option suits visitors who want boots for their current trip, but both are worth contacting before you arrive in Nashville if you are planning ahead.


What is the difference between cowboy boot brands available in Nashville?


Laredo and Abilene represent the accessible end of the market, using genuine leather with comfort system insoles at prices starting around $160-$175. Dan Post occupies the quality mid-range, with detailed leather linings, removable orthotic insoles, and shaft specifications published transparently. Lucchese, founded in 1883, uses American manufacturing and premium leathers at higher price points. The Frye Company, founded in 1863, focuses on leather goods with a heritage positioning. Each brand targets a different buyer, and Nashville retail carries all of them, so you can compare in person before committing.


What cowboy boot style works best for walking on Broadway?


Square toe boots with a walking heel (lower and more vertical than a traditional cowboy heel) and a rubber or crepe sole perform best for extended walking on Broadway. Leather soles look traditional but become slippery on wet pavement and bar floors. A shaft height of 11-13 inches is standard for most production boots; shorter booties are more comfortable for all-day walking if you are not prioritizing the traditional silhouette. Prioritize fit at the heel, which should hold snugly with minimal slip, over any aesthetic consideration.


Can I buy cowboy boots in Nashville and have them shipped home?


Boot Barn offers a "We Have It Promise" (WHIP) service with free 2-day shipping, and also offers Buy Online Pick Up In Store. If you find a style in-store but need a different size, the staff can typically locate inventory across Boot Barn's network and ship directly to your home address. Nashville Boot Co. is an online-first retailer that ships nationally. Most boutique stores including Planet Cowboy will also coordinate shipping for purchases made in-store.


Are there Nashville boot stores near Opry Mills or outside downtown?


Boot Barn has a location at 405 Opry Mills Drive near the Opry Mills Mall, in addition to its Broadway flagship and locations at 144 2nd Avenue North, 6622 Charlotte Pike in West Nashville, and 240 Long Hollow Pike in Goodlettsville. Boot Country's locations span multiple Nashville-area spots as well. Visitors staying outside downtown who want to avoid Broadway crowds can find comparable selection at the Opry Mills or West Nashville Boot Barn locations.


Where Do Nashville Visitors Go Wrong When Buying Cowboy Boots?


The most common mistake Nashville boot buyers make is purchasing on aesthetics alone without testing fit across multiple criteria. Cowboy boot sizing differs meaningfully from standard shoe sizing, and the differences are brand-specific rather than universal. Dan Post, Laredo, and Abilene each size slightly differently, and the same nominal size in different brands can fit tighter or looser at the toe box, shaft, and heel.


Specifically, measure or confirm your shaft circumference before buying a tall boot. Nashville Boot Co. publishes shaft circumference specs for Dan Post and Abilene styles (typically 12-13 inches for men's, 11-12 inches for women's), which lets you compare against your own measurements before visiting in person. If a boot fits perfectly at the toe but gaps at the shaft, or squeezes the calf, that is a fit issue the boot will not resolve on its own.


The second common error is buying without a plan for breaking them in. New leather boots need 10-20 wears to fully conform. Buying a pair Saturday afternoon and wearing them to Broadway Saturday night is fine if you accept some stiffness; buying them Friday and suffering through a full weekend of walking in rigid leather is avoidable. Boot Barn's in-store stretching service, or even a half-size adjustment from the staff, can make an evening of wear significantly more comfortable.


Third: exotic leather upsells in tourist-adjacent stores occasionally use lower-quality exotics or simulated exotic prints rather than genuine full-quill ostrich or python. Verify the product description carefully. Genuine full-quill ostrich has the distinctive raised nodules across the entire panel; smooth ostrich uses the leg skin without the quill follicles and costs less. Both are real ostrich leather, but they are different products at different price points. The Dan Post DP3103 Anders, for example, specifically specifies ostrich leg leather at $459.95, while the DP3077 Full Quill Ostrich is a different construction at $469.85.


Planning Your Nashville Stay Around Boot Shopping


Cowboy boots in Nashville fit naturally into a broader visit itinerary because the best retail destinations cluster in two walkable areas: Lower Broadway and The Gulch. Boot Barn at 318 Broadway is steps from the Ryman Auditorium and walkable from Bridgestone Arena, making it easy to pair with an evening on the honky-tonk strip. The Gulch, where Lucchese, The Frye Company, and hatWRKS are concentrated, sits about 10-15 minutes on foot from Broadway and is close to the 12 South neighborhood for post-shopping dining.


Visitors who want to cover both areas in a single day should plan to hit The Gulch boutiques in the morning when crowds are lighter, then move to Boot Barn Broadway in the afternoon or early evening. Opry Mills is worth the drive (roughly 15-20 minutes from downtown) if you are visiting the Grand Ole Opry and want to combine boot shopping with that experience.


For groups staying in one of Nashville's larger vacation rentals, such as the properties in the Maverick STR portfolio that sit 5-10 minutes from Broadway, the logistics are straightforward: Uber or scooter to the Broadway stores, then walk The Gulch circuit before returning to the property. Groups shopping together at Boot Country's buy-one-get-two-free promotion benefit from having three people coordinating purchases, so plan who is participating before you walk in.


Nashville's short-term rental market recorded an average daily rate of $362.30 and an occupancy rate of 54% as of the most recent AirDNA data, reflecting strong and sustained visitor demand. Booking your Nashville accommodation well in advance, particularly for weekends near major events, gives you flexibility to plan excursions like boot shopping without time pressure. For visitors curious about Nashville's best group-friendly Nashville vacation rentals for large groups, the options near Broadway and The Gulch make boot shopping and Broadway nights easy to combine in the same trip.


If you are a property owner thinking about how Nashville's visitor demographics translate to rental demand, the numbers from the Nashville Convention and Visitors Corp are instructive. Nashville welcomed 17.39 million total visitors in 2026, representing a 2.7% increase year-over-year, and generated $11.64 billion in total visitor spending. That sustained demand is precisely why Nashville Airbnb management has become a professional specialty: the market rewards properties that are positioned, priced, and managed well. At Maverick STR, we manage a portfolio of Nashville properties whose performance consistently lands in the 90th percentile of the local market, with managed properties outperforming market benchmarks by 50% or more.


Modern Nashville townhomes with city skyline views at dusk, near cowboy boots shopping on Broadway

Whether you are visiting Nashville to buy cowboy boots, celebrate a bachelorette, or scout an investment property, the city's depth of experience across all three of those categories is real. The boot stores are legitimate. The rental market is strong. And if you are a property owner looking to maximize your Nashville investment, Maverick STR brings the market data, management infrastructure, and revenue expertise to make that work. One recent client we took on was projected to earn $60,000 in year one; we delivered $100,000. The process behind that result is the same one we apply across every property in our Nashville portfolio. Start the conversation at maverickstr.co.


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