International markets, bungalow charm & Nashville's next breakout address
Nashville, TN Real Estate
—
Active Rentals
—
Median Rent
—
Homes for Sale
—
Median Home Price
—
Active Rentals
—
Median Rent
—
Homes for Sale
—
Median Home Price
The Neighborhood
International markets, bungalow charm & Nashville's next breakout address
Known for
Market Trends
Abode Exclusive Rentals
For Sale
Location
About Woodbine
Woodbine sits just south of downtown Nashville, stretching along Nolensville Pike between Harding Place and Thompson Lane. The housing stock here tells a straightforward story: post-war bungalows, brick ranches, and modest single-families on tree-lined streets like Colemont Drive and Woodmont Lane. This is Nashville before the boom priced everyone out — a neighborhood where sidewalks crack in the heat, front porches sag just slightly, and the rhythm still feels residential despite the commercial energy pulsing along Nolensville Pike. Woodbine, Nashville, TN remains one of the city's most under-the-radar pockets, a place where you can still find a house with a yard without selling a kidney.
Nolensville Pike is the neighborhood's spine and its greatest asset. Kurdish markets like International Market and Anatolia stock spices and flatbreads you won't find at Kroger. Taco trucks idle in gravel lots. El Ray Azteca serves some of the city's best tamales. This is where Nashville eats when it's hungry for something real. You're ten minutes from downtown via I-440, fifteen from the airport, close enough to Melrose for weekend coffee runs and far enough from Broadway to sleep through the night. Woodbine Park offers green space without the crowds, and Thompson Lane connects you east-west across the entire south side.
Real estate in Woodbine leans heavily toward single-family homes — mostly 1950s and 1960s builds on generous lots, many ready for renovation or flipping. Apartments for rent in Woodbine are limited but tend toward duplexes and small complexes off the main drag. Homes for sale in Woodbine Nashville typically run below the Nashville median, attracting first-time buyers, investors, and anyone tired of bidding wars in East Nashville. The neighborhood hasn't exploded yet, but the bones are here: solid housing stock, central location, and a commercial corridor that already feels more interesting than half the city's polished districts.
Frequently Asked Questions
Woodbine is known for the Nolensville Pike corridor, lined with Kurdish grocers, taco trucks, and international restaurants that give the area a global flavor uncommon in Nashville. The neighborhood itself is residential — post-war bungalows and brick ranches on quiet streets — with easy highway access and affordable housing stock.
Woodbine's housing is dominated by single-family homes built in the 1950s and 1960s — brick ranches, modest bungalows, and some split-levels on lots that still have actual yards. Rentals tend toward duplexes and older walk-up complexes rather than large apartment communities. It's a neighborhood where you can still buy a house without a trust fund.
Woodbine offers more affordable rental options than trendier Nashville neighborhoods, with proximity to downtown via I-440 and access to Thompson Lane for cross-town travel. You're close to international dining on Nolensville Pike and a short drive to Melrose or 12 South. The trade-off is fewer walkable amenities directly in the residential streets, but the value is hard to beat.
Woodbine sits near the Nolensville Pike corridor with International Market, El Ray Azteca, and Anatolia. Woodbine Park provides green space within the neighborhood. You're minutes from I-440 for downtown access, Thompson Lane for east-west connections, and close to the Melrose and Berry Hill districts for shopping and dining.
Explore Nearby
Connect with an Abode agent who knows Woodbineinside and out — from the best streets to the hidden gems.