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5 neighborhoods selected in this guide.
East Nashville is the city's creative epicentre—a sprawling collection of sub-neighbourhoods (Five Points, Lockeland Springs, Inglewood) where vintage shops, craft cocktail bars, and indie music venues sit beside colourful Victorian shotgun houses and community murals.

Germantown is Nashville's oldest suburb, founded in the 1850s by German immigrants who built the brick row houses, beer halls, and churches that still define the neighbourhood. Today it's a dining hotspot with James Beard–recognised restaurants alongside craft breweries and boutique shops.

Broadway—locally called the Honky Tonk Highway—is the neon-drenched spine of Nashville's entertainment district, stretching from the Cumberland River to Music Row. Every bar features live country, rock, or blues from morning to the small hours, with no cover charges and cold beer flowing on multi-storey rooftop patios.

The Gulch is a walkable former rail yard turned upscale neighbourhood, packed with restaurants, boutiques, and street art. Located just southwest of Broadway, it's Nashville's most deliberately designed neighbourhood—a LEED-certified mixed-use district with a polished, cosmopolitan edge.

12 South is a compact, tree-lined neighbourhood corridor along 12th Avenue South, known for its independent shops, brunch spots, and the iconic "I Believe in Nashville" mural. It's the city's go-to neighbourhood for a laid-back Saturday of shopping and eating.