How Do You Split a Property Into Two Parcels in Tennessee?

If you’re trying to understand how to split a property into two parcels in Tennessee, the confusion usually isn’t about the survey itself. It’s about whether the property can legally be divided in the first place.

Many property owners assume that if there is enough land, it can be split. In reality, subdivision approval depends on zoning, access, utilities, and the ability of each new parcel to function independently.

This guide walks through the exact process so you can understand what’s required before investing time or money.

What Does It Mean to Split a Property Into Two Parcels?

Splitting a property means converting one legally recognized parcel into two separate, buildable lots.

Each new parcel must:

Meet zoning requirements (lot size, frontage, setbacks)
Have legal access (road frontage or recorded easement)
Support utilities (water, sewer, or septic approval)

This is typically classified as a minor subdivision, even when dividing into just two parcels.

Step 1: Confirm the Property Can Be Split

Before hiring a surveyor, the first step is to verify zoning and planning.

You’ll need to confirm:

Minimum lot size requirements
Required road frontage
Setback regulations
Utility availability

If the property does not meet these requirements, the split may not be approved without a variance.

This step determines feasibility.

Step 2: Hire a Licensed Land Surveyor

A Tennessee-licensed surveyor will:

Perform a boundary survey
Identify easements and constraints
Design a compliant lot split

They will create a preliminary plat showing:

New lot lines
Lot dimensions
Access points

This is the first formal version of the property division.

Step 3: Complete Soil Testing (If Septic Is Required)

If either parcel will rely on septic:

Each lot must pass soil testing independently
A soil scientist evaluates absorption capacity

If one parcel does not support septic, the subdivision may not be approved as designed.

Step 4: Submit a Subdivision Plat for Approval

The proposed split is submitted to the local planning authority.

Depending on location, this may be:

City Planning Department
County Planning Commission

They review:

Zoning compliance
Access and frontage
Drainage and stormwater
Utility feasibility

Even simple splits are reviewed through this process.

Step 5: Address Revisions

It’s common for planning staff to request adjustments such as:

Modifying lot lines
Adding easements
Clarifying access

This step continues until the plat meets all requirements.

Step 6: Final Approval and Recording

Once approved:

The final plat is signed
It is recorded with the county

At that point:

The original parcel becomes two legal parcels
Each receives its own tax identification

Step 7: Update Tax and Utility Records

After recording:

New parcel IDs are assigned
Property taxes are separated
Utilities can be established for each lot

What Causes a Property Split to Be Denied?

Most issues are structural, not procedural.

Common reasons include:

Not enough road frontage
Septic limitations on one lot
Zoning minimums not met
Lack of legal access
Existing easements that restrict division

Large acreage alone does not guarantee approval.

Timeline to Split a Property in Tennessee

Typical timeline:

Survey and layout: 2–4 weeks
Soil testing: 1–3 weeks
Planning approval: 3–8+ weeks

Most property splits take between 6 and 12 weeks, depending on complexity.

Cost to Split a Property Into Two Parcels

Typical cost ranges:

Survey and plat: $2,000–$6,000+
Soil testing: $500–$2,000
Application and recording fees: varies

Costs increase if revisions or engineering work are required.

How to Know If Splitting Your Property Makes Sense

The key question is not whether the land can be divided. The real question is whether each resulting parcel stands on its own as a compliant, buildable property. If one parcel is compromised, the value created by splitting may not match expectations.

Splitting a property into two parcels in Tennessee is less about drawing a new boundary and more about meeting a defined set of legal and functional requirements.

When those requirements are met, the process is straightforward. When they are not, the process becomes iterative and uncertain. Understanding this upfront allows you to move forward with clarity rather than assumptions.

If you’re considering splitting a property in Franklin or Williamson County, we can walk through your specific situation and identify whether it’s viable before you invest in surveys or applications.

If you want to think through it clearly, we can map it out together.

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