High rents aren’t moving out: Why rent-flation reigns in Nashville


After Charleston-based mega-investor Greystar bought his downtown apartment complex, Joey Bales knew his rent would go up. What he didn’t expect was for rent to jump $400.

Bales, a 45-year-old Tennessee native, had been stocking up cash for a down payment on a home but had wanted to wait longer to buy — especially with Davidson County’s asking prices through the roof. But after doing some back-of-the-envelope math, he realized that his new rental rate was basically the same as what a mortgage…

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