Lol!!! I live on $740 a month on SS. I'm retired and live alone here in eastern Tennessee. I receive no help from anyone however I survive. I would have liked to have owned my own home with a garden and a few chickens ,but ,sadly, i rent a house instead. Luckily my rent is cheap $600 a month with no gov funding. It's clean and decorated with things I love. I drive a 93 Chevy truck my only vehicle. I'm not complaining. Life is what u make of it. I paint paintings, love my cat, hike, yard sale, go camping and have food on the table. It may not be steak nor meat every nite but I eat. I receive a few food stamps but since I have SS income its not as much. My town has a population of 3500. Im thankful for what I have tho. As long as I'm capable of taking care of myself I hope to live out my life here God willing lol .
We are moving up to eastern Tn late June of next year from Florida. Looking for a simple town with a simple life to do the same things you like. Camping especially. Plus we ride motorcycles. We are 60 and 66.5. Can I ask what town you’re in?
Of all the comments from all the videos about Tennessee I've been watching, your comment is the best, by far. It's so refreshing to hear from someone with such a positive attitude and is so content. I have one question, though. How does the summer heat and humidity of Eastern or NE Tennessee compare to Middle Tennessee? Thanks!
The low life is the best I’m happy your at peace I live in a. Country town in North Carolina thinking about buying land let’s see what Tennessee has in store
My utilities alone would swallow up that remaining $140, and my car insurance is more than that, jacked over the past 3 years from about $75 to $202, and it is a 2007 sedan with just shy of 200K miles (was a commute car). But $600 to rent a house is amazing, and in my area, a 1 bedroom apartment is about $1,100 on up and renting a 3 bedroom house, about $3,200. Thank God I bought my house years and years ago, and my payment, with just about 4 years left, is less than anyone pays for rent. They gentrified my 'hood, and no way could I buy into it at the rates they go for now. A neighbor bought a house on the block a couple of years ago and paid $100,000 over the asking price because of a bidding war. Crazy. And too many fleeing Californians are moving in, I'd like to go away. Their attitudes and behavior is abominable. They wreck their state, then go running to conservative states to go wreck them as well. I'd prefer they lie in the bed they made, personally.. I'd be a good addition to TN, I would not bring what they do not want there, for sure.
Good summary. One pro that was omitted was that Tennessee is a free state. This was very obvious during the Covid hysteria that hit much of the country. Tennessee did not overreact like many states did. Tennessee is a very conservative state. If you are a Conservative, you will probably like it here. If you consider yourself progressive, or liberal, or left, not so much.
Free in some ways not in others: marijuana is still illegal. If you are a whiskey fan... illegal to have liquor shipped to you from out of state. Abortion is illegal in all cases. Various laws banning various different things. The religious nuts are in charge of the legislators- - this is not what I would call "freedom". On the other hand, self defense is ok, free to have guns and the government pretty much stays out of the way in other matters.
@@RLMorris42 And people who feel as you do about these issues would be well-advised to find a state which is more suited to them. There are plenty of choices.
We moved to middle Tennessee 5 years ago and love everything about it! I lived in Illinois and California before that, so this was a huge change that I didn’t know I needed. Life here is so much less stressful and the people here are so much nicer.
@@22Abigail22 Really going to be based on your employer and type of insurance you have. By overall healthcare costs it’s ranked 9th but that’s because 9% are uninsured. If you have good employer insurance it’s really not a concern
I've lived in Tennessee for 45 years and have traveled most of the U.S. Coming home is always something that brings a comfort the minute I cross the state line. Sweet tea, southern accents, and southern cooking are my favorites. We enjoy a mild climate most of the year and seldom see much snow. Nashville, Memphis, Chattanooga, and Knoxville seem to be melting pots, so you're likely to experience people groups from all around the world. However, taking a country drive to places off the beaten path will help you discover places that time hasn't touched in 50 years.
I'm 54 and my wife and I are VERY worried about our future, gas and food prices rising daily. We have had our savings dwindle with the cost of living into the stratosphere, and we are finding it impossible to replace them. We can get by, but can't seem to get ahead. My condolences to anyone retiring in this crisis, 30 years nonstop just for a crooked system to take all you worked for.
I feel your pain mate, as a fellow retiree, I’d suggest you look into passive index fund investing and learn some more. For me, I had my share of ups and downs when I first started looking for a consistent passive income so I hired an expert advisor for aid, and following her advice, I poured $30k in value stocks and digital assets, Up to 200k so far and pretty sure I'm ready for whatever comes.
@@temmyolarewaju9371 That's actually quite impressive, I could use some Info on your FA, I am looking to make a change on my finances this year as well
if you claim anything to be a certain way because "the ones on the other side" messed it up, you have your own head stuffed up your keister. Blue and red, conservative liberal, The government is screwing us all and promoting propaganda to make us think were doing it to each other! (divide and conquer! were at each others throats) foolish thoughts.
I moved to Knoxville in 04, from NW Mo. I was blown away from day 1. 15 years later, I was forced to move back to Mo. I miss TN and her people every day. 😢
I moved to southern middle TN 9 months ago because this is where I want to live out my remaining time on earth. I was the very first generation born outside of TN 57 years ago as my mom's family is from eastern TN, dads family from west TN. I now live in a very wooded hilltop area which is beautiful every which way you look. Although I live an hour south of Nashville, I have to work in and around Nashville which is a long commute in extremely heavy traffic every morning and afternoon. The reward of course is when I arrive home in Lewis County which is beautiful every where you look. As for cost of living and especially insurance, it is outrageously high but I've made up my mind that my life is much better down here versus the rat race I lived up in Indiana. I should've moved here decades ago but I was so busy with work that there was no time to think about upending my life and moving south. Well I finally did it and thrilled with my new life and job. I hit the ground running when I moved here but sadly I'm only making 1/3rd the income I was used to and that is the price I had to pay and have to live with. I don't have the resources I was used to but now I have a life which I never had before due to work and approaching my 60's, it was an acceptable trade-off. I'm in a good place now and I'm happy.
Grew up in Hickman County and have relatives in Hohenewald. Hickman, Lewis, Perry, and Maury have some of the best hunting, fishing, and most beautiful scenery in the state. It goes without saying that the folks there are absolutely wonderful.
I've been here five years and I'm starting to come around to the overall tax situation here, it's going to be difficult to beat the tax situation, here versus overall in the U.S.A. And he did spend time highlighting that point. The price point on single family homes your going to find that hard to beat also, that with being able to afford it once you bought it!
As someone that hopes to move to TN by summer time from central Florida it seems like such a breath of fresh air ! I visted TN and Gatlinburg traffic was nothing compared to i4 ,i75,275 . And land lock is fine with me! It still has plenty to do out doors with out a over crowded beach and the humid heat here ! And property tax and insurance here in florida is laughable!! I am so excited!!
I’m glad you wrote this. I’ve been doing some comparisons and it seems like we would save a ton with the much lower property taxes and insurance costs there. Keep us posted on your move progress!
There are times though when traffic in Gatlinburg can be an absolute nightmare. It is often faster to walk through the main drag than to drive. If you come during a busy time, study maps and figure out the alternate routes around town. Also, during busy times waits to get into a restaurant in town can take a long, long time. Research in advance and get on a wait list before even heading to go eat.
I lived in South Florida over 30 years I do not miss it The restrictions taxes permits makes it impossible for the average person to get ahead. Tennessee is more my style 😎
Great video! Moved to Middle Tennessee from the Midwest in 1996 expecting to stay maybe two years :) It's hard to leave a place with great neighborhoods, beautiful houses, a wonderful cultural life, friendly people and great food. Oh and low taxes and mild winters! Summer is a bear with the heat/humidity, but our outdoor season is roughly 8 months out of the year, and when I'm sitting on my patio in the sun with just a light sweater in the middle of March I am so thankful I'm down here. My neighborhood has gotten a direct hit by two tornadoes since I moved down here, so it's definitely a thing, however pick your poison no matter where you live: severe heat, drought, blizzards, mudslides, wildfires, tornadoes, hurricanes, earthquakes...
Wow! Very comprehensive report. I came to Tennessee in 1988 by way of the military, when relatives would ask me about Tennessee I would tell them it was horrible. I hope not too many people watch this, because it’s fine just the way it is now. By the way, I came from California and don’t plan on moving back.
Watch your ass girl when it comes to realtors and home builders. IT IS DEFINATLY A BUYER BEWARE STATE. VERY CLANNISH PEOPLE. Look around hard and save yourself a lot of grief. DO NOT MOVE TO TENNESSEE!
@@heathermiller5413 I wouldn't necessarily say Texas is *BAD* per se, but it's certainly not what I like. I'm coming from the perspective of someone who has lived in 15 different states and has moved around quite a bit, so I've got a pretty good idea of what I like and what I don't like. It's enormous--so it may depend on where you live. I live in Corpus Christi which is extremely different from the rest of Texas. My main desire to leave Texas is the lack of natural beauty (from my own subjective preference) and how far away I am from literally everything. I personally find Texas to be very, very ugly but I like mountains, trees, rivers, lakes, greenery. Texans will argue there are lots of beautiful parts of the state (including Big Bend, The Hill Country and even Corpus Christi where I live ... I just hate the beach lol), but having grown up in Colorado and Hawaii I'm just spoiled when it comes to my perception of beauty I guess. lol. I also miss seasons ... the climate here is super hot and I'm miserable most of the year. The culture is not something I particularly care for, either. Again, not *BAD* ... just not my vibe. Things (and often people) here are big, loud, prideful and in-your-face. I find the driving here to be horrific and I find it very hard to find peace. And I also am seeking a lower cost of living. But there are lots of benefits to living in Texas, too. I guess it just depends on what your priorities are. I'd love to answer any questions you might have about my experiences with Texas to help you make a decision.
My question is how good is the soil in Eastern Tennessee? I am currently developing a 20 acre forest into a small homestead/farm. We have clay soil. It can be improved over time. However I have considered just packing up and moving to a less populated area. We live in Upstate SC and I foresee never ending massive population growth in the near and continuous future here. Two hundred acres of never devolved land next to us just sold and it has been cut flat to the red clay. There will now be a couple thousand people next door to us. Heartbreaking. I wanted to develop this land in hopes my grandchildren could continue on farming it and have a great place to live near a city but isolated. Well that dream was crushed. Its happening all around this area. That land next to us has always been forest. I guess it seemed we were safe. Nothing lasts forever. 😢 Terry
God willing I’ll be moving to your beautiful state soon!! I absolutely love Tennessee, you are so right the southern hospitality is unbelievable, coming from Illinois which is, well I wont say it.
My husband was in the military and we’ve lived all over the country and overseas. From my experience there are friendly people everywhere! I’m actually tired of people saying the people in the south are so much friendlier than other states. I’ve seen several comments already of residents not wanting others to move in and “change” their state. Very sad and small minded. FYI I grew up in Illinois and Iowa
@@maggie0940 if our state is good, why would we want you to move here and change it? @BMW Dan, you are welcomed to TN. The main problem we have is with people moving here from states with a higher cost of living, and paying inflated prices for property. Incomes for the average Tennessean have not elevated at the same rate property prices have. Maybe you can understand what a problem this has become for natives. Help us out by getting a really good deal when you buy a place.
@@dotjohnson231You may be missing one point. That is people moving to your area from other states are not the people setting the pricing standards. Its your own local greedy realtors doing so. They are likely mostly native people from your area. The same thing is happening here where I live. Their greed and lust for money destroys the very place they came from. They have no consideration for the people of their area. They just want all the money they can get their hands on. Terry
@@ForestToFarm I understand, but the reason local people can set those prices is that people from the other areas are able to pay it. If no one is buying, the prices come down. But thanks for your thoughts. Greed is not restricted to any one area of the country.
I love my home in Houston and Texas will always be my first love, but I consider Knoxville my second home. Tennessee is a wonderful place with incredibly friendly people.
We lived in Dickinson, Texas for 4 years and hated it. Even before Hurricane Harvey sent 28 inches of bayou water into our home. Grotesque humidity, fire ants, cockroaches. Good to now be in the Rocky Mountains.
I would include healthcare, particularly for people considering moving to small towns/rural areas as a negative. If you want good healthcare and good assisted living facilities, move to Nashville. I live in northeast TN in a small town about an hour away from Knoxville. Our Area Regional Hospital and the few other ARHs near us are awful.
Here's a secret however that I've been seeing in private groups, a good chunk of people born and raised in Tn, is sick of everyone from out of state moving into Tennessee.
That is true everywhere. The population is growing everywhere and people move around. Just my opinion but based on what I hear and see people say. It seems there is no longer a safe place to escape population growth and its likely to continue to get worse in the coming years. Love those around you and make the best of life with them is my motto. 😊 Terry
@@ForestToFarmso true there is a couple moved here from California they have loud dogs bark all night Chattanooga now is so congested the traffic is horrible but have been here 73 years love my home and the city
I was from Texas been there for 32 years moved to Oregon for the money. Ever since California had a shakeup every single good state had seen a influx of people move in. Austin is where my heart is and it's ruined by these liberal idiots and now I can't move back.
Well they’re just gonna have to get over it. They don’t own the state no matter how many generations of their pappy’s and granny’s have been there. That’s life. People move and things change.
I have lived here in East Tennessee since 2005 from Albany, NY area. I retired and headed south. Wouldn't live anywhere else. You can find anything you want here. Cost of living is so much less than New York. My pension goes a long way here.
Humidity in Los Angeles and San Francisco are totally different kind of humidity, their humidity is from the ocean air not relative humidity hanging in the air heated up and sticky and oppressive.
I enjoy knowing the pros and cons and you are right, there is no perfect place but I believe the pros outweighs the cons from my research. Honestly the only thing that scares me is allergies. I will definitely have to deal with that if we live there. We are very familiar to paying high sales tax which I prefer with no state income tax and heavy traffic out here in Washington state. It is a very high cost of living out here in every way which is why we are considering moving to NE Tennessee. Weather is not perfect anywhere but living in a place that gets rain more than half the year in WA really is depressing! I think dealing with allergies might be worth seeing the sun more often. Really enjoyed your video. Thank you.
We have family in, I believe, Bellevue, and definitely Seattle WA and expect them back in Tennessee. My cousin and his wife are professors at a Seattle University and that has become a place that’s probably not the best one to raise a family. FYI, The western part of Tennessee is one of the worst places for allergies in America, perhaps even the world. However, when we go to East, Tennessee in the mountains, my allergies improve almost 100%. Hope to see y’all there!
@@thejackrabbithole-5311 We live in Bellevue and are looking to purchase a retirement home outside of Nashville. Overall from what I have read it seems like a great quality of life financially and offers many outdoor activities which we love. Knoxville looks beautiful but without any major airports with non stop flights wouldn’t work for us given we will be flying back to Seattle often to see our kids. I have heard eastern Tennessee Knoxville area is worse in terms of allergies. Even if we end up in middle Tennessee I will need to get shots for my allergies. No plans considering western Tennessee for numerous reasons. We are visiting Nashville in June so we can get a better sense of the suburbs outside of Nashville.
I moved to southeast lower Tennessee from southeast lower Michigan. I know all about traffic coming from the Detroit area. Love it here, hardly any snow. Too much in Michigan. Bitter cold long winters is not for me.
Being interested in Tennessee as a retirement destination, I'm finding the real estate agent based channels leave out critical information. Channels like Nick Johnson's give it all. Things like: demographics, average school graduation level, crime stats, average income of the population, homeless areas and drug usage, meth, and level of employment to name a few.
NO real estate agent is going to give you the honest to God truth linking a particular racial demographic with crime. lol But we all know. WE ALL KNOW. wink wink
Without a doubt, the most succinctly thorough and fair assessment of a state that is one of my favorites. Weeks in Memphis. Months in Murfreesboro and Gallatin. Spring Nationals at Bristol. Great people. Great music. Great food. Great solitude if or when you need it.
I live in Nashville, traffic is the worst. My office is 14 miles away, from my driveway to the office, it takes me an hour to an hour and a half each way. Other than that, it's an ok place to live.
The first place I found out charges tax on food was MO, where My Aunt and Uncle lived. I'm originally from California and now live in Colorado and both these States do not charge sales tax on food or water.
I got that rude awakening when I left California too. People already have a hard time feeding their families; why must state's make it worse with grocery tax!
I love Tennessee! I visited 8 times to Clarksville, Memphis, Nashville, Knoxville & Chattanooga. Driven through the Smokey Moutains and been on the Lookout Moutain I encourage people to visit. The food is great and overall the people were very friendly. I would love to relocate there is a consideration. I am looking more at Chattanooga.Memphis real estate is pricey to me and I would live in Ak to work in Memphis if I consider, but more interest in the Southeast to live.
Do any of you people actually truly believe that people are uprooting their entire lives and moving back east just to change it into California? Or do you just repeat everything you see on Fox News and Facebook?
Our property tax is super low. About $850 a year for a $375000 home ! In Michigan I would be paying almost $4000 for the same. That makes your house payment significantly lower. When I lived in Texas, which I also loved, Property taxes were like Michigan. Great video. Thanks.
@@TNVAHomeTeam Searching homes, etc to see whats out there. Right now, in Valdosta, a New 3/2/2, 1450sq ft on 1/3 acre is $222,000. Not seeing much that way
I have 1 more year to go til I finish my degree then I plan to head down next summer from Ohio. Always loved visiting TN especially Gatlinburg is so beautiful! And people are so nice
We just visited Pigeon Forge about a month ago. Even though it's a tourist area, the people are definitely more friendly than here in Indianapolis! I really enjoyed it!😊
Excellent information for potential real estate buyers. It is such a beautiful state to visit and enjoy music and wildlife in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Have a fantastic day!
FYI, San Francisco is cold and foggy most of the year, with cool-to-cold "sea breezes" -- so humidity is not a problem -- at all. SF's problems are not weather-related, except it's too cold to grow a tomato.
What an outstanding presentation! Extremely well articulated points. We have friends that moved to the Bristol area, from here in the Memphis area and are happy there, almost beyond description. Same for friends that moved to Lebanon, not like Beirut, Tennessee 😉 We too, plan to move to middle, or east, Tennessee from the Memphis area. Memphis is not generally representative of the rest of our fine state. To those we would love to welcome here; Please, if your leaving high tyranny, high taxes and high crime behind, don’t vote for the policies that foment those liabilities. Otherwise, why not just stay where you’re at?
Coming from Illinois the sales tax was 9% so coming to TN where it is 9.75% is nothing compared to how much higher the income and property tax is in Illinois. My property taxes in Illinois was around $10,000/year where a comparable home her in TN is about $1,000/year!
We just moved the East Tennessee spring of 2024, and I can say, Tennessee’s greatest asset is its people. They are genuinely nice here, courteous and friendly. We love the state’s beauty; we sometimes have deer visit our wooded back yard. We are both retired and have easily left our other life behind. We love this state; it *is* “home”.
The reason traffic is so bad is because of all these people moving here. I was born and raised in Nashville and due to all the people moving here Nash is not the same. It's changed and not for the better. I wish TN could be closed.
@CindyCoe The State of Tennessee government will not ever close off migrants from other states because of the revenue from the growth. This would be reversed if a TN state income tax (highway tolls too) were ever implemented. People would stop moving in and would slow business growth. Tennessee is missing out on a lot of revenue by not implementing a State income tax.😁
I've been looking at moving to either the Johnson city area or Springfield MO. I live in Illinois and my biggest complaint is the lack of quality lakes to fish and nature preserves to camp. In Central Illinois we tiny lakes and tiny nature preserves, the closest good chunk of woodland is like 5 hours away in Southern Illinois. As a plumber, I wanna be close to a good size city to work in yet have a rual home on a few acres just outside of whatever city. I've got family in both areas and I've camped down there a handful of times, I like both areas.
Alot of people have been moving to my home town of morristown. As a result alot of new construction of homes has been happening. Not a terrible thing, however it is annoying that rather than building actual family homes, there seems to be a focus on rentable town house style homes.
I was just in Morristown last week. I used to go there for my job 10 years ago. I loved the people and the area. I thought to myself, “I may be able to actually live here”. Being from rural CT it really reminds me of home. Fast forward 10 years and I am still wanting to move to eastern TN. I can tell you I left CT thinking it had changed, I now live in Tampa Bay and it has gone absolutely nuts! Morristown may have a few new businesses and restaurants, but it feels (thankfully) pretty much the same to me. Hope those moving in won’t try to change its beauty or people!
That’s discouraging about Union City area. My friend moved south of town by outskirts. 1 acre of land and fixer. The neighbors have been super nice mowing his lawn before he moved in and the other neighbor has some cattle and garden grown food he sells him. Seemed like nice people.
I thought hubby & I would end up in Tennessee, but an so glad we chose Kentucky instead! Our sales tax & other taxes are lower, cost of living is lower & not as crowded in western Kentucky.
I'm from Bristol too. I moved to Gatlinburg with Wyndham/Fairfield in 2005 and stayed there til 2012... I've been in Myrtle Beach since.. havent been in Bristol since 2009
I've spent my life living in San Diego, California, and Henderson Nv. The only thing keeping me from moving to Tennessee is that I'm used to very little rain and sunny almost every day.
Not a bad job describing Tennessee, I am a Vet running away from California. Let me cover a few points. Regular gas is about 3 bucks vs California 5-7 per gallon. Pro Constitutional Carry state, so be polite. I haven’t experienced 1 incident of road rage yet. Mostly Christian Conservative background. All that Hollywood Pedophilia crap not tolerated here. These country boys might not call the cops if you mess with their kids. Hard core drugs not tolerated either, weed legal for medical use only. Haven’t seen any gang activities or graffiti anywhere in Johnson City. Vets get 175k for 100% disability waiver on property taxes. Not too much homelessness. Plenty of blue collar jobs at restaurants and fast food places. Haven’t seen any pollution yet, not sure if that Ohio train mess going to mess up fishing or not. Tennessee mostly white, black, Hispanic, and very few Asians. Tennessee political atmosphere, middle and eastern Conservative Country folk. Memphis might be a bit more liberal. Liberals in Nashville would be considered moderate Republicans by California or NY standards. Things people in Tennessee might take offense to, you messing with their money, business, family, kids, culture, bad manners. Things they won’t agree with usually, CRT, Transgender Education, Santanism, Occultism. This is mostly a Pro Constitutional-Pro American State. How Conservative is Tennessee? Republican Governor Lee won 70% of the vote, De Santis won with 65%. Not sure what schools and curriculum are like, haven’t taught here yet, so I don’t know what kids are like. JC has a big Vet center, so big, easy to get lost in. No traffic in JC, longest stop I have made in JC is at a traffic light lol. Speed limits slow, got speed traps, drive slow in school zones. Lots of churches sprinkled all over the place in JC. My area has lots of cops, these country cops got helicopters too. Forget about running from them, only so many ways in and out, you not outrunning a helicopter or the radio. Just take the ticket and go to traffic school lol. Lots of National Parks and Forest area, country farms etc etc. Don’t hear too many issues with cryptids being violent or too troublesome in city areas. A few hours drive to neighboring states, Kentucky, Missouri, S. Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, Georgia, Alabama etc etc. The Cons, they tend to do things slow, country speed. Usually quiet and peaceful, some people don’t actually lock their doors here at night. However, they will shoot you. People running from Ca, NY, Tx have raised property values, good for people living here but bad for people buying. Food selection is decent but need more international restaurants. Lots of BBQ and Southern Comfort food. Things lacking are karaoke, Korean BBQs, Korean Saunas in Johnson City area. They don’t have a bunch of natural Hot Springs, lots of beauty spas though.
I live in a small town about an hour West of JC. Our "fancy" restaurant , there is only one, is Gondolier or you can go to the next town which has a Cracker Barrel 🤣 East TN is not the place to find vegetarian/vegan. It is meat and potatoes country.
We're moving to TN this year after my military retirement out of NY, i cannot wait. Theres two neighborhoods in Chattanooga and three neighborhoods in Knoxville we're looking at. At first, i was all about the ines in Knoxville, after a lot of research, i think Chattanooga is going to be the better, long term option, id like to hear your opinion. Great video, thanks.
You don't mention anything about North West Tennessee, such as the Union City area. I keep hearing about crime but not sure I have heard otherwise. Any pros and cons for that area?
Your comparison of humidity is incorrect. The deciding factor is dew point. I am from SF and 74% humidity in Ca vs 74 in TN are two different planets. Calif is dry, TN is wet.
As far as 2023 goes, what city would be good for me? I'm a black conservative, 40 years young, no kids never married but looking to settle down eventually. Have lived all over the globe but will be coming by way of San Antonio, TX. I work hard for what I have. Not shy, have a great sense of humor and am a veteran. Thanks all for your input in advance.
TN is what Florida was 30 years ago when I moved to Central Florida. It was smallish on the outskirts all around Orlando but each year it got worse and worse, huge housing development were cow fields and orang groves used to be, then of course that all needs more roads, stores and retail people services and on an on. I thought about moving to TN but it seems only a matter a maybe 5 years before it is getting like Florida. The whole east coast of the USA is very, very crowed.
Born in Abingdon. Settled in the State of Franklin, aka East TN. Love it here. No place is perfect. Corruption everywhere. But this community suits me.
If you love snow, it'll depend on where you were to pick in TN. In our area (northeast corner) we get about 12 inches in a year. It might affect travel 1 or 2 days a year unless you live in the mountains. I'm just over an hour drive to 3 ski resorts in the NC mountains so I used to ski several time a year. You won't find much to do with snow once you get in middle or western TN.
When I was there I thought it was funny that people would look at a thousand-foot "hill" & call it a mountain. It's true that some of those places in California have high humidity but they are not combined with the kind of heat you get. Big difference.
NE TN native..lived here my whole life except for my time in the military. Your review was subjective for the most part and take it from someone who grew up here in the 70s-80s,this region has went downhill FAST in the last three years. Sign of the times I suppose. It is all about the mighty dollar I guess. Call someplace paradise kiss it goodbye.
Two pros I would add. Tennessee is a common sense red state, (with the exception of Memphis). I've live in Tennessee since 1991 and Governor Bill Lee is the best Governor I've seen. Number 2 is the food. The variety is vast based on what part of the state you're in but all is good. People in Tennessee love to eat. 🙂
I tried for months to get a house under contract in Tennessee or Kentucky with no luck. How much is insurance in either of these dates for homeowners and auto?
Thanks for the upddate! Just a suggestion. When you are being photographed or videotaped, try not to have a light on "behind" you unless you have a stronger one in front of you. You need the light on your face. It's hard to see what you're saying without it. Just sayin' ... have a great day!!!
I own a house on a small lot in White County. My domestic partner is buried on the property. I need help with knowing the laws on how to zone it or declare a burial site on the property. Can any one help me please.
Thanks for that! I just checked Alltrails & the Ramsey Cascades has been closed since last year due to damage. I wanted to check it out. Charlie's Bunion looks amazing.
@@TNVAHomeTeam At Ramsey the walking spans across the creek may have been damaged. That whole ridge and valley network is a water shed for sure, a lot of logs and rocks that get forced down further and further. Have not done a hike to Charlies Bunion yet.
The housing market here right now is insanely inflated. Some properties have doubled in sale price in the last 2 years. Otherwise I love living in TN traffic in metro areas is getting a bit rough but far from the worst I have seen. Sales tax here is nasty, but no state income tax in exchange.
Perhaps you intended to put with the no income tax pro but there is also no state tax on investment income. They slowly did away with the Hall Tax which was a tax on interest and dividends. Most people don't have to file a state income tax form anymore.
I live in east TN. This video didn't mention how the bad the public school system is -- absolutely terrible for good education. Also, very few quality services for those with special needs (my daughter has autism). In addition, so many people have moved here during the last few years that the social fabric is going downhill fast, as people are bringing their bad behaviors from other places here. The meth and drug problem here is bad and getting worse every year, which is creating a host of other problems. Lastly, the wait for medical services is always ridiculously long.
Really appreciate your video and the information that you provided. My only criticism is that your state by state comparison was almost exclusive to NY or CA. Comparing to 2 of the most expensive states over and over is not much of a comparison. Whynot include a Missouri or another central state to provide a true comparison?
Lol!!! I live on $740 a month on SS. I'm retired and live alone here in eastern Tennessee. I receive no help from anyone however I survive. I would have liked to have owned my own home with a garden and a few chickens ,but ,sadly, i rent a house instead. Luckily my rent is cheap $600 a month with no gov funding. It's clean and decorated with things I love. I drive a 93 Chevy truck my only vehicle. I'm not complaining. Life is what u make of it. I paint paintings, love my cat, hike, yard sale, go camping and have food on the table. It may not be steak nor meat every nite but I eat. I receive a few food stamps but since I have SS income its not as much. My town has a population of 3500. Im thankful for what I have tho. As long as I'm capable of taking care of myself I hope to live out my life here God willing lol .
YOU are a beautiful American!
We are moving up to eastern Tn late June of next year from Florida. Looking for a simple town with a simple life to do the same things you like. Camping especially. Plus we ride motorcycles. We are 60 and 66.5. Can I ask what town you’re in?
Of all the comments from all the videos about Tennessee I've been watching, your comment is the best, by far. It's so refreshing to hear from someone with such a positive attitude and is so content. I have one question, though. How does the summer heat and humidity of Eastern or NE Tennessee compare to Middle Tennessee? Thanks!
The low life is the best I’m happy your at peace I live in a. Country town in North Carolina thinking about buying land let’s see what Tennessee has in store
My utilities alone would swallow up that remaining $140, and my car insurance is more than that, jacked over the past 3 years from about $75 to $202, and it is a 2007 sedan with just shy of 200K miles (was a commute car). But $600 to rent a house is amazing, and in my area, a 1 bedroom apartment is about $1,100 on up and renting a 3 bedroom house, about $3,200.
Thank God I bought my house years and years ago, and my payment, with just about 4 years left, is less than anyone pays for rent. They gentrified my 'hood, and no way could I buy into it at the rates they go for now. A neighbor bought a house on the block a couple of years ago and paid $100,000 over the asking price because of a bidding war. Crazy.
And too many fleeing Californians are moving in, I'd like to go away. Their attitudes and behavior is abominable. They wreck their state, then go running to conservative states to go wreck them as well. I'd prefer they lie in the bed they made, personally.. I'd be a good addition to TN, I would not bring what they do not want there, for sure.
Good summary. One pro that was omitted was that Tennessee is a free state. This was very obvious during the Covid hysteria that hit much of the country. Tennessee did not overreact like many states did. Tennessee is a very conservative state. If you are a Conservative, you will probably like it here. If you consider yourself progressive, or liberal, or left, not so much.
Toured and purchased my current home in Tennessee while everyone else was “locked down” by the MSM.
Liberals stay out. Please!
Free in some ways not in others: marijuana is still illegal. If you are a whiskey fan... illegal to have liquor shipped to you from out of state. Abortion is illegal in all cases. Various laws banning various different things. The religious nuts are in charge of the legislators- - this is not what I would call "freedom". On the other hand, self defense is ok, free to have guns and the government pretty much stays out of the way in other matters.
@@RLMorris42 And people who feel as you do about these issues would be well-advised to find a state which is more suited to them. There are plenty of choices.
@@gdholmfirth no, I'll stay in Tennessee and advocate for freedom.
We moved to middle Tennessee 5 years ago and love everything about it! I lived in Illinois and California before that, so this was a huge change that I didn’t know I needed. Life here is so much less stressful and the people here are so much nicer.
What town did you move to and what is itnlike living there?
I want to move to Tennessee so badly. I'm watching this video for research.
Heck, you lived in the two worst possible places LOL. I was born in IL but successfully escaped
Can you tell us about the health insurance? Would you say is more expensive or just as expensive as the other states
@@22Abigail22 Really going to be based on your employer and type of insurance you have. By overall healthcare costs it’s ranked 9th but that’s because 9% are uninsured. If you have good employer insurance it’s really not a concern
You failed to mention one of Tennessees most striking features. The land is so beautiful it makes you want to cry.
I've lived in Tennessee for 45 years and have traveled most of the U.S. Coming home is always something that brings a comfort the minute I cross the state line. Sweet tea, southern accents, and southern cooking are my favorites. We enjoy a mild climate most of the year and seldom see much snow. Nashville, Memphis, Chattanooga, and Knoxville seem to be melting pots, so you're likely to experience people groups from all around the world. However, taking a country drive to places off the beaten path will help you discover places that time hasn't touched in 50 years.
I'm 54 and my wife and I are VERY worried about our future, gas and food prices rising daily. We have had our savings dwindle with the cost of living into the stratosphere, and we are finding it impossible to replace them. We can get by, but can't seem to get ahead. My condolences to anyone retiring in this crisis, 30 years nonstop just for a crooked system to take all you worked for.
I feel your pain mate, as a fellow retiree, I’d suggest you look into passive index fund investing and learn some more. For me, I had my share of ups and downs when I first started looking for a consistent passive income so I hired an expert advisor for aid, and following her advice, I poured $30k in value stocks and digital assets, Up to 200k so far and pretty sure I'm ready for whatever comes.
@@temmyolarewaju9371 That's actually quite impressive, I could use some Info on your FA, I am looking to make a change on my finances this year as well
@@BrianEscobar-90 My advisor is VICTORIA CARMEN SANTAELLA;
You can look her up online
Nah I Can't say I can relate, VICTORIA CARMEN SANTAELLA charge is one-off and pretty reasonable when compared to what I benefit in returns.
Big difference between west Tenn and east Tenn regarding safety. You could not pay me to live around Memphis.
Jim Smith: is Western Tennessee safer area?
@@stevenkaskus6173 Oh hell no.
As long as you stay out of Memphis and Jackson areas you'll be fine.
@@jimsmith8324 But you wouldn't be able to afford Nashville.
😮💨🙄🙄🙄
If you move from a blue, liberal, progressive state please don’t try to turn our state to be like the one you moved away from. In God We Trust🙏
Amen.
if you claim anything to be a certain way because "the ones on the other side" messed it up, you have your own head stuffed up your keister. Blue and red, conservative liberal, The government is screwing us all and promoting propaganda to make us think were doing it to each other! (divide and conquer! were at each others throats) foolish thoughts.
Amen. Live in CA, 100% TEAM MAGA
💯%.
I moved to Knoxville in 04, from NW Mo. I was blown away from day 1. 15 years later, I was forced to move back to Mo. I miss TN and her people every day. 😢
I moved to southern middle TN 9 months ago because this is where I want to live out my remaining time on earth. I was the very first generation born outside of TN 57 years ago as my mom's family is from eastern TN, dads family from west TN. I now live in a very wooded hilltop area which is beautiful every which way you look. Although I live an hour south of Nashville, I have to work in and around Nashville which is a long commute in extremely heavy traffic every morning and afternoon. The reward of course is when I arrive home in Lewis County which is beautiful every where you look. As for cost of living and especially insurance, it is outrageously high but I've made up my mind that my life is much better down here versus the rat race I lived up in Indiana. I should've moved here decades ago but I was so busy with work that there was no time to think about upending my life and moving south. Well I finally did it and thrilled with my new life and job. I hit the ground running when I moved here but sadly I'm only making 1/3rd the income I was used to and that is the price I had to pay and have to live with. I don't have the resources I was used to but now I have a life which I never had before due to work and approaching my 60's, it was an acceptable trade-off. I'm in a good place now and I'm happy.
Grew up in Hickman County and have relatives in Hohenewald. Hickman, Lewis, Perry, and Maury have some of the best hunting, fishing, and most beautiful scenery in the state. It goes without saying that the folks there are absolutely wonderful.
I’ve lived here in TN for 25 years - I still learned a lot from your video. You did a great job!
I've been here five years and I'm starting to come around to the overall tax situation here, it's going to be difficult to beat the tax situation, here versus overall in the U.S.A. And he did spend time highlighting that point. The price point on single family homes your going to find that hard to beat also, that with being able to afford it once you bought it!
As someone that hopes to move to TN by summer time from central Florida it seems like such a breath of fresh air ! I visted TN and Gatlinburg traffic was nothing compared to i4 ,i75,275 . And land lock is fine with me! It still has plenty to do out doors with out a over crowded beach and the humid heat here ! And property tax and insurance here in florida is laughable!! I am so excited!!
I’m glad you wrote this. I’ve been doing some comparisons and it seems like we would save a ton with the much lower property taxes and insurance costs there. Keep us posted on your move progress!
For same reasons, moving from South Florida to TN.
There are times though when traffic in Gatlinburg can be an absolute nightmare. It is often faster to walk through the main drag than to drive. If you come during a busy time, study maps and figure out the alternate routes around town. Also, during busy times waits to get into a restaurant in town can take a long, long time. Research in advance and get on a wait list before even heading to go eat.
@@YourRightSide I just saw your insurance rates. Holy Deeeesantis!
I lived in South Florida over 30 years
I do not miss it
The restrictions taxes permits makes it impossible for the average person to get ahead. Tennessee is more my style 😎
Moving to Knoxville in 3 weeks when our home is built!
Love Tennessee!
🤠✝️🇺🇸
Hi can I ask you who’d you use as your builder and any info you can share with me in relation to that, Tia!
I moved to the Knoxville area two years ago. Absolutely love it here!
Great video! Moved to Middle Tennessee from the Midwest in 1996 expecting to stay maybe two years :) It's hard to leave a place with great neighborhoods, beautiful houses, a wonderful cultural life, friendly people and great food. Oh and low taxes and mild winters! Summer is a bear with the heat/humidity, but our outdoor season is roughly 8 months out of the year, and when I'm sitting on my patio in the sun with just a light sweater in the middle of March I am so thankful I'm down here. My neighborhood has gotten a direct hit by two tornadoes since I moved down here, so it's definitely a thing, however pick your poison no matter where you live: severe heat, drought, blizzards, mudslides, wildfires, tornadoes, hurricanes, earthquakes...
Wow! Very comprehensive report. I came to Tennessee in 1988 by way of the military, when relatives would ask me about Tennessee I would tell them it was horrible. I hope not too many people watch this, because it’s fine just the way it is now. By the way, I came from California and don’t plan on moving back.
The bugs are huge, it never snows, and the summer is like jumpin out tha shower straight into clothes.
Keep telling them it is horrible please.
@@dotjohnson231 They need a “lol” option ha ha. I agree with what you are saying for my location as well.
Terry
Looking to leave Texas and relocate to NE Tennessee. Watching these videos definitely get me jazzed but I really appreciate the truth with the cons.
Watch your ass girl when it comes to realtors and home builders. IT IS DEFINATLY A BUYER BEWARE STATE. VERY CLANNISH PEOPLE. Look around hard and save yourself a lot of grief. DO NOT MOVE TO TENNESSEE!
Good choice, have a great time in Tennessee.
Can I ask, why is Texas bad? I'm trying to decide between TX and TN and I've heard from other people that they are tired of TX as well..
@@heathermiller5413 I wouldn't necessarily say Texas is *BAD* per se, but it's certainly not what I like. I'm coming from the perspective of someone who has lived in 15 different states and has moved around quite a bit, so I've got a pretty good idea of what I like and what I don't like. It's enormous--so it may depend on where you live. I live in Corpus Christi which is extremely different from the rest of Texas. My main desire to leave Texas is the lack of natural beauty (from my own subjective preference) and how far away I am from literally everything. I personally find Texas to be very, very ugly but I like mountains, trees, rivers, lakes, greenery. Texans will argue there are lots of beautiful parts of the state (including Big Bend, The Hill Country and even Corpus Christi where I live ... I just hate the beach lol), but having grown up in Colorado and Hawaii I'm just spoiled when it comes to my perception of beauty I guess. lol. I also miss seasons ... the climate here is super hot and I'm miserable most of the year. The culture is not something I particularly care for, either. Again, not *BAD* ... just not my vibe. Things (and often people) here are big, loud, prideful and in-your-face. I find the driving here to be horrific and I find it very hard to find peace. And I also am seeking a lower cost of living. But there are lots of benefits to living in Texas, too. I guess it just depends on what your priorities are. I'd love to answer any questions you might have about my experiences with Texas to help you make a decision.
@Samantha Beaty Thank You!
My question is how good is the soil in Eastern Tennessee? I am currently developing a 20 acre forest into a small homestead/farm. We have clay soil. It can be improved over time. However I have considered just packing up and moving to a less populated area. We live in Upstate SC and I foresee never ending massive population growth in the near and continuous future here. Two hundred acres of never devolved land next to us just sold and it has been cut flat to the red clay. There will now be a couple thousand people next door to us. Heartbreaking. I wanted to develop this land in hopes my grandchildren could continue on farming it and have a great place to live near a city but isolated. Well that dream was crushed. Its happening all around this area. That land next to us has always been forest. I guess it seemed we were safe. Nothing lasts forever. 😢
Terry
Agreed.
coming to Tennessee to start new life there in '25 cant wait thx for the tips
God willing I’ll be moving to your beautiful state soon!! I absolutely love Tennessee, you are so right the southern hospitality is unbelievable, coming from Illinois which is, well I wont say it.
My husband was in the military and we’ve lived all over the country and overseas. From my experience there are friendly people everywhere! I’m actually tired of people saying the people in the south are so much friendlier than other states. I’ve seen several comments already of residents not wanting others to move in and “change” their state. Very sad and small minded. FYI I grew up in Illinois and Iowa
@@maggie0940 if our state is good, why would we want you to move here and change it?
@BMW Dan, you are welcomed to TN. The main problem we have is with people moving here from states with a higher cost of living, and paying inflated prices for property. Incomes for the average Tennessean have not elevated at the same rate property prices have. Maybe you can understand what a problem this has become for natives. Help us out by getting a really good deal when you buy a place.
@@dotjohnson231You may be missing one point. That is people moving to your area from other states are not the people setting the pricing standards. Its your own local greedy realtors doing so. They are likely mostly native people from your area. The same thing is happening here where I live. Their greed and lust for money destroys the very place they came from. They have no consideration for the people of their area. They just want all the money they can get their hands on.
Terry
@@ForestToFarm I understand, but the reason local people can set those prices is that people from the other areas are able to pay it. If no one is buying, the prices come down. But thanks for your thoughts. Greed is not restricted to any one area of the country.
I love my home in Houston and Texas will always be my first love, but I consider Knoxville my second home. Tennessee is a wonderful place with incredibly friendly people.
We lived in Dickinson, Texas for 4 years and hated it. Even before Hurricane Harvey sent 28 inches of bayou water into our home. Grotesque humidity, fire ants, cockroaches. Good to now be in the Rocky Mountains.
I would include healthcare, particularly for people considering moving to small towns/rural areas as a negative. If you want good healthcare and good assisted living facilities, move to Nashville. I live in northeast TN in a small town about an hour away from Knoxville. Our Area Regional Hospital and the few other ARHs near us are awful.
I have family in Knoxville- love it there-
I live in a Northern state- r4 seasons
4
Here's a secret however that I've been seeing in private groups, a good chunk of people born and raised in Tn, is sick of everyone from out of state moving into Tennessee.
That is true everywhere. The population is growing everywhere and people move around. Just my opinion but based on what I hear and see people say. It seems there is no longer a safe place to escape population growth and its likely to continue to get worse in the coming years. Love those around you and make the best of life with them is my motto. 😊
Terry
@@ForestToFarmso true there is a couple moved here from California they have loud dogs bark all night Chattanooga now is so congested the traffic is horrible but have been here 73 years love my home and the city
I was from Texas been there for 32 years moved to Oregon for the money. Ever since California had a shakeup every single good state had seen a influx of people move in. Austin is where my heart is and it's ruined by these liberal idiots and now I can't move back.
Well they’re just gonna have to get over it. They don’t own the state no matter how many generations of their pappy’s and granny’s have been there. That’s life. People move and things change.
I have lived here in East Tennessee since 2005 from Albany, NY area. I retired and headed south. Wouldn't live anywhere else. You can find anything you want here. Cost of living is so much less than New York. My pension goes a long way here.
I grew up there too. NY's leadership is destroying a beautiful state.
Humidity in Los Angeles and San Francisco are totally different kind of humidity, their humidity is from the ocean air not relative humidity hanging in the air heated up and sticky and oppressive.
A dew point of 65 and above is what makes it feel “muggy”. High humidity with a low dew point feels good.
I enjoy knowing the pros and cons and you are right, there is no perfect place but I believe the pros outweighs the cons from my research. Honestly the only thing that scares me is allergies. I will definitely have to deal with that if we live there. We are very familiar to paying high sales tax which I prefer with no state income tax and heavy traffic out here in Washington state. It is a very high cost of living out here in every way which is why we are considering moving to NE Tennessee. Weather is not perfect anywhere but living in a place that gets rain more than half the year in WA really is depressing! I think dealing with allergies might be worth seeing the sun more often.
Really enjoyed your video. Thank you.
I'm glad you enjoyed it!
We have family in, I believe, Bellevue, and definitely Seattle WA and expect them back in Tennessee. My cousin and his wife are professors at a Seattle University and that has become a place that’s probably not the best one to raise a family.
FYI, The western part of Tennessee is one of the worst places for allergies in America, perhaps even the world. However, when we go to East, Tennessee in the mountains, my allergies improve almost 100%. Hope to see y’all there!
@@thejackrabbithole-5311 We live in Bellevue and are looking to purchase a retirement home outside of Nashville. Overall from what I have read it seems like a great quality of life financially and offers many outdoor activities which we love. Knoxville looks beautiful but without any major airports with non stop flights wouldn’t work for us given we will be flying back to Seattle often to see our kids. I have heard eastern Tennessee Knoxville area is worse in terms of allergies. Even if we end up in middle Tennessee I will need to get shots for my allergies. No plans considering western Tennessee for numerous reasons. We are visiting Nashville in June so we can get a better sense of the suburbs outside of Nashville.
One of my sisters daily routines (she lives an hour from Memphis) is Diatomaceous Earth and no allergies for her or her dogs.
I found this to be very informative. Even though my family has lived in Nashville for over 200 years, this was very interesting. Nice work!
I moved to southeast lower Tennessee from southeast lower Michigan. I know all about traffic coming from the Detroit area. Love it here, hardly any snow. Too much in Michigan. Bitter cold long winters is not for me.
One of the greatest analysis I have watched so far. Great work, thank you.
Thanks so much for the kind words!
Agreed!
I've learned to use 321 and head north and jump on to 40 and go west to 81 to avoid a good bit of the traffic and stop lights getting out if town
Ive been to Tessessee twice since my friend moved there. It is a truly beautiful state.
I live in SF Bay area and visited TN (Pigeon Forge) last summer - its definitely more humid in TN
Being interested in Tennessee as a retirement destination, I'm finding the real estate agent based channels leave out critical information. Channels like Nick Johnson's give it all. Things like: demographics, average school graduation level, crime stats, average income of the population, homeless areas and drug usage, meth, and level of employment to name a few.
NO real estate agent is going to give you the honest to God truth linking a particular racial demographic with crime. lol But we all know. WE ALL KNOW. wink wink
Maybe Tennessee isn't for you?
@@MrChipBryant😮
A COMPLETE evaluation would help in making that decision. I don't make decisions on mabeys. @@MrChipBryant
Without a doubt, the most succinctly thorough and fair assessment of a state that is one of my favorites. Weeks in Memphis. Months in Murfreesboro and Gallatin. Spring Nationals at Bristol. Great people. Great music. Great food. Great solitude if or when you need it.
Very accurate summary of TN. I came from northeast Ohio and moved to Nashville.
Prices are way too high now in Nashville as expensive as California for real estate now which is crazy!
Nashville is no where near as expensive as California's biggest cities, San Diego, LA and Sf are double the price.
I live in Nashville, traffic is the worst. My office is 14 miles away, from my driveway to the office, it takes me an hour to an hour and a half each way. Other than that, it's an ok place to live.
That’s true. How are you doing? Hope you are fine and staying safe?
My son lives in Sparta Tenn. I love it. Though he does commute to work in Nashville. Sparta a very small quiet town.
The first place I found out charges tax on food was MO, where My Aunt and Uncle lived. I'm originally from California and now live in Colorado and both these States do not charge sales tax on food or water.
The trade off is no state income tax, low registration fees low property tax and gas taxes. Besides even illegals can't dodge the sales tax
I got that rude awakening when I left California too. People already have a hard time feeding their families; why must state's make it worse with grocery tax!
I love Tennessee! I visited 8 times to Clarksville, Memphis, Nashville, Knoxville & Chattanooga. Driven through the Smokey Moutains and been on the Lookout Moutain I encourage people to visit. The food is great and overall the people were very friendly. I would love to relocate there is a consideration. I am looking more at Chattanooga.Memphis real estate is pricey to me and I would live in Ak to work in Memphis if I consider, but more interest in the Southeast to live.
If you move here from California, leave your politics there, don't drag it into our Great State.
Damn haven’t heard this outplayed comment before
Do any of you people actually truly believe that people are uprooting their entire lives and moving back east just to change it into California? Or do you just repeat everything you see on Fox News and Facebook?
Amen!
Our property tax is super low. About $850 a year for a $375000 home ! In Michigan I would be paying almost $4000 for the same. That makes your house payment significantly lower. When I lived in Texas, which I also loved, Property taxes were like Michigan. Great video. Thanks.
I moved to Nashville in 1970 and never looked back. I moved out of the city in 2006 and love the countryside in Dickson County!
From south GA, wife wants to move up there in 2024 for our retirement years. This video is helpful.
Glad we could help.
@@TNVAHomeTeam Searching homes, etc to see whats out there. Right now, in Valdosta, a New 3/2/2, 1450sq ft on 1/3 acre is $222,000. Not seeing much that way
I have 1 more year to go til I finish my degree then I plan to head down next summer from Ohio. Always loved visiting TN especially Gatlinburg is so beautiful! And people are so nice
We just visited Pigeon Forge about a month ago. Even though it's a tourist area, the people are definitely more friendly than here in Indianapolis! I really enjoyed it!😊
I AM LOOKING FORWARD TO LIVE AND RETIRE IN TENNESSEE.❤
Excellent information for potential real estate buyers. It is such a beautiful state to visit and enjoy music and wildlife in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Have a fantastic day!
FYI, San Francisco is cold and foggy most of the year, with cool-to-cold "sea breezes" -- so humidity is not a problem -- at all. SF's problems are not weather-related, except it's too cold to grow a tomato.
What an outstanding presentation! Extremely well articulated points.
We have friends that moved to the Bristol area, from here in the Memphis area and are happy there, almost beyond description. Same for friends that moved to Lebanon, not like Beirut, Tennessee 😉
We too, plan to move to middle, or east, Tennessee from the Memphis area. Memphis is not generally representative of the rest of our fine state.
To those we would love to welcome here; Please, if your leaving high tyranny, high taxes and high crime behind, don’t vote for the policies that foment those liabilities. Otherwise, why not just stay where you’re at?
Coming from Illinois the sales tax was 9% so coming to TN where it is 9.75% is nothing compared to how much higher the income and property tax is in Illinois. My property taxes in Illinois was around $10,000/year where a comparable home her in TN is about $1,000/year!
We just moved the East Tennessee spring of 2024, and I can say, Tennessee’s greatest asset is its people. They are genuinely nice here, courteous and friendly. We love the state’s beauty; we sometimes have deer visit our wooded back yard. We are both retired and have easily left our other life behind. We love this state; it *is* “home”.
How are the medical facilities, hospitals, clinics, etc???
@timgarrett757 - after alot of internet searching, their healthcare is the bottom of the US, just like most southern states.
@timgarrett757 - healthcare in TN ranks at the bottom. Good isn't cheap and cheap isn't good.
Thanks Scott, very informative, great video 👍
My property is split Davidson and Wilson counties. Since February, the value is increasing again after seasonal retreat.
The reason traffic is so bad is because of all these people moving here. I was born and raised in Nashville and due to all the people moving here Nash is not the same. It's changed and not for the better. I wish TN could be closed.
@CindyCoe Yes. Nashville has become very, very, very bad . . . yet, people keep moving there.
@CindyCoe The State of Tennessee government will not ever close off migrants from other states because of the revenue from the growth. This would be reversed if a TN state income tax (highway tolls too) were ever implemented. People would stop moving in and would slow business growth. Tennessee is missing out on a lot of revenue by not implementing a State income tax.😁
@@lenteditor5574maybe you should move to California then if that’s the way you feel.
@@hairywitch4063 why dont you go rundown somebody else's city, Warlock!!!
I know what you mean, when I was living in Chattanooga, my wife and I did most of our shopping in Ft. Oglethorpe.
...or Ringgold. Did a good bit of shopping at the Costco.
I've been looking at moving to either the Johnson city area or Springfield MO. I live in Illinois and my biggest complaint is the lack of quality lakes to fish and nature preserves to camp. In Central Illinois we tiny lakes and tiny nature preserves, the closest good chunk of woodland is like 5 hours away in Southern Illinois. As a plumber, I wanna be close to a good size city to work in yet have a rual home on a few acres just outside of whatever city. I've got family in both areas and I've camped down there a handful of times, I like both areas.
Let us know if we can help.
You would love Dale Hollow Lake above Cookeville TN
Alot of people have been moving to my home town of morristown.
As a result alot of new construction of homes has been happening.
Not a terrible thing, however it is annoying that rather than building actual family homes, there seems to be a focus on rentable town house style homes.
Lived in Motown forr 6 years and left on 2021. Love Cherokee Lake. Miss it so much.
I was just in Morristown last week. I used to go there for my job 10 years ago. I loved the people and the area. I thought to myself, “I may be able to actually live here”. Being from rural CT it really reminds me of home. Fast forward 10 years and I am still wanting to move to eastern TN. I can tell you I left CT thinking it had changed, I now live in Tampa Bay and it has gone absolutely nuts! Morristown may have a few new businesses and restaurants, but it feels (thankfully) pretty much the same to me. Hope those moving in won’t try to change its beauty or people!
That’s discouraging about Union City area. My friend moved south of town by outskirts. 1 acre of land and fixer. The neighbors have been super nice mowing his lawn before he moved in and the other neighbor has some cattle and garden grown food he sells him. Seemed like nice people.
I thought hubby & I would end up in Tennessee, but an so glad we chose Kentucky instead! Our sales tax & other taxes are lower, cost of living is lower & not as crowded in western Kentucky.
I'm from Bristol too. I moved to Gatlinburg with Wyndham/Fairfield in 2005 and stayed there til 2012... I've been in Myrtle Beach since.. havent been in Bristol since 2009
Excellent video- thank you.
Other than Memphis and Jackson, West TN is a good place to live. Huge agricultural area.
Jackson has a nice side on the north and the surrounding counties are a great place with good schools compared to urban Jackson.
I've spent my life living in San Diego, California, and Henderson Nv. The only thing keeping me from moving to Tennessee is that I'm used to very little rain and sunny almost every day.
Not a bad job describing Tennessee, I am a Vet running away from California. Let me cover a few points. Regular gas is about 3 bucks vs California 5-7 per gallon. Pro Constitutional Carry state, so be polite. I haven’t experienced 1 incident of road rage yet. Mostly Christian Conservative background. All that Hollywood Pedophilia crap not tolerated here. These country boys might not call the cops if you mess with their kids. Hard core drugs not tolerated either, weed legal for medical use only. Haven’t seen any gang activities or graffiti anywhere in Johnson City. Vets get 175k for 100% disability waiver on property taxes. Not too much homelessness. Plenty of blue collar jobs at restaurants and fast food places. Haven’t seen any pollution yet, not sure if that Ohio train mess going to mess up fishing or not. Tennessee mostly white, black, Hispanic, and very few Asians. Tennessee political atmosphere, middle and eastern Conservative Country folk. Memphis might be a bit more liberal. Liberals in Nashville would be considered moderate Republicans by California or NY standards. Things people in Tennessee might take offense to, you messing with their money, business, family, kids, culture, bad manners. Things they won’t agree with usually, CRT, Transgender Education, Santanism, Occultism. This is mostly a Pro Constitutional-Pro American State. How Conservative is Tennessee? Republican Governor Lee won 70% of the vote, De Santis won with 65%. Not sure what schools and curriculum are like, haven’t taught here yet, so I don’t know what kids are like. JC has a big Vet center, so big, easy to get lost in. No traffic in JC, longest stop I have made in JC is at a traffic light lol. Speed limits slow, got speed traps, drive slow in school zones. Lots of churches sprinkled all over the place in JC. My area has lots of cops, these country cops got helicopters too. Forget about running from them, only so many ways in and out, you not outrunning a helicopter or the radio. Just take the ticket and go to traffic school lol.
Lots of National Parks and Forest area, country farms etc etc. Don’t hear too many issues with cryptids being violent or too troublesome in city areas. A few hours drive to neighboring states, Kentucky, Missouri, S. Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, Georgia, Alabama etc etc.
The Cons, they tend to do things slow, country speed. Usually quiet and peaceful, some people don’t actually lock their doors here at night. However, they will shoot you. People running from Ca, NY, Tx have raised property values, good for people living here but bad for people buying. Food selection is decent but need more international restaurants. Lots of BBQ and Southern Comfort food. Things lacking are karaoke, Korean BBQs, Korean Saunas in Johnson City area. They don’t have a bunch of natural Hot Springs, lots of beauty spas though.
I live in a small town about an hour West of JC. Our "fancy" restaurant , there is only one, is Gondolier or you can go to the next town which has a Cracker Barrel 🤣 East TN is not the place to find vegetarian/vegan. It is meat and potatoes country.
Nice to know, alot of business options..
There is no medical weed in Tennessee. Fact.
Pl axe bring up the volume. Good review. Louder and I can hear great Thanks
I wish you’d talk about the bugs. Being from the dessert we have different things to worry about here but….. ugh! The bugs seem awful.
We're moving to TN this year after my military retirement out of NY, i cannot wait. Theres two neighborhoods in Chattanooga and three neighborhoods in Knoxville we're looking at. At first, i was all about the ines in Knoxville, after a lot of research, i think Chattanooga is going to be the better, long term option, id like to hear your opinion. Great video, thanks.
Chattanooga has changed A LOT , if you're looking for quiet home life , look in adjacent Marion county , Guild , South Pittsburg, Kimball Jasper areas
@@blackgirloffgrid1054 we found and closed on a house in Soddy Daisy. We found what we wanted almost exactly. Thank you for your reply.
You don't mention anything about North West Tennessee, such as the Union City area. I keep hearing about crime but not sure I have heard otherwise. Any pros and cons for that area?
You aren’t far from the truth Mary. It’s a crime area. How are you doing? Hope you are fine and staying safe?
Your comparison of humidity is incorrect. The deciding factor is dew point. I am from SF and 74% humidity in Ca vs 74 in TN are two different planets. Calif is dry, TN is wet.
We pay almost 9% sales tax, in addition to NYC, NY State and Federal. Not to mention property taxes. Can't wait to retire in Tn!!!
Love this video, it's the first time I came across your channel, very interesting. I think I'm starting to like Tennessee already. I'm from NYC.
Lebanon TN was a peaceful city, not anymore people everywhere. And the prices are higer. I am ready to move.
As far as 2023 goes, what city would be good for me? I'm a black conservative, 40 years young, no kids never married but looking to settle down eventually. Have lived all over the globe but will be coming by way of San Antonio, TX. I work hard for what I have. Not shy, have a great sense of humor and am a veteran. Thanks all for your input in advance.
Charlotte N.C.
@@dr.julianataylor4312 NC has state tax, no thanks
You definitely gave some great information about the State. I am a California Realtor, I’ve seen many people leave California, & go to Tennessee.
We love Tennessee. Just haven’t met many people and that makes me sad. I left my family 700 miles behind me 😢
Praying that you find your tribe in TN.
TN is what Florida was 30 years ago when I moved to Central Florida. It was smallish on the outskirts all around Orlando but each year it got worse and worse, huge housing development were cow fields and orang groves used to be, then of course that all needs more roads, stores and retail people services and on an on. I thought about moving to TN but it seems only a matter a maybe 5 years before it is getting like Florida. The whole east coast of the USA is very, very crowed.
Born in Abingdon. Settled in the State of Franklin, aka East TN.
Love it here.
No place is perfect. Corruption everywhere.
But this community suits me.
I live in Georgia I'm from Kentucky I love snow thing about moving to Tennessee or Florida any advice
If you love snow, it'll depend on where you were to pick in TN. In our area (northeast corner) we get about 12 inches in a year. It might affect travel 1 or 2 days a year unless you live in the mountains. I'm just over an hour drive to 3 ski resorts in the NC mountains so I used to ski several time a year. You won't find much to do with snow once you get in middle or western TN.
Headed to eastern Tennessee in may of this year from upstate NY, can’t wait!
Let us know when you're going to be in the area & we'll show you around!
i love in cali never feel the. humidity Tenn. . OMG!
I moved to Tennessee last year in February.
How's it going?
Great content.Thank you,Sir!🇺🇸
Hi very informative can you make a video on Maury columbia TN as I will move with family in the coming days ???
When I was there I thought it was funny that people would look at a thousand-foot "hill" & call it a mountain. It's true that some of those places in California have high humidity but they are not combined with the kind of heat you get. Big difference.
NE TN native..lived here my whole life except for my time in the military. Your review was subjective for the most part and take it from someone who grew up here in the 70s-80s,this region has went downhill FAST in the last three years. Sign of the times I suppose. It is all about the mighty dollar I guess. Call someplace paradise kiss it goodbye.
Two pros I would add. Tennessee is a common sense red state, (with the exception of Memphis). I've live in Tennessee since 1991 and Governor Bill Lee is the best Governor I've seen. Number 2 is the food. The variety is vast based on what part of the state you're in but all is good. People in Tennessee love to eat. 🙂
I tried for months to get a house under contract in Tennessee or Kentucky with no luck.
How much is insurance in either of these dates for homeowners and auto?
Thank you for this. Great info!
Thanks for the upddate! Just a suggestion. When you are being photographed or videotaped, try not to have a light on "behind" you unless you have a stronger one in front of you. You need the light on your face. It's hard to see what you're saying without it. Just sayin' ... have a great day!!!
I own a house on a small lot in White County. My domestic partner is buried on the property. I need help with knowing the laws on how to zone it or declare a burial site on the property. Can any one help me please.
14:56 Ramsey Cascades and Charlies Bunion are the two top hiking trails according to enthusiasts I have talked to.
Thanks for that! I just checked Alltrails & the Ramsey Cascades has been closed since last year due to damage. I wanted to check it out. Charlie's Bunion looks amazing.
@@TNVAHomeTeam At Ramsey the walking spans across the creek may have been damaged. That whole ridge and valley network is a water shed for sure, a lot of logs and rocks that get forced down further and further. Have not done a hike to Charlies Bunion yet.
The housing market here right now is insanely inflated. Some properties have doubled in sale price in the last 2 years. Otherwise I love living in TN traffic in metro areas is getting a bit rough but far from the worst I have seen. Sales tax here is nasty, but no state income tax in exchange.
In California we had the same sales tax but also high property tax, state income tax and high car registration fees not to mention gas taxes
Thanks! We bought a lot in Rockwood and will be moving from Arizona and building there in 2026. Can't wait!!!
Having lived in Texas most of my life and I don't travel much I always assumed food was tax free everywhere.
Never come to New England. Lol
How’s Sparta? What’s the weather like?
Perhaps you intended to put with the no income tax pro but there is also no state tax on investment income. They slowly did away with the Hall Tax which was a tax on interest and dividends. Most people don't have to file a state income tax form anymore.
But still federal tax right?
@@npcokay yes, @least 10% for the big guy.
I live in east TN. This video didn't mention how the bad the public school system is -- absolutely terrible for good education. Also, very few quality services for those with special needs (my daughter has autism). In addition, so many people have moved here during the last few years that the social fabric is going downhill fast, as people are bringing their bad behaviors from other places here. The meth and drug problem here is bad and getting worse every year, which is creating a host of other problems. Lastly, the wait for medical services is always ridiculously long.
I've heard of meth but never heard of rug?
@@ibberman Thanks. I corrected the typo, and I quit Fox news after the Tucker firing.
I've lived in Knoxville TN. My neighbors informed me as soon as I moved in that, neighbors here don't socialize and want to be left alone. So true.
Hopefully I’ll be in Tennessee in 3yrs.
Really appreciate your video and the information that you provided. My only criticism is that your state by state comparison was almost exclusive to NY or CA. Comparing to 2 of the most expensive states over and over is not much of a comparison. Whynot include a Missouri or another central state to provide a true comparison?
Mainly because many people coming to this area are from the really high tax states. I haven't had anyone from Missouri reach out to us.