Pineview Heights is an established residential neighborhood on the west side of Tullahoma, Tennessee, near Bel-Aire Elementary and Tullahoma High School and inside the city limits (Coffee County). It's a settled, built-out area rather than an active build site, and, importantly, it's mixed-era: the streets that carry the name run from an older 1950s-era stretch (along McKellar Drive) to a newer 1990s-era stretch (around Pineview Circle), so the age of the home varies widely within the same neighborhood.
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No active listings in Pineview Heights right now
Inventory in this subdivision changes often. Browse all Tullahoma homes and subdivisions below, or tell me your must-haves and I'll set up a saved search for the next listing here.
| Address | Sold Price | Sold Date | Beds / Baths | Sqft |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 932 Mckellar Dr | $239,900 | Jun 1, 2026 | 3 bd / 1 ba | 1,424 |
| 935 Mckellar Dr | $369,900 | Jun 1, 2026 | 4 bd / 2 ba | 1,778 |
| 913 1st Ave | $200,000 | — | 3 bd / 2 ba | 1,413 |
Pineview Heights is an established residential neighborhood on the west side of Tullahoma, Tennessee, near Bel-Aire Elementary and Tullahoma High School and inside the city limits (Coffee County). It's a settled, built-out area rather than an active build site, and, importantly, it's mixed-era: the streets that carry the name run from an older 1950s-era stretch (along McKellar Drive) to a newer 1990s-era stretch (around Pineview Circle), so the age of the home varies widely within the same neighborhood.
It reads in the entry-to-mid part of the Tullahoma market, homes here are modest single-family houses, and a real share of the stock is used as rentals, which means the two things that move any individual home's value most are its era and its condition, not the subdivision name. The grid above shows every home currently for sale in Pineview Heights straight from the local MLS; the rest of this page is the first-hand read a portal listing can't give you.
Here's what the portal pages, and, honestly, my own older blog post about this neighborhood, get wrong or leave out about Pineview Heights. The portals mostly surface the name as a rentals search (apartments and houses for rent), so a buyer searching it gets a grid of listings and no read at all.
And the write-ups that call it a "growing, newer-construction community" are simply not describing what's on the ground. So let me correct the record with what the county build records actually show.
Pineview Heights is established and mixed-era, not new. The streets filed under the name split into two distinct vintages: the McKellar Drive side is largely 1950s homes, modest, mid-century, well past the age where the expensive systems matter, and the Pineview Circle side is largely 1990s homes.
That 40-year spread inside one neighborhood name is the single most useful thing to know here, because it means the same search results can hand you a 70-year-old house and a 30-year-old house on the next screen, and they are not the same purchase. On the older McKellar stock especially, the roof, HVAC, electrical panel, wiring, and plumbing are the whole conversation, some have been updated over the years and some have not, and that gap moves the price far more than the address does.
The second real signal is the rentals dynamic, and it cuts two ways for a buyer. Because a meaningful share of Pineview Heights homes are tenant-occupied or bought as rentals, an owner-occupant here should expect to sometimes compete with investor buyers, to see homes that are currently leased (which affects showings, condition, and closing timing), and to read a "recently updated" listing carefully, since landlord-grade and owner-grade updates aren't the same thing.
If you're the investor, the flip side is that this is an area with genuine, demonstrated rental demand on the west side near the schools, but I'll steer you to real numbers rather than the appreciation and rent projections my old post leaned on, because those weren't grounded, and I'm not going to hand you a forecast dressed up as a fact. What this pocket actually offers is entry-to-mid, west-side, near Bel-Aire and Tullahoma High, at a price the specific home and its era set, which is exactly what a "homes for rent" portal facet can't tell you.
Pineview Heights sits on the west side of Tullahoma, inside the city limits and Coffee County, near Bel-Aire Elementary and Tullahoma High, the neighborhood guide puts the west/central core in the established, older-stock, generally better-value-per-square-foot part of the city. It's an established area, not a brand-new one, and its defining fact is that it's mixed-era: public build records on the streets the name covers show an older 1950s-era stretch along McKellar Drive and a newer 1990s-era stretch around Pineview Circle (also written "Pine View Circle").
So you're looking at settled streets with grown-in trees rather than an active build site, and the "typical" home swings from mid-century to late-1990s depending on which street you're on. The homes lean modest single-family, a range of bed/bath counts and sizes across the two vintages, and their condition ranges from original-systems houses (common on the older McKellar side) to updated ones.
That era-plus-condition spread is the single biggest thing that separates one Pineview Heights home from the next.
One correction worth making up front, because it's out there in my own older blog post and buyers find it: Pineview Heights is not a "growing, newer-construction" subdivision, and the specific prices, appreciation rates, and HOA figures that post cites aren't grounded in the record. The neighborhood is established and mixed-era, as the build years above show.
I'd rather give you the accurate read and correct my own earlier coverage than let a rosier-but-wrong version stand.
On dues: I don't publish an HOA answer for Pineview Heights from the name, because that's exactly the kind of thing that can't be assumed. That said, most of Tullahoma's established, built-out neighborhoods carry no homeowners association and no monthly dues, and the older west-side stock here is a likely example; the 1990s Pineview Circle section I still confirm rather than guess at.
Either way, I pull the recorded plat and any HOA or covenant paperwork on the specific home before you write an offer, so you know the real answer rather than trusting a listing headline, and I do not repeat the dollar HOA figure the old blog quoted, because it isn't verified. If you're weighing Pineview Heights against other developments in town, the Tullahoma subdivisions index lists the named developments side by side; if your question is more about areas by price and feel than this specific pocket, the neighborhood guide maps the whole city.
Day to day, the west side keeps you close to downtown Tullahoma and the west/central core, though it's worth being honest about the geography: Tullahoma's biggest grocery-and-big-box run is up North Jackson Street on the north side, so the largest hauls are a short drive up the corridor rather than around the corner, but the west/central side has its own closer everyday options. Here's how the practical stuff actually lines up from this part of town.
The honest takeaway: from Pineview Heights you're a few minutes from the west/central everyday options (Food Lion on W Lincoln, downtown, the hardware independents) and a short corridor drive from the full big-box lineup on North Jackson, convenient without being on top of the retail. If a specific errand (a certain grocer, a short base commute, a park) is high on your list, I'll fold it into the search.
A few things I confirm before you commit here, because this is where a mixed-era, partly-tenant-occupied neighborhood either rewards you or surprises you.
First, era and condition, the whole ballgame in this neighborhood. The first question on any Pineview Heights home is which vintage, a 1950s McKellar-side house and a 1990s Pineview Circle house are inspected differently.
On the older stock I steer hard toward the expensive systems: the age of the roof and HVAC (mid-century-original equipment is long past its expected life), the electrical panel and wiring (older systems may need updating for safety and insurance), the plumbing and water heater, and any crawlspace or foundation moisture. On the 1990s stock the systems are newer but now decades old themselves, so it's still a systems read, just a different one.
Either way I read any "updated" or "renovated" claim against what was actually done and when, the difference between a real update and a cosmetic refresh is the difference between a fair price and inheriting someone else's deferred maintenance, and it's where a well-negotiated repair or price credit lives.
Second, the rentals dynamic, a real buying condition here. Because a share of these homes are rentals, I check whether a specific home is tenant-occupied (which affects when we can show it, what condition it's in, and whether a lease conveys or has to be dealt with at closing), and I read "recently updated" listings on rental homes with extra care, since landlord-grade finishes and owner-grade finishes aren't the same.
If you're an owner-occupant, I'll also set expectations that you may occasionally be up against an investor offer, and structure yours to compete. If you're the investor, we underwrite it on the actual numbers, not projections.
None of this is a comment on the neighborhood, it's just the practical reality of buying in an area with genuine rental activity, and it's better to know it going in.
Third, the HOA / covenant question and the basics. Whether any association exists and what any recorded covenants restrict, I pull the plat and any HOA or covenant paperwork on the specific home so you know the real answer before you write an offer, rather than trusting the listing field (and I do not repeat the dollar HOA figure the old blog quoted, because it isn't verified).
The good news on the paperwork side: this is a west-side, in-city area, so it does not carry the Coffee/Franklin county-line tax-and-zoning wrinkle that homes on Tullahoma's southern edge do, one fewer variable to chase. For financing, I can introduce local VA, USDA, and THDA lenders early so your offer is clean, this price tier is where those programs, and a solid inspection strategy on older systems, do the most work.
Pineview Heights is on the west side of Tullahoma, near Bel-Aire Elementary and Tullahoma High, which keeps it a short drive from downtown and the west/central everyday options and a reasonable commute to the Arnold Air Force Base gate, I'll map the actual drive time for any specific address. On schools, homes inside the Tullahoma city limits are served by Tullahoma City Schools, a seven-school district with a single high school, Tullahoma High School, two middle schools (East and West, split geographically), and four elementary schools (Bel-Aire, East Lincoln, Jack T.
Farrar, and Robert E. Lee). The Pineview Heights addresses I've reviewed sit closest to Bel-Aire Elementary and Tullahoma High, with West Middle School on the west-side middle split, but attendance zones are drawn by address and can change, and listing-site school data isn't always right, so I confirm the exact assigned zone for any specific home rather than assuming it.
I map the assigned schools for every Pineview Heights address on the Tullahoma schools page (and there's a dedicated homes zoned for Bel-Aire Elementary search if that zone is the priority); for how the west side compares on commute, amenities, and feel against the rest of town, the neighborhood guide has the area-by-area read.
Yes, Pineview Heights is an established west-side neighborhood in Tullahoma, and the grid above shows every home currently listed for sale there straight from the local MLS, refreshed daily. One thing to know: the portals index this name heavily for rentals, and it's a smaller pocket, so on many days for-sale inventory ranges from a couple of homes to none at all, the live count above is the honest read.
If nothing fits today, tell me and I'll set up a saved search so you hear about the next Pineview Heights listing the day it hits, often before it spreads to the portals.
It's established, not new construction, and it's mixed-era. Public build records on the streets that carry the name show an older 1950s-era stretch along McKellar Drive and a newer 1990s-era stretch around Pineview Circle, so the age of a home swings by roughly 40 years within the same neighborhood.
That makes era and condition the biggest drivers of price and of what you'll need to budget for, on the older mid-century homes especially, I read the roof, HVAC, electrical, and plumbing against the asking price before you offer. )
It has to be confirmed on the specific listing and in the recorded documents rather than assumed from the name, but most of Tullahoma's established, built-out neighborhoods carry no homeowners association and no monthly dues, and the older west-side stock here is a likely example, with the 1990s section confirmed rather than guessed at. I pull the plat and any HOA or covenant paperwork before you write an offer so you know the real answer and any restrictions, and I don't repeat any dollar dues figure that isn't verified.
If avoiding dues is the priority, you can also filter straight to no-HOA homes across Tullahoma.
Pineview Heights is on the west side of Tullahoma, inside the city limits and Coffee County, near Bel-Aire Elementary and Tullahoma High, a short drive from downtown and the west/central everyday options and a reasonable commute to the Arnold AFB gate. Homes inside the city limits are served by Tullahoma City Schools, whose single high school is Tullahoma High School; the addresses I've reviewed sit closest to Bel-Aire Elementary and West Middle, but attendance zones are set by address and can change, so confirm the exact zone for any home on the Tullahoma schools page.
For how the area compares on price and feel, see the neighborhood guide; for live prices and days on market, the market report.
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