Club and Community Lifestyle: What Seattle Families Discover in Tennessee
Seattle families familiar with Overlake Golf & Country Club, Seattle Tennis Club, Bellevue Club, Sahalee, and Broadmoor often arrive expecting to find a similar private club experience in Tennessee.
What many discover is that Nashville's club culture is not only comparable, but in many ways more expansive.
At the center of Nashville's private club scene is Belle Meade Country Club, one of the South's most storied and prestigious clubs. Alongside Belle Meade are Richland Country Club, Country Club of Nashville, and Governors Club, each offering championship golf, tennis, dining, fitness, and active social calendars.
For those seeking a more modern and globally connected membership experience, Soho House Nashville has quickly become a favorite gathering place for entrepreneurs, executives, creatives, and transplants relocating from larger metropolitan markets.
The biggest surprise for many Seattle transplants, however, isn't the clubs themselves.
It's the way club life extends into everyday living.
Unlike the Pacific Northwest, Middle Tennessee offers a collection of golf-centric communities where membership, neighborhood, and lifestyle are deeply connected.
The Grove
Located approximately 30 to 40 minutes south of downtown Nashville, The Grove combines luxury homes, a championship golf course, resort-style amenities, and a vibrant social atmosphere. Many Seattle families are drawn to its blend of privacy, community, and country club living.
Troubadour Golf & Field Club
Situated in College Grove and designed by renowned architect Tom Fazio, Troubadour has become one of the country's most sought-after private club communities. Members enjoy world-class golf, exceptional dining, wellness amenities, and an unmatched luxury lifestyle experience.
Westhaven
Located in Franklin, roughly 25 minutes from downtown Nashville, Westhaven offers a uniquely walkable community centered around golf, pools, fitness, dining, events, and neighborhood gathering spaces. For many relocating families, it represents a lifestyle that simply doesn't exist at the same scale in the Seattle market.
More Than Golf
What ultimately differentiates Nashville from Seattle isn't the quality of the clubs. Both markets offer exceptional private memberships.
The difference is the integration of those clubs into daily life.
Golf carts replace cars for neighborhood dinners. Families gather at community events throughout the year. Clubhouses become extensions of the neighborhood rather than destinations requiring a special trip.
For many Seattle families, the move to Tennessee isn't simply about finding a new golf club. It's about discovering an entirely different way of living.