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When to Sell Your Franklin Investment Property TL;DR: Selling an investment property isn't just about market conditions — it's about whether the propert...
TL;DR: Selling an investment property isn't just about market conditions — it's about whether the property still aligns with your financial goals. Knowing the signals that point toward selling (and the ones that don't) can save you from holding too long or exiting too early.
Most investors don't sell because the market tells them to. They sell because the numbers stopped making sense months ago and they finally admitted it. That's worth examining honestly, because in a market like Franklin — where demand has remained strong through Spring 2026 — it's easy to assume holding is always the right call.
It isn't always the right call.
A rental property in Westhaven, Berry Farms, or one of the older corridors near downtown Franklin might be appreciating nicely on paper. But appreciation alone doesn't tell you whether the investment is still performing. You need to look at what the property is actually delivering relative to what your capital could do elsewhere.
Cash-on-cash return measures the annual pre-tax income you earn against the cash you originally invested. If you put $80,000 down on a rental and it nets you $6,400 a year after expenses, that's an 8% cash-on-cash return.
Now imagine that same property five years later. Your equity has grown to $200,000. Your rents have increased, but so have your insurance premiums, property taxes (Williamson County's values have climbed steadily), and maintenance costs on an aging home. Your net income might still be $6,400 — but measured against your current equity position, you're effectively earning a much lower return on the capital trapped in that property.
This is the calculation most investors avoid. It forces a harder question: could you sell, reinvest the proceeds into a different property or asset class, and earn more?
If the answer is yes, the property has become a low-performing savings account disguised as an investment.
Franklin properties built in the early-to-mid 2000s — common in neighborhoods like McKays Mill, Fieldstone Farms, and parts of Cool Springs — are reaching the age where big-ticket items start stacking up. HVAC replacements, roof work, water heater failures, and siding repairs don't arrive one at a time. They cluster.
One useful rule: track your annual maintenance spend as a percentage of gross rent. If that number has climbed from 10-12% into the 20%+ range over the past two years, the property is entering a capital-intensive phase. You can either reinvest heavily to reset the clock or sell while the home still shows well and before a major system fails during a tenant's lease.
Selling a property in good cosmetic shape with one known issue (say, a 15-year-old roof) is far easier than selling one with deferred maintenance stacked three items deep.
A long-term tenant paying below-market rent can feel like stability. But if your lease renewal in Franklin is $200/month under comparable properties and raising rent risks a vacancy, you're stuck subsidizing someone else's housing at the cost of your return.
The reverse is also true. High turnover — two or three tenant changes in 18 months — quietly destroys profitability. Between vacancy loss, make-ready costs, leasing fees, and your own time, each turnover can cost the equivalent of two to three months of rent.
If you're seeing a pattern of difficult turnovers and the property type or location seems to attract short-term tenants, the asset might not suit your investment style. Selling and reallocating into a property with stronger tenant retention (different price point, different neighborhood, different property type) can be a smarter long-term play.
This one is subtle. Some investors hold properties because selling feels like admitting a mistake — or because the property was their first investment and carries sentimental weight. Others hold because they dread the complexity of a sale: capital gains calculations, potential 1031 exchange timelines, and the effort of finding a replacement property.
None of those are financial reasons to keep an underperforming asset. They're friction. And friction favors inertia.
If you catch yourself justifying a hold with phrases like "it'll come back" or "I just don't want to deal with selling right now," pause. Run the actual numbers. What is the property returning today, measured against current equity? What would the capital produce elsewhere?
Franklin's Spring 2026 market is active, with buyer demand steady across both owner-occupied and investor-purchased properties. Inventory remains manageable, and well-maintained homes in established neighborhoods are moving. If your investment property happens to be the kind of home a primary-residence buyer would also want — a three-bedroom in a good school district, a walkable location near downtown — you benefit from competing demand across buyer types.
That won't always be the case. Selling into strength isn't about timing the peak. It's about recognizing when conditions are favorable and your property's fundamentals no longer justify holding.
The best exit is the one you choose on your terms, not the one the property forces on you.