One of the biggest sources of stress in buying a lot is the clock. Many communities make you start building within a year or two, which turns a piece of land into a countdown. Tennessee National does it differently: there is no timeline to build after you buy a lot. That single fact changes how you plan.
Here is how the process actually works once the land is yours — what you control, what to expect, and a realistic timeline when you are ready to build.
First: there is no deadline
Buy the lot, hold the lot. You are not forced to break ground on anyone’s schedule but your own. That means you can:
- Lock in your location now while the lot you want is available, especially if you are eyeing scarce inventory like a dockable lake lot.
- Build when your life lines up — after a home sale, a retirement date, or simply when the timing feels right.
- Avoid carrying pressure on your budget, since there is no penalty clock forcing construction before you are ready.
For a lot of buyers, that flexibility is the whole point. The land secures the spot; the build happens on your terms.
What you are building
Tennessee National is a custom-home community. This is not a place where you pick from three production floor plans and watch an identical house go up next door. Homes here are custom builds in a Craftsman architectural style, set across a 1,492-acre gated community on Watts Bar Lake in Loudon County, about 35–40 minutes from downtown Knoxville.
That custom approach is why the build process matters. You are designing a home to your lot, your views, and your life — and the steps below reflect that.
A realistic step-by-step timeline
Every build is different, but the path generally follows the same arc once you decide to start.
- Design and plans. Work with an architect or designer on a plan that fits your lot’s orientation, slope, and views. For a waterfront or dockable lot, this is where you plan the home around the water.
- Builder selection. Choose a builder familiar with the community’s Craftsman style and its architectural guidelines. Review completed homes and talk to owners who have built here.
- Architectural review. Custom-home communities maintain design standards to protect everyone’s value. Expect a review of your plans and exterior elevations before construction begins, so build submission and any revisions into your schedule.
- Permitting. Your builder typically handles local permits and coordinates inspections. Timelines vary with the county and the season.
- Construction. Ground breaks, the home goes up, and inspections happen along the way. A custom home generally takes several months to a year-plus depending on size, complexity, and weather.
- Final walkthrough and move-in. Punch list, final inspections, and the keys.
The honest summary: from the day you commit to building, plan in months, not weeks — and more for a larger or more complex home. Because there is no deadline, you can run the design and review phases at a comfortable pace before the construction clock starts.
Where the lake and the lifestyle fit in
Building here is not just a construction project — it is buying into a community that is already alive. Tennessee National has 300+ homes built and occupied and 400+ active members, so you are joining established neighbors rather than waiting for a community to materialize.
While your home takes shape, the rest is already there: a full-service marina on Watts Bar Lake’s 80 miles of navigable shoreline, a Greg Norman signature 18-hole golf course with reciprocal play at 800+ courses worldwide, and a golf-cart-friendly layout connecting it all. Many owners spend the build period getting to know the community they are about to live in full-time.
Budgeting around the build
A few numbers keep the financial picture clear. Lots range from $99K to $850K, with dockable lake lots adding a $250K–$500K premium for deep-water access. Single-family HOA dues are $150/month. And Tennessee has no state income tax, which keeps ongoing ownership costs lower than in much of the country.
Because you are not racing a build deadline, you can buy the lot, let your budget catch up, and start construction when the math is comfortable. That is a meaningfully different financial experience than communities that force the timeline.
The takeaway
Owning a lot at Tennessee National means owning your timeline. There is no deadline to build, the homes are true custom Craftsman builds, and the process — design, review, permit, construct — runs at a pace you set. Meanwhile the lake, the golf, and the neighbors are already in place.
If you are weighing a lot here and want to map out a realistic build plan for your situation, get in touch with the community team and walk through the steps for the specific lot you have in mind.