Every active home for sale in Winchester, TN — straight from the local Franklin County MLS and refreshed daily, not a stale portal feed. Filter by price, beds, or what matters most here (in-town or on the water, acreage, lake access), and I'll help you tour and negotiate the moment the right one lands.
Jon Smith · Real Broker · 5.0 on Google (22 reviews) · RENE-certified negotiator
Search & filter Winchester listings →Quick routes to the searches Winchester buyers ask for most:
General mid-2026 ranges — live pricing is in the grid above, and full trends live on the Winchester real estate overview. Because Winchester spans modest in-town houses and lakefront estates, a single citywide "average" hides more than it shows; compare within your band and your side of the in-town-vs-lake line.
| Budget | What it typically buys in Winchester | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Under $250K | Older and mid-century in-town homes on compact lots, some fixers, and the occasional condo — entry-level and investor range. | Best value is usually a solid in-town house close to downtown and services; these move fastest, so set an alert. |
| $250K–$400K | The core of the market: updated 3-bed homes, newer construction in subdivisions, and homes with a little acreage. | New-construction pockets (e.g. Stone Field Heights on city utilities) and lake-access communities start showing up here. |
| $400K–$700K | Larger family and newer homes, real acreage, and lake-access properties near a community ramp — the lake premium begins. | This is where in-town and lake budgets fork; the same dollar buys very differently on each side. |
| $700K+ | True dockable Tims Ford waterfront and estate homes, up well past a million dollars. | Thinner, more seasonal inventory; the specific shoreline and dock matter more than any market-wide number. |
Everyday in-town buyer activity clusters in the low-to-mid range, while the lake end stretches the top of the market well into seven figures. For a real number on your side of that line, I build the comp set rather than quoting a citywide median.
County-seat homes close to the square, courthouse, schools district office, and everyday shopping — from starter houses to comfortable family homes. Newer in-town subdivisions like Stone Field Heights sit on city water, sewer, and gas. Browse all Winchester homes →
Communities minutes from the water with deeded access or a community ramp — Dripping Springs, Hopkins Point, gated Twin Creeks Village (marina, pools, clubhouse), and the newer Fanning Bend. Tims Ford lake homes →
Acreage, mini-farms, and country properties just outside the city core — room for a shop, a garden, or animals, often on well and septic. Franklin County real estate →
The portals all show roughly the same feed. What they can't do is walk you through the in-town-vs-lake decision, read an older house, and protect you once you're under contract.
Real-time MLS alerts, plus a heads-up on coming-soon and off-market homes before they hit the portals.
Winchester runs from mid-century in-town houses to lake properties. I read the older stock (roof, HVAC, and well/septic outside the city) and the lake-access diligence — what's true dockable waterfront vs. a community ramp, dock permits, TVA shoreline rules, and flood considerations.
RENE-certified negotiation for your bottom line — including second-home and lake buyers where comps are thin — plus local lender intros and inspections coordinated through closing. Reviews & results →
For a lot of buyers, yes. Winchester is the county seat of Franklin County and the government, healthcare, and shopping hub for the whole area, and it sits right on the doorstep of Tims Ford Lake for boating, bass fishing, and Tims Ford State Park. It's affordable by Middle Tennessee standards, Tennessee has no state income tax, and the local tax bill is modest. Homes here are served by Franklin County Schools (the countywide district, not Tullahoma City Schools), so it's worth confirming the exact zone for any specific home. Whether it's the right fit comes down to your budget, whether you want to be in town or on the water, and your school priorities — happy to walk through the tradeoffs.
It genuinely depends who you ask right now — the major data providers disagree on Winchester, and a single citywide "average" is close to useless here because it mixes modest in-town houses with lakefront estates that run past a million dollars. Rather than quote a number that hides your reality, I keep the live median and days-on-market in the MLS stat bar at the top of this page, and I pull real, comparable sold prices for the specific area, price band, and side of the in-town-vs-lake line you're considering. For the fuller market read, see the Winchester real estate overview — the comps for your search matter far more than any citywide figure.
They behave like two different markets. In-town Winchester is the more affordable and more predictable side — established neighborhoods close to downtown, the schools, and services. Tims Ford homes generally carry a premium, but how much depends on the kind of access: true dockable waterfront sits at the top (well into seven figures), lake-view and community-ramp homes below that, and simple lake-access communities lower still. Lake inventory is also thinner and more seasonal. Compare within the right bucket, waterfront to waterfront and in-town to in-town, which is exactly the comp work I do before you offer. The full lake picture lives on my Tims Ford Lake guide.
Send me your must-haves — in town or on the lake — and I'll set up a live search, plus first dibs on new listings before they spread to the portals. No pressure, no obligation.