Best Nashville Coffee Shops: What Locals Actually Order (2026)
- Chase Gillmore

- Apr 5
- 18 min read
Updated: 2 hours ago

The best Nashville coffee shops are scattered across a city that has quietly built one of the South's most distinctive cafe cultures, with serious local roasters, hotel lobby counters worth seeking out, and neighborhood hangouts that reward regulars who know what to order. This guide covers the shops worth your time by neighborhood, with specific drink picks, honest caveats about crowds and parking, and two coffee crawl routes you can actually follow without backtracking across the city.
Crema Coffee Roasters (SoBro and East Nashville) is widely regarded as Nashville's benchmark for specialty coffee, with monthly classes that go beyond just brewing.
Barista Parlor has three Nashville locations and is known specifically for its bourbon vanilla iced latte, best ordered at the East Nashville original.
Bongo Java is Nashville's oldest coffee company and the first local roaster to offer certified organic, Fair Trade brews, according to the company's own history. Its East Nashville location doubles as a board game cafe with over 500 games.
Humphreys Street Coffee in Wedgewood-Houston is a social enterprise that has donated over $200,000 to community programs and reinvests 100% of its profits.
Several shops, including Dose (East Nashville) and Cafe Intermezzo (SoBro), serve alcoholic beverages alongside coffee, making them practical choices for groups who land somewhere between brunch and an afternoon drink.
For groups staying near downtown Nashville, most of the best cafes are a 5-to-15-minute Uber or rideshare from the Broadway corridor.
Nashville's coffee scene in 2026 looks nothing like it did five years ago. The city's visitor base has grown to 16.9 million annual visitors in Davidson County according to the Nashville Convention and Visitors Corp, and that foot traffic has attracted serious coffee operators who might have launched in Portland or Brooklyn a decade ago. The result is a city with a tiered cafe landscape: destination roasters drawing enthusiasts, neighborhood staples with loyal regulars, hotel counters that punch above their weight, and a growing number of walk-up windows for people who want a good shot and no fuss.
Most first-time visitors make the mistake of caffeinating near Broadway and calling it done. That approach works in a pinch, but it skips the neighborhoods where Nashville's coffee identity actually lives: East Nashville, Wedgewood-Houston, The Nations, Germantown, and 12 South. This guide is organized to help you find the right shop whether you have 20 minutes between honky tonks or two hours to linger over a pour-over. For broader planning, the Nashville things to do guide pairs well with this list if you want to build a full day around a neighborhood. You can also browse things to do in Nashville for even more ideas across the city.

Which Nashville Coffee Shops Are Actually Worth the Hype?
The best Nashville coffee shops earn their reputations through specific, repeatable strengths: consistent espresso, distinct menus, or a room worth sitting in. Not every highly-Instagrammed cafe delivers on all three. Here are the shops that hold up under scrutiny, organized by what makes each one worth the stop.
Crema Coffee Roasters: Nashville's Specialty Benchmark
Crema Coffee Roasters operates two Nashville locations: one in SoBro within a short walk of Lower Broadway, and one in East Nashville on Duke Street. Both roast with precision and train their baristas to a higher standard than most competitors in the city. The SoBro location is the practical choice for visitors staying near downtown; the East Nashville shop has more neighborhood character and a calmer atmosphere on weekday mornings.
What most people miss: Crema runs coffee classes a few times each month, covering brewing techniques and origin sourcing. For a group with even one serious coffee person, booking a class adds a genuinely memorable activity to a Nashville itinerary. The classes are held at the East Nashville location and typically cost in the $40-60 per person range. Check the website for current dates.
Crema also operates a coffee counter inside Pinewood Social, Nashville's well-known lifestyle venue on Noel Place. That counter is easy to miss since it's tucked inside a larger space, but it serves Crema's full espresso menu and is considerably less crowded than either standalone location on a Saturday morning.
Barista Parlor: Three Locations, One Clear Best Order
Barista Parlor has earned its reputation across three Nashville spots: the East Nashville original, a location in Wedgewood-Houston, and a small shop in the lobby of the W Nashville in the Gulch. The Gulch location is convenient if your group is already in that part of the city, but the East Nashville shop has the atmosphere that made Barista Parlor what it is: exposed steel, natural wood, an open roasting area, and a longer drink list.
Order the bourbon vanilla iced latte. It is the drink that appears in nearly every mention of this place for a reason. It is not overly sweet, and the bourbon note is an actual flavor rather than a novelty add-on. Budget roughly $6-8 for specialty drinks at this price point. The East Nashville location fills up by 10am on weekends, so arriving before 9am or after noon gives you a better shot at a seat.
Frothy Monkey: The Neighborhood Staple That Earned It
Frothy Monkey has four Nashville locations: The Nations, 12 South, East Nashville, and Downtown. The 12 South shop is the one worth planning around specifically: a front patio that works in nearly every season, a full brunch menu that justifies lingering for 90 minutes, and enough regulars to give the place a genuinely neighborhood feel rather than a tourist-serving operation.
The Wine Down Wednesday promotion at Frothy Monkey is a local favorite that most visitors never discover. Wednesday evenings bring wine and small plate specials that draw a completely different crowd than the morning coffee rush. If your group is in Nashville mid-week, it is one of the better low-key evening options that does not involve a cover charge or a honky tonk wait.
8th and Roast: The Serious Roaster's Pick
8th and Roast has three primary Nashville locations: 8th Avenue South, Charlotte Avenue in Sylvan Park, and Midtown near Vanderbilt University, plus outposts at the airport and the Canopy by Hilton in the Gulch. The Charlotte Avenue location is significantly larger and more modern than the original 8th Avenue shop, with better seating for groups and a broader menu.
This is the shop to recommend to anyone who leads with "I like my coffee black and I want to taste the origin." The roasting operation is visible, the staff can answer sourcing questions without deflecting, and the menu rotates with seasonal single-origins. Midtown and Vanderbilt-area visitors will find the location near campus the most convenient; it is roughly a 6-minute drive from Underwood Manor, which sits close to Centennial Park on the same side of town.

Which Nashville Coffee Shops Are Best for Each Neighborhood?
Knowing the best Nashville coffee shop overall is less useful than knowing which one is closest to where you are spending the morning. Nashville's neighborhoods each have distinct cafe identities, and driving across the city for a specific shop is rarely necessary when strong local options exist within walking distance of most major areas.
East Nashville: The Densest Coffee Corridor
East Nashville has more specialty coffee options per square mile than any other Nashville neighborhood, and most of them are within a short stretch of Five Points or along Gallatin Avenue. Beyond Crema and Barista Parlor, Retrograde Coffee is worth a stop for its in-house sourdough bagels (genuinely among the better breakfast items in the neighborhood) and its use of Lightspeed Coffee beans. The East Nashville Retrograde location has a more relaxed pace than its Germantown counterpart.
Dose's East Nashville shop is the right call if your group wants a full-service kitchen and a reason to stay for an hour: the location serves craft beer, wine, and cocktails alongside coffee, which makes it unusually flexible for a late morning that might drift into afternoon. The bakery component is worth ordering from, particularly the morning pastry rotation.
Forevermore is an East Nashville shop that pairs coffee with sustainable clothing and goods, and has an in-store photo booth that gets used constantly. It is not Nashville's best espresso, but the experience is distinct enough to be worth a stop if your group is already walking the neighborhood. Flora and Fauna at Highland Yards in East Nashville uses local and seasonal menu ingredients and has a different energy than the Five Points concentration of shops.
Wedgewood-Houston: Community Roasters and Craft Operators
Humphreys Street Coffee is the most compelling story in Nashville's coffee scene. As a social enterprise of Harvest Hands CDC, the Wedgewood-Houston shop roasts its own coffee, reinvests 100% of profits into programs and scholarships, and has directed over $200,000 to community development since opening. The coffee is genuinely good, not just cause-driven. Order a drip or a cortado and spend a few minutes looking at what they have posted about their impact work.
Americano Lounge is one of the more ambitious small shops in the city. Owner Cody Pellerin and his team completed all the construction, buildout, woodwork, and lighting themselves, and everything served, including pastries, coffee, and sodas, is made in-house. The shop uses AA certified organic, single origin Comsa Marcala Honduras coffee. That level of sourcing specificity is unusual for an independent operator and worth noting if origin matters to you.
Elegy Coffee rounds out the Wedgewood-Houston options. Started by the team behind The Fox cocktail bar (described consistently as one of Nashville's best), Elegy brings a hospitality-industry sensibility to its coffee program. The three-location operation (Germantown, Downtown, Wedgewood-Houston) has a walk-up coffee window in East Nashville as well. The Wedgewood-Houston location is the original and typically the least crowded.
Downtown and SoBro: Practical Picks for Broadway-Area Visitors
Elixr at Fifth and Broadway is the most visible downtown option, and it is busy on weekends because of its location. The Strawberry Milk Latte is the signature order. Arrive before 10am on Saturday or Sunday to avoid a significant wait; the foot traffic from the nearby entertainment district spills into the shop by mid-morning. For a full roundup of Nashville hot spots beyond coffee, the Underwood Manor blog covers the city's top venues and neighborhoods.
Cafe Intermezzo in SoBro takes a European approach: French press coffee served at the table, espresso drinks with alcohol available (the Cafe Salzburg is one of the better examples), and a sit-down format that feels deliberate rather than grab-and-go. Cafe Intermezzo uses Kaldi's Coffee. This is the right recommendation for a group that wants to treat a mid-morning coffee stop as a full experience rather than a fuel stop.
Groups staying within 5 minutes of downtown, as guests at Underwood Manor typically are, can reach the Crema SoBro location in about a 10-minute Uber. For mornings when nobody wants to leave the property, Underwood Manor stocks the kitchen with a Nespresso Virtuo machine, unlimited regular and decaf pods, and Tazo teas, which handles the pre-adventure caffeine need without the commute. The property features The Space, a thoughtfully designed gathering area perfect for groups starting their day together before heading out to explore Nashville's cafe scene.
The Gulch and Hotel Coffee Shops Worth Seeking Out
Killebrew Coffee inside the Thompson Hotel in The Gulch is worth knowing about specifically for the brown butter cinnamon roll, which is one of the better baked goods attached to a Nashville coffee operation. The Gulch location makes it convenient if your group is already heading to that part of the city.
Poindexter Coffee inside the Graduate Hotel is colorful, retro-themed with pink accents and vintage-inspired booths, and serves a strong cold brew that earns regular mentions in local roundups. If your group is visiting Vanderbilt or staying in Midtown, this is a more interesting stop than the predictable chain options nearby.
Barista Parlor's presence in the W Nashville lobby is the rare hotel coffee shop that does not feel like a lobby afterthought. The full Barista Parlor menu is available, and the Gulch location means it is close to the Herman Haven, which sits less than 2 miles from Broadway and is convenient for groups who want to walk to a genuinely good espresso before heading to the downtown entertainment strip.
Are There Nashville Coffee Myths Worth Busting Before You Go?
Several persistent assumptions about Nashville's coffee scene lead visitors to make suboptimal choices. These are the myths that consistently send people to the wrong shop at the wrong time.
Myth 1: Broadway Is the Right Place to Start Your Morning Coffee
Reality: The Broadway corridor is optimized for nightlife, and the coffee options in the immediate honky tonk zone reflect that. You will find serviceable caffeine near Lower Broadway, but Nashville's best coffee shops are concentrated in East Nashville, Wedgewood-Houston, and The Nations, neighborhoods that are typically a 10-15 minute Uber from the Broadway core. Treat the morning coffee stop as a neighborhood exploration opportunity rather than a pre-bar errand. For a full guide to top cool neighborhoods in Nashville you must explore, the Underwood Manor blog covers each area in depth.
Myth 2: Hotel Coffee Shops Are Just Lobby Conveniences
Reality: Several Nashville hotel coffee programs are genuinely worth seeking out even if you are not staying there. Barista Parlor at the W Nashville, Killebrew at the Thompson, and Poindexter at the Graduate are operated by real coffee professionals, not hotel F&B departments trying to check a box. Killebrew's brown butter cinnamon roll and Poindexter's cold brew are specific reasons to visit, not just the proximity.
Myth 3: All Nashville Coffee Shops Are the Same Price
Reality: Pricing varies meaningfully across the city. Walk-up operations like Surefire Coffee Co. in Germantown and OSA Coffee Roasters in Edgehill typically charge $4-5 for an espresso-based drink. Full-service shops with seating, food menus, and specialty roasts (Crema, Barista Parlor, 8th and Roast) run $6-9 for a specialty drink. Hotel-based cafes (Killebrew, Poindexter) tend to sit at the higher end of that range. Budget accordingly if your group is doing a multi-stop coffee crawl.
Myth 4: You Need to Visit Bongo Java for Nostalgia, Not Quality
Reality: Bongo Java earned its reputation as Nashville's oldest coffee company and the city's first roaster to offer certified organic, Fair Trade brews. But the more practically interesting location in 2026 is the East Nashville shop, renamed Game Point, which operates as Nashville's first board game cafe with over 500 games available free to play. For a group that wants coffee and something to do with two hours, this is a more useful stop than the Belmont Boulevard original.
Fido, Bongo Java's Hillsboro Village sister location, is separately worth knowing about for both food and coffee quality. It sits near Belmont University and Vanderbilt in a neighborhood that rewards a slower morning walk. The food menu at Fido is more developed than at most coffee shops and earns consistent praise from locals who live in the area.
Myth 5: You Cannot Find Good Coffee Near the Touristy Parts of Nashville
Reality: Honest Coffee Roasters has a downtown location that serves quality espresso without the wait times of more Instagram-visible spots. The Nations location at L&L Market surrounds the coffee counter with food kiosks, boutiques, and a yoga studio, making it one of the more genuinely neighborhood-feeling spots on the west side of the city. Honest roasts its own beans and is underrepresented in most tourist-facing coffee guides. Check out the full Nashville hidden gems locals actually love for more under-the-radar spots like these.

How Should You Plan a Nashville Coffee Crawl by Neighborhood?
A Nashville coffee crawl works best when organized by neighborhood rather than by quality ranking. The city is spread out, and hopping between East Nashville, the Gulch, and 12 South in a single morning means spending more time in a car than in a cafe. Two routes cover the highest concentration of quality shops with the least wasted transit time.
East Nashville Coffee Crawl (Half-Day Route)
Start at Retrograde Coffee for an in-house sourdough bagel and a morning espresso before the Five Points area fills up. Walk or rideshare to Barista Parlor on Woodland Street for the bourbon vanilla iced latte, which drinks better at the East Nashville original than at any other location. From there, Dose is a 5-10 minute walk for anyone who wants a second round, a pastry, or a transition into an early afternoon with their craft beer and cocktail menu. Cap the crawl at Crema's East Nashville location on Duke Street for a pour-over before heading back toward downtown.
The full route takes roughly 2.5-3 hours if you give each stop 30-45 minutes. East Nashville parking is available near Five Points on Woodland Street but fills up by 10am on weekends. Street parking on side streets like Russell Street or South 11th is almost always available and free.
Wedgewood-Houston and Gulch Coffee Route (Afternoon-Friendly)
This route suits groups staying south of downtown or those who want a late-morning start. Begin at Humphreys Street Coffee for a cortado and a few minutes with their community impact materials if that context matters to your group. Walk to Americano Lounge for a single origin espresso and an in-house pastry. Finish at Killebrew Coffee in the Thompson Hotel for the brown butter cinnamon roll and a different kind of setting.
The Wedgewood-Houston stretch is walkable if you are already in that neighborhood. From The Gulch, rideshare back to the Broadway corridor is typically 5-8 minutes and runs $6-10. For Nashville trip planning purposes, this afternoon route pairs well with a visit to The Gulch's mural wall before heading back to your rental.
What Are the Practical Details Most Coffee Guides Skip?
Most Nashville coffee roundups tell you what to order but skip the details that actually affect your morning. Here is what the typical guide misses.
Hours: When Does Each Type of Shop Open?
Nashville coffee shop hours vary more than most visitors expect. Destination roasters like Crema and 8th and Roast typically open at 7am on weekdays and 8am on weekends. Full-service cafe-restaurants like Frothy Monkey and Dose open by 7am daily and serve food through mid-afternoon. Hotel coffee shops (Killebrew, Poindexter, Barista Parlor at W Nashville) often open between 6:30am and 7am to serve hotel guests. Walk-up windows and smaller operations tend to open at 8am or later. Always verify current hours directly with the shop before building an itinerary around a specific opening time, as hours in 2026 reflect post-expansion staffing patterns that can shift seasonally.
Parking: Realistic Options Near Each Area
East Nashville shops near Five Points have the most forgiving parking: street parking on Woodland Street and the surrounding side streets is free and available outside of special event days. Wedgewood-Houston has a mix of free street parking and small paid lots near the main commercial stretch. Downtown and SoBro options (Crema, Elixr, Cafe Intermezzo) require either metered street parking ($1.50-2.50 per hour typical) or a paid garage. The Gulch hotel shops benefit from Thompson and W Nashville valet if you are a guest, but street parking in The Gulch is limited and often metered. Frothy Monkey's 12 South location has a small lot but fills fast on weekend mornings; street parking on 12th Avenue South works but requires arriving early.
Accessibility and Pet-Friendly Patios
Frothy Monkey's 12 South and The Nations locations have accessible entrances and outdoor patios that welcome leashed dogs. Bongo Java's Game Point in East Nashville has a pet-friendly outdoor space. Humphreys Street Coffee in Wedgewood-Houston has ground-level entry. If ADA accessibility or pet-friendly outdoor seating is a priority for your group, call ahead to confirm current setup, as patio layouts change with seasons and property renovations. Most Nashville coffee shops do not prominently advertise accessibility features in their online listings, making a direct inquiry the most reliable approach.
Quick Reference: Best Nashville Coffee Shops by Type
Coffee Shop | Neighborhood | Best For | Signature Order | Honest Caveat |
Crema Coffee Roasters | SoBro / East Nashville | Specialty espresso, coffee classes | Single origin pour-over | East Nashville location can be slow on weekends |
Barista Parlor | East Nashville / Gulch / Wedgewood-Houston | Craft espresso, atmosphere | Bourbon vanilla iced latte | Fills up by 10am on weekends at the East Nashville location |
Frothy Monkey | 12 South / The Nations / East Nashville / Downtown | Full brunch menu, patio, locals crowd | Drip or latte with food order | 12 South parking is competitive Saturday mornings |
8th and Roast | 8th Ave S / Charlotte Ave / Midtown | Origin-focused roasting, serious coffee | Single origin black coffee | Charlotte Ave location is best; 8th Ave original is smaller |
Bongo Java (Game Point) | East Nashville | Board game cafe with 500+ games | Drip or espresso with a game | Can get busy when large groups book the game room |
Humphreys Street Coffee | Wedgewood-Houston | Community impact, in-house roasting | Cortado or drip | Limited seating; not ideal for large groups |
Dose | East Nashville / Sylvan Park | Coffee plus beer, wine, cocktails; full kitchen | Whatever is baked that morning | East Nashville location can have a wait for food |
Killebrew Coffee | The Gulch (Thompson Hotel) | Hotel coffee that earns its price | Brown butter cinnamon roll + espresso | Pricier than standalone shops; hotel pricing |
Americano Lounge | Wedgewood-Houston | In-house everything, single origin focus | Espresso with in-house pastry | Small space; limited seating for groups |
Cafe Intermezzo | SoBro / Downtown | European coffee experience, alcohol-adjacent drinks | Cafe Salzburg (coffee with spirit) | Sit-down format; slower paced than grab-and-go options |
Frequently Asked Questions About Nashville Coffee Shops
What is the best coffee shop in Nashville for a first-time visitor?
Crema Coffee Roasters is the most reliable starting point for first-time visitors. The SoBro location sits within a short walk of Lower Broadway, serves consistently high-quality specialty espresso, and offers a rotation of single-origin pour-overs that reflect genuine sourcing care. For visitors staying near downtown Nashville, Crema SoBro is typically a 10-minute rideshare from most properties in the West End and Midtown area.
Which Nashville coffee shop is best for remote work?
8th and Roast's Charlotte Avenue location in Sylvan Park is the best remote work option: it is large, has reliable seating throughout the week, and offers a quieter environment than the East Nashville competition. Frothy Monkey's The Nations location is a second strong choice, with good table availability on weekday mornings and a food menu that justifies a longer stay. Avoid Elixr at Fifth and Broadway for focused work on weekends; foot traffic from the Broadway corridor makes it unpredictably busy. For more on working remotely while traveling, see the 7 best places to work remotely in Nashville guide.
What are Nashville's best coffee shops near Broadway?
Crema SoBro is the best quality option within a short walk of Lower Broadway. Cafe Intermezzo in SoBro is worth the visit for a European-style coffee experience, including French press served at the table and espresso drinks with alcohol. Elixr at Fifth and Broadway is the most convenient walk-in option near the entertainment district, with the Strawberry Milk Latte as the signature order, though weekend crowds can mean a 15-20 minute wait.
Does Nashville have any coffee shops with a social mission?
Humphreys Street Coffee in Wedgewood-Houston is the most prominent example. As a social enterprise of Harvest Hands CDC, Humphreys Street roasts its own coffee and reinvests 100% of its profits into community programs and scholarships, having directed over $200,000 toward those initiatives since opening. The Well, with locations in Green Hills and Music Row, has similarly directed over $200,000 to communities since opening in 2012 and occasionally features live music.
What is the best neighborhood to explore Nashville coffee shops on foot?
East Nashville offers the highest density of quality coffee shops within a walkable radius. Starting near Five Points, you can reach Barista Parlor, Retrograde Coffee, Crema's East Nashville location, Dose, and Forevermore within a roughly 1-mile stretch. Wedgewood-Houston is a second strong option for a focused crawl, with Humphreys Street Coffee, Americano Lounge, and the Elegy Coffee location concentrated along the main corridor.
How far are Nashville's best coffee shops from downtown vacation rentals?
Most of Nashville's top-rated coffee shops are 5-15 minutes by rideshare from the downtown and West End vacation rental zone. Crema SoBro is the closest quality option to the Broadway corridor. Barista Parlor's East Nashville location is roughly 10-12 minutes from downtown. Guests at Underwood Manor, located approximately 5 minutes from downtown Nashville near Centennial Park, are about 6 minutes from 8th and Roast's Midtown location on the Vanderbilt side of town. If you are still deciding where to stay in Nashville, proximity to walkable neighborhoods and coffee corridors is worth factoring in.
Which Nashville coffee shops are best for groups?
Frothy Monkey's four locations are the most group-friendly, with larger seating areas, a full brunch menu, and the flexibility to accommodate a group that arrives on different timelines. Bongo Java's East Nashville Game Point location is particularly well-suited for groups who want something to do with two hours: over 500 board games are available free to play. For a group staying at a Nashville vacation rental, starting mornings at the property with an in-house coffee setup and saving cafe visits for afternoons tends to produce less friction than coordinating a group of 8-10 before noon. Groups looking for a property with on-site entertainment can explore the Speakeasy Game Room at Underwood Manor, which keeps the group entertained without leaving the house.
Where Should You Stay to Make Nashville Coffee Exploration Easy?
Nashville's best coffee shops spread across neighborhoods that sit between downtown and the outer residential districts, which means your base matters for how practical a morning coffee crawl actually is. Properties in the West End, Midtown, and downtown-adjacent areas put you within a reasonable rideshare of East Nashville, Wedgewood-Houston, and 12 South without committing to a specific neighborhood.
For groups planning a Nashville trip around both the coffee scene and the broader range of Nashville activities, the location calculus is similar: proximity to downtown means short Ubers to Broadway at night and short trips to East Nashville in the morning. If you are planning a Nashville bachelorette party and want your group's mornings to include a neighborhood cafe run before the evening schedule kicks in, having a rental with an in-house coffee setup reduces the pressure to coordinate a group exodus before 9am. For inspiration on how to structure the full trip, the top 7 cute coffee shops in Nashville you must visit pairs well with a perfect weekend in Nashville itinerary.
Nashville's visitor numbers reflect a city that has figured out how to attract serious travelers. According to the Nashville Convention and Visitors Corp, Davidson County welcomed 16.9 million daily and overnight visitors in 2026. That audience has driven the coffee scene's expansion, and in 2026 the city continues to add new operators, with recent openings in Berry Hill, 12 South, and Germantown adding to an already strong lineup. The best time to visit Nashville is any weekday morning when the weekend tourist volume drops and the neighborhood cafes return to their regular local pace. For more ideas on how to spend your time in Music City, the best things to do in Nashville TN in 2026 covers everything from Nashville restaurants worth the hype to the best Nashville bars locals actually frequent. Planning a Nashville birthday weekend or a bachelorette party in Nashville this year? The city's coffee scene is an underrated part of what makes a full trip feel local rather than touristy. For a comprehensive look at best Nashville outdoor restaurants to pair with your cafe crawl, or to find the best Nashville TN brunch spots near your coffee stops, those guides round out a full morning itinerary.

If your group is still deciding where to stay, Underwood Manor sits approximately 5 minutes from downtown Nashville and about 6 minutes from the 8th and Roast Midtown location on the Vanderbilt side of the city. The house stocks a Nespresso Virtuo machine with unlimited pods for mornings when the group needs coffee before anyone is ready to go anywhere. For a Nashville trip that includes both a serious coffee itinerary and a private backyard with a 7-person hot tub and the kind of speakeasy game room that makes groups miss their Broadway reservations, it is worth checking dates before finalizing anything on a third-party platform. View availability at Underwood Manor directly to compare against platform pricing.





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