West Knoxville · An Atlas

Six West Knox pockets, six personalities.

A working atlas of the neighborhoods I know best — what makes each one different, and which one fits the way you actually live.

I show West Knox most days. From Farragut's family-suburban steadiness to the Concord-Northshore lakefront, Bearden's cultural anchor to the new construction wave in Hardin Valley — these six pockets are where my work happens. Tap any of them on the map below, or use the picker to start somewhere closer to home.

West Knoxville Neighborhood Atlas

West Knoxville Neighborhood Atlas An editorial illustrated map of West Knoxville, Tennessee, showing six neighborhoods (Hardin Valley, Farragut, Concord-Northshore, Cedar Bluff, Rocky Hill, Bearden) plotted in their relative geographic positions on Fort Loudoun Lake, between Interstate 40 and Kingston Pike, west of downtown Knoxville. Map includes 12 buyer landmarks: schools, parks, and shopping anchors. Fort Loudoun Lake — Tennessee River — I-40 PELLISSIPPI Kingston Pike Northshore Dr HARDIN VALLEY RDCEDAR BLUFF RDLOVELL RD Hardin Valley AcademyHardin Valley AcademyFarragut SchoolsFarragut SchoolsBearden HighBearden HighWest HighWest HighCedar Bluff MiddleCedar Bluff MiddleMcFee ParkMcFee ParkThe Cove at ConcordThe Cove at ConcordConcord ParkConcord ParkLakeshore ParkLakeshore ParkTurkey CreekTurkey CreekWest Town MallWest Town MallBearden Dining RowBearden Dining Row A BUYER'S ATLASWest Knoxville— Six neighborhoods, drawn from the inside — NSWE 012 mi — LEGEND —SchoolsParks & lakeShopping Downtown › Hardin Valley · West Knox's fastest-growing communityNo. 01Hardin Valley37932Farragut · West Knox's established family suburbNo. 02Farragut37934 · 37922Concord-Northshore · Lakefront luxuryNo. 03Concord-Northshore37922 · LAKEFRONTCedar Bluff · The strategic center of West KnoxNo. 04Cedar Bluff37923Rocky Hill · Mature trees, walkable town center, tight-knit communityNo. 05Rocky Hill37919Bearden · Knoxville's cultural anchorNo. 06Bearden37919 · CULTURAL

An illustrated guide · Tap a neighborhood to read more

I'm here because I'm

The Neighborhoods

The pockets I show most weeks of the year.

Each of these neighborhoods has its own personality — its own rhythm, its own price register, its own kind of buyer who tends to land there and stay. Below is the working brief I'd give a friend over coffee on a Saturday morning.

No. 01

Hardin Valley

37932 New construction Growing Knox County schools

Hardin Valley is the fastest-growing community in West Knox for a reason — newer construction, Hardin Valley Academy, and the Oak Ridge science corridor at your doorstep. Buyers coming from Dallas, Atlanta, or Northern Virginia recognize the rhythm here: well-planned subdivisions, sidewalks, families pushing strollers on a Saturday morning.

It's the under-the-radar relocation answer I always show after Farragut. The inventory gap is closing fast — what was a value market three years ago is becoming a serious move-up market — but you're still buying into appreciation, not paying for it.

Explore Hardin Valley
No. 02

Farragut

37934 · 37922 Family-forward Lake-adjacent Knox County schools

When out-of-state buyers Google "best neighborhood in Knoxville," nine times out of ten the answer is Farragut. Farragut is served by Knox County Schools — Farragut Primary, Intermediate, Middle, and High. McFee Park, the Cove at Concord, and the Town's events calendar do the rest.

The real work isn't finding a Farragut house; it's knowing which streets in which subdivisions sell to the same families twice in ten years. That's a knowledge I've built one Saturday morning at a time, and it's hard to fake.

Explore Farragut
No. 03

Concord-Northshore

37922 Lakefront Luxury Established

This is where Fort Loudoun Lake actually lives in Knoxville. The Channel Point estates, the deeded boat slips, the back-porch sunsets over the water — Concord-Northshore is the West Knox luxury market in its purest form. Inventory is patient: people wait years to land here, and when they do, they don't leave.

If you're shopping at $1M and up with lake access on the brief, this is the first conversation we should have. I currently host an open house at 12124 Channel Point Drive — a 2.4-acre double lot with a deeded slip and mountain views — that gives you a feel for what this submarket actually offers.

Explore Concord-Northshore
No. 04

Cedar Bluff

37923 Central Mid-century Value

Cedar Bluff is the strategic center of West Knox: five minutes from everything, surprisingly residential once you turn off the corridor, and the most underrated value in the metro. Most of the housing stock is mid-century — built in the '60s and '70s — which means real square footage at a price that lets a first-time buyer or a savvy investor in the door.

If your priorities are budget, location, and a commute that doesn't eat your evenings, start here. The neighborhoods just off the corridor have aged into something quietly excellent, and the entry price is still measurably lower than anywhere else on this map.

Explore Cedar Bluff
No. 05

Rocky Hill

37919 Tight-knit Established Mature landscape

Rocky Hill is where buyers go when they want Bearden's character without Bearden's traffic, and Farragut's family-suburban steadiness without Farragut's price tag. Mature trees, a walkable town center, and one of the tightest-knit communities in West Knox.

Inventory here is genuinely tight — many of the best deals never list publicly, which is where having an agent who knows the street actually earns its keep. If Rocky Hill is on your short list, the conversation starts with me knowing what's coming before it shows up on Zillow.

Explore Rocky Hill
No. 06

Bearden

37919 Cultural Historic Walkable-ish

Bearden is Knoxville's cultural anchor — historic homes, mid-century gems, and the Kingston Pike dining row right outside your front door. It's the part of West Knox that feels least suburban. First-time buyers can plant a flag here at price points that don't exist further west, and move-up families come for the character that newer construction can't replicate.

Bearden is where you live if you want to walk somewhere on a Saturday — and where the architectural stock is interesting enough that no two streets feel quite the same.

Explore Bearden
At a glance

All six, side by side.

The fastest read for the comparison shopper. Numbers are 2026 estimates rolled up from public sources — directional, not surgical. For surgical, that's what a conversation is for.

Neighborhood Median home value Walkability Lifestyle Best for
Farragut 37934 · 37922 $585,000 13Car-dependent Family · Lake-adjacent Move-up families · Relocation
Concord-Northshore 37922 ~$590,000 11Car-dependent Lakefront · Luxury Lake life · Luxury
Bearden 37919 ~$525,000 65Somewhat Walkable Cultural · Historic First-timers · Urban-ish lovers
Hardin Valley 37932 ~$525,000 10Car-dependent New construction · Growing Move-up · Young professionals
Rocky Hill 37919 ~$585,000 33Car-dependent Tight-knit · Established Move-up families · Off-market shoppers
Cedar Bluff 37923 ~$400,000 45Car-dependent Central · Mid-century First-time buyers · Value

Median home values rolled up from Zillow, Redfin, NeighborhoodScout, and Homes.com · walkability via Walk Score · 2026 estimates, refresh ranges vary by source · Last refreshed 2026-05-06.

How I work West Knox

Six neighborhoods. One agent who actually knows them.

Most agents will show you any house in any pocket. I'd rather be the agent who can tell you which street in which subdivision sells to the same families twice in ten years — and which one doesn't.

I'm a REALTOR® at Greater Impact Realty Knoxville, and West Knox is where my work happens. Most weeks I'm in Farragut on Saturday and somewhere between Bearden and Hardin Valley on a weekday — that's not coincidence, it's where the families I work for actually live and trade.

If you're moving in from out of state, I can sort all six of these for you in a single conversation. If you've lived in Knoxville for ten years and are upgrading from one pocket to another, the conversation gets faster — but the value of an agent who's already inside the network goes up, not down.

The atlas above is a snapshot. The real picture is built one Saturday morning at a time. Let's walk a few of these together.

— Loyalty isn't a slogan. It's how I show up.
Let's Talk West Knox

Ready to see one of these in person?

Easiest way to start is a text — I read everything and answer most things within the day. Tell me which neighborhood is calling, or just tell me what you're trying to figure out. We'll work backward from there.

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