By DON FENLEY
The Tri-Cities housing market continues to display balance as 2025 moves toward its close. Annualized October home sales totaled 6,800 transactions across all price tiers.
The TCI annualized home sales tracker points to a market settling into a healthier rhythm that supports both housing and business growth. Key takeaways are:
- Johnson City continues to define the region’s housing and commercial leadership.
- Kingsport is translating residential stability into strategic retail and industrial redevelopment.
- Greeneville and Bristol are evolving steadily, linking residential absorption to new local commerce and service expansion.
Taken together, the data signals a Tri-Cities housing market that’s powering a more disciplined phase of commercial development. It’s a sign of economic maturity and a solid foundation for 2026 growth.
Regional Overview
The middle price range remains the heartbeat of regional housing activity. Nearly half of all of the 12-month sales ending in October were concentrated between $200,000 and $399,999, while another 1,274 sales came in the $100K–$199K range.
At the upper end, 291 annualized sales above $700,000, including 76 above $1 million, reflect sustained strength in executive and relocation demand – the demographic driving high-end retail and service growth across the region.
Johnson City: Growth Leader
The Johnson City Region remains the undisputed market anchor, claiming roughly one-third of all regional sales.
- The $200K–$299K tier logged 824 sales, and another 648 occurred in the $300K–$399K range.
- The region also led in luxury closings with 47 homes selling above $1 million.
This depth across all price segments continues to fuel demand for new commercial construction, especially in Washington County’s retail, medical, and service corridors. Developers are responding with new mixed-use projects and expanding medical office parks to match residential growth in Boones Creek, Gray, and the I-26 corridor.
Kingsport: Value, Stability, Expanding Retail Corridors
The Kingsport Region posted 1,844 annualized sales, anchored by affordable inventory but with visible movement in the upper price tiers.
- More than half of Kingsport’s sales were below $300,000, yet the $800K–$1M segment showed meaningful activity, reflecting demand for executive housing tied to industrial expansion.
That mix is shaping Kingsport’s commercial footprint, with steady new retail, dining, and light-industrial development along Stone Drive, Fort Henry Drive, and in western Sullivan County. Builders and investors increasingly cite residential stability as justification for redeveloping aging retail strips into service and mixed-use properties.
Greeneville: Compact, Affordable
The Greeneville Region’s 963 annualized sales show a strong mid-market structure – nearly 60% between $200K and $399K.
Though smaller in volume, Greeneville’s steady absorption rate is reinforcing confidence in local commercial investment, including downtown infill, logistics-adjacent warehousing, and service-sector expansion near the Tusculum and I-81 corridors.
Developers see Greeneville’s population and residential momentum as a foundation for gradual retail growth rather than speculative building.
Bristol: Consistent Housing, Expanding Support Sectors
With 1,198 annualized sales, Bristol remains a steady contributor, led by the $200K–$399K range.
Luxury activity – eight $1M+ and six $900K sales – is modest but meaningful, helping bolster interest in hospitality, dining, and entertainment ventures near The Pinnacle and Bristol’s downtown revitalization zones.
Residential stability continues to underpin new small-business formation, especially in service trades and short-term rental investment near lake and raceway corridors.
Residential–Commercial Connection
Across the Tri-Cities, the normalization of residential sales is reshaping commercial development patterns:
- The trend suggests a return to fundamentals and matching new retail and office projects to the distribution of homebuyers by income and geography.
- Medical, logistics, and neighborhood retail centers should follow residential rooftops, especially in growth corridors near I-26, I-81, and Route 11W.
- The surge in mid-tier homeownership is driving demand for professional services, construction, healthcare, and consumer retail – sectors that thrive on predictable population growth.
Categories: REAL ESTATE

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