Retirement Planning
Most investment property conversations focus on year-one cash flow. That's a reasonable place to start, but it's not the only lens worth using. For buyers in their 40s and 50s, the more interesting question might be: what does this property look like in 15 or 20 years?
An ORG lot is a specific kind of asset — relatively low acquisition cost, strong rental demand in a high-traffic travel market, and a setting that only gets more valuable as the Smoky Mountains continue to draw visitors year after year. For the right buyer, that combination sets up a long-game scenario worth thinking through carefully.
The retirement-focused approach to an ORG lot isn't complicated, but it requires thinking in phases rather than in annual returns.
During your working years, the lot is actively rented. Rental income offsets — and ideally covers — your carrying costs: loan payments, HOA fees, insurance, and maintenance. You build equity in the lot while the property largely pays for itself. You use it personally a few weeks a year and rent the remainder.
As you approach retirement, you begin shifting the balance — more personal use, fewer rental weeks. The property is now partially or fully paid off. Rental income, even at reduced volume, helps cover HOA fees and ongoing costs without drawing on retirement accounts.
The lot is yours, debt-free or nearly so. You winter in Florida and spend spring and fall in Gatlinburg. Or you rent it for the peak summer weeks and use the income to fund trips elsewhere. The property has transformed from an investment into a lifestyle asset that still generates income when you want it to.
Retirement destinations are often chosen for climate, cost of living, and proximity to family. The Smoky Mountains check different boxes — natural beauty, a genuine four-season environment, a strong community of like-minded people, and a location that's within a day's drive of most of the eastern United States.
Outdoor Resorts Gatlinburg in particular has a community character that matters in retirement. It's not a transient campground — it's a community of owners who often return season after season, who know each other, and who have built something beyond just a parking spot for a camper. For buyers who want a retreat with a real sense of place, that's meaningful.
The Smoky Mountains draw 12+ million visitors a year. Whatever the rental market looks like in 15 years, the underlying demand for this location is structural, not cyclical.
One of the most powerful features of the ORG lot as a retirement investment is how accessible the entry point is. A lot purchased for $130,000–$150,000 is a fundamentally different financial commitment than a $600,000 cabin. At the lower price point:
Not every retirement scenario looks the same. Some ORG owners envision full-time seasonal use — spending three or four months at the resort each year. Others want a place to land a few weekends a year in a setting they love, supplemented by rental income the rest of the time. Both are realistic at ORG.
One important consideration: if the property transitions from investment use to primarily personal use in retirement, the tax picture changes. Rental income may no longer be your primary goal, and the property shifts from an investment asset to a personal one. That transition has implications for depreciation recapture, deductibility of expenses, and estate planning. Your CPA should be part of thinking through what that phase looks like before you get there.
The best retirement investments are ones you'd be happy to own even if the financial case fell short of projections. A lot in the Smoky Mountains is the kind of asset you can feel good about regardless of exactly what the returns look like.
I'm an owner at Outdoor Resorts Gatlinburg and a licensed Tennessee real estate agent. If you're thinking about this as a 10–20 year play, I'd love to talk through what that looks like in practice.
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