Nashville visitors and locals were asked what's changed for the worse in the last five years. The responses came fast, and a few themes showed up so consistently they're hard to ignore.
Traffic Is Getting Worse
This one is not even a debate anymore. Traffic in Nashville has become a genuine problem, and people who have lived here for years say it's reached a tipping point.
What used to be a 20-minute drive across town can now stretch into something that looks a lot more like a parking lot. Getting in and out of downtown on a weekend is its own ordeal. And for people commuting to work, the daily grind on corridors like I-24 has worn a lot of patience thin.
More people moving to Nashville means more cars. The roads haven't kept up.
Everything Costs More
Drinks on Broadway were never cheap. But the price of a night out has climbed to a level that catches a lot of visitors off guard.
Two beers at a bar can run close to two months' rent, according to some. Hotel rates have spiked. Parking fees near downtown can run $50 or more on a busy night. And the cost of living for people who actually live here, rent, property taxes, groceries, has gone up sharply while wages have largely stayed flat.
Nashville used to feel accessible. For a growing number of people, it's starting not to.

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Downtown parking has become one of the most consistent frustrations for visitors. Fees near Broadway are steep, and availability on busy nights is limited.
The workaround that gets recommended most: Music City Center Garage. It tends to run $20 to $25 depending on how long you're there, and holds that rate even during major events. If you're planning a night downtown, it's worth plugging into your plans ahead of time.

The Bar Scene Has Changed
Long-time Nashville locals have feelings about what Broadway has become. The celebrity-owned bars, the packed-in crowds, the party buses and bachelorette groups, it adds up to an atmosphere that feels very different from what the strip used to be.
The music itself comes up too. Some visitors feel like the bands are cycling through the same rotation of covers, and that the raw, unpredictable energy that once defined Broadway has been smoothed out into something more polished and less interesting.
Robert's Western World keeps coming up as the one place that still feels like the old Nashville. If authentic country music is what you're after, that's where locals keep pointing.
Iconic Venues Have Disappeared
This one hits harder for people who knew Nashville before the boom. Several smaller venues that served as proving grounds for local musicians have either closed or changed beyond recognition.
Places like Douglas Corner and the old Mercy Lounge meant something to the local music scene in a way that a celebrity bar simply doesn't. Their loss has left a gap that a lot of people feel but can't quite replace.
What This Means for Visitors
None of this means Nashville isn't worth the trip. It absolutely is. The food is still great. The live music scene, even with its changes, still delivers. And the energy of the city on a weekend night is hard to find anywhere else.
But going in with realistic expectations makes the experience better. Budget more than you think you'll need. Give yourself extra time to get anywhere. And if you want to see a version of Nashville that still feels a little more like itself, wander past Broadway and see what you find.