Neighborhood
Harvest Point
Spring Hill, TN · Maury County · Ward 4

Harvest Point is Spring Hill's largest master-planned subdivision on the Maury County side of the city, located off Cleburne Road in Ward 4. At full buildout, it'll have roughly 1,200 residential lots and townhomes spread across what's been described as 450-700 acres (sources vary), with over 100 acres set aside for pocket parks and open space. Development started around 2017 and is still actively building — as of early 2026, it's past Phase 11 with multiple builders selling new construction simultaneously.
This is a value-oriented community relative to the Williamson County side of Spring Hill. You get new construction, solid amenities (pool with splash pad, dog park, 5 miles of trails, community garden), and a front-porch neighborhood feel, all at price points that start in the high $300Ks for resale and run up to $840K for new builds. The trade-off is Maury County Public Schools instead of Williamson County Schools — and that's a real factor worth understanding.
History and Development
The land was rezoned through Spring Hill Ordinance 16-12, which rezoned the property known as the "Villages at Harvest Point" at the intersection of Beechcroft Road and Cleburne Road. CKP Development is the land developer — the people behind CKP have built several subdivisions across Middle Tennessee, including Bridgemore Village in Thompson's Station.
Catalyst Design Group handled the landscape architecture and community design, incorporating over 100 acres of pocket parks and open spaces into the plan, along with five miles of walking trails, a swimming pool, dog park, community garden, and pond.
Construction kicked off around 2017 and has been continuous since. The subdivision has been built in phases — Spring Hill city documents reference Phase 2 road dedications from 2018, and listings reference Phase 11 as of 2025-2026. That's a fast pace of development.
Current status: Active construction with multiple builders selling new homes. The community is partially built out — newer phases on the outer edges are still under construction while earlier phases are established and lived-in.
Location and Access
Harvest Point sits on the western side of Spring Hill, off Cleburne Road, squarely in Maury County.
Key distances and access points:
- Cleburne Road is the main access road in and out of the subdivision
- Beechcroft Road borders the development to the south
- I-65: Accessible via Saturn Parkway or US-31, roughly 10-15 minutes depending on traffic
- Saturn Parkway (TN-396): Quick connection to I-65 and the GM/Saturn manufacturing area
- Columbia Pike (US-31): A few minutes east
- Cool Springs/Franklin: 20-25 minutes north
- Downtown Nashville: 35-40 miles, about 40-45 minutes without traffic
- Spring Hill Middle School: Adjacent to the subdivision
Streets within Harvest Point: Harvest Point Boulevard (main road), Crutcher Court, Eastwood Lane, Ewell Farm Drive, Rangeland Road, Sable Lane, June Wilde Ridge, among others expanding with new phases.
Nearby subdivisions: Autumn Ridge, Bluebird Hollow, Beechcroft Station, Charleston Farms, Shirebrook Townhomes, and Williamsburg.
Homes
Harvest Point has a real mix of housing — single-family detached homes and townhomes across a wide price and size range, depending on which builder and phase you're looking at. Architectural styles lean Craftsman, farmhouse, and cottage-inspired, with front porches as a consistent design element across builders.
Builders Currently Active
Celebration Homes (local, family-owned)
- Single-family homes: 1,867-2,977 sq ft
- Townhomes available at 1166 June Wilde Ridge
- Townhome features: open concept, enlarged living areas, loft, 3 bedrooms, primary suite with sitting area
- Design center lets buyers pick finishes
- Incentives available through preferred lender (Encompass Lending)
D.R. Horton (national builder)
- Floor plans include the Clifton (1,859 sq ft, single-story) through the Tisdale (3,594 sq ft, two-story)
- 4 decorated model homes available to tour
- New homes from $499,990
Regent Homes (regional builder)
- Townhomes: 1,821-1,844 sq ft, 3 bedrooms, 2.5 bathrooms, 2-car garages
- Focused on the townhome segment of the community
Phillips Builders (Nashville builder since 1952)
- Model home at 201 Sable Lane, Spring Hill, TN 37174
- Single-family homes
Lennar (national builder)
- Classic Parks Collection
- Operating in Harvest Point alongside the other builders
Pricing
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| New construction range | $499,990 - $839,990 |
| Average listing price (Oct 2025) | $582,570 |
| Active listings (Oct 2025) | 44 |
| Average price per sq ft | $256 |
| Average bedrooms | 4.4 |
| Average bathrooms | 3.4 |
| Average square footage | 2,962 |
Resale homes in earlier phases can be found starting in the high $300Ks to low $400Ks, particularly for smaller floor plans and townhomes.
Amenities
Harvest Point has a solid amenities package for a Maury County subdivision, and it's one of the community's strongest selling points:
- Resort-style swimming pool with splash pad and kiddie area
- Dog park
- 5 miles of walking and jogging trails with scenic creek crossings
- Community garden
- Pond
- Playground / tot lot
- Picnic areas
- Over 100 acres of pocket parks and open spaces woven throughout the community
- On-site commercial: Live-work business area with shops, a salon, and a fitness studio
- Sidewalks and front-porch streetscapes throughout
The five miles of trails is the standout — that's more trail mileage than most Spring Hill subdivisions offer. Combined with the 100+ acres of green space, the community has a distinctly outdoorsy feel despite being a suburban subdivision.
HOA
HOA dues: Approximately $55-$75 per month.
Community website: harvestpointliving.com (includes homeowner portal, HOA documents, rules and regulations)
Facebook group: Harvest Point Community Page (facebook.com/groups/harvestpointcommunitypage/)
The HOA covers maintenance of common areas, pools, trails, and community amenities. Specific details about the management company, payment schedules, and governing documents are available through the homeowner portal on the community website.
Schools
Harvest Point is on the Maury County side of Spring Hill, which means Maury County Public Schools (MCPS). This is the single biggest differentiator between Harvest Point and Williamson County subdivisions in Spring Hill — and it's reflected directly in the price gap.
Spring Hill Elementary School (MCPS)
- Grades PK-4, approximately 445 students
- Niche grade: B-
- GreatSchools rating: 6/10
- Math proficiency: 37%, Reading proficiency: 37%
- Student-teacher ratio: 15 to 1
- Located at 5359 Main St, Spring Hill, TN 37174
Spring Hill Middle School (MCPS)
- Grades 5-8, approximately 538 students
- Niche grade: B-
- Math proficiency: 34%, Reading proficiency: 35%
- Student-teacher ratio: 17 to 1
- Located at 3501 Cleburne Road, Spring Hill, TN 37174 (adjacent to Harvest Point)
- Opened August 2010
Spring Hill High School (MCPS)
- Grades 9-12, approximately 1,204 students
- Niche grade: C+
- GreatSchools rating: 4/10
- Math proficiency: 19%, Reading proficiency: 35%
- Graduation rate: 83%
- Average SAT: 1070, Average ACT: 24
Here's the honest take: these numbers are significantly lower than the Williamson County Schools that serve the other side of Spring Hill. Heritage Elementary, Heritage Middle, and Independence High (which serve neighborhoods like Brixworth and Newport Crossing) post much higher proficiency rates. Spring Hill High School's 4/10 GreatSchools rating and 83% graduation rate versus Independence High's 7/10 and 95% is a gap that matters to families. Maury County schools are improving — SHMS is relatively new (opened 2010) — but the performance gap with WCS is real and well-documented.
Some Harvest Point families opt for private school options in the area, which adds cost but solves the school quality concern.
Community Feel
Harvest Point is designed around the "front-porch neighborhood" concept, and it largely delivers on that. The streetscapes are built with porches facing the sidewalks, trails connect different sections, and the amenity areas (pool, garden, dog park) serve as natural gathering points.
Because the community is still actively building, there's a mix of established sections (earlier phases with mature landscaping and lived-in homes) and brand-new construction zones. The earlier phases have a settled-in feel. The outer phases still have that new-subdivision energy — clean streets, young trees, construction crews nearby.
The on-site live-work commercial area (salon, fitness studio, shops) is a nice touch that most Spring Hill subdivisions don't have. It's small, but it adds a village-center dynamic.
The demographics skew toward young families and first-time homebuyers, drawn by the relative affordability compared to Williamson County options. The townhome sections bring in singles, downsizers, and people who want new construction without the maintenance burden.
Honest Pros and Cons
Pros
- Price point is the headline — new construction from $500K and resale from the high $300Ks is dramatically more affordable than comparable neighborhoods on the Williamson County side of Spring Hill. You get more house for your money here
- Five miles of trails and 100+ acres of green space — this is genuinely above average for amenities. The trail system is extensive and well-maintained
- Pool with splash pad — families with young kids will use this constantly in Tennessee summers
- Multiple builders competing — with Celebration, DR Horton, Regent, Phillips, and Lennar all active, you have real options for floor plans, price points, and quality levels
- New construction availability — unlike fully built-out neighborhoods, you can still buy new here and pick your finishes
- On-site commercial — the live-work area with shops and services is a differentiator
- Community garden — a small detail, but it signals the type of community this is trying to be
Cons
- Maury County Public Schools — this is the elephant in the room. Spring Hill High School's C+ Niche grade and 4/10 GreatSchools rating is a real drawback compared to WCS schools. If school quality is your top priority, Harvest Point may not be the right fit unless you're planning on private school
- Maury County side = less cachet — fairly or not, the Williamson County address carries more weight for resale value and perception. Harvest Point's prices reflect this
- Still under construction — if you're in a newer phase, you're living next to active building sites. Earlier phases are fine, but the outer edges are a work in progress
- Distance from I-65 interchange — Harvest Point is on the western side of Spring Hill, farther from the highway than northern neighborhoods like Brixworth or June Lake. The commute to Franklin or Nashville is a few minutes longer
- Traffic on Cleburne Road — as the main artery in and out, Cleburne Road handles all the subdivision's traffic plus school traffic from the adjacent middle school. It can get congested during peak hours
- National builders dominate — DR Horton and Lennar build at price points and speed that can mean less customization and more cookie-cutter layouts compared to local custom builders
Last updated: April 2026
Sources: Nashville Home Guru, Regent Homes, D.R. Horton, Celebration Homes, Phillips Builders, Lennar, Catalyst Design Group, Nashville MLS, LCT Team, Bethany Hartzog Team, Niche.com, GreatSchools, City of Spring Hill official website, Harvest Point Living (harvestpointliving.com)