Tennessee county land guide

Sevier County TN Land Due Diligence Guide

Buying rural land in Sevier County, Tennessee? Check access, septic and wastewater path, water and utilities, flood and drainage, restrictions, terrain, records, and seller claims before making an offer.

Direct answer

What to verify first

For Sevier County land, start by matching the parcel to official records, then ask the right office path about access, onsite wastewater, flood/drainage, restrictions, utilities, and intended use. Cabin, rental, RV, tiny-home, and mountain-view language should be treated as a question list until records and local-office paths are checked.

  • Region East Tennessee / Smoky Mountain area
  • County seat Sevierville
  • Site caution Mountain terrain, steep roads, creek and drainage paths, wooded lots, and rental-oriented listings can make access, driveway, wastewater, floodplain, and utility questions especially important.

Last updated: May 23, 2026. Screening-grade public-source starting point only.

Pre-offer checklist

What to check before buying land in Sevier County

Parcel identity

Confirm parcel number, acreage, tax record basics, map location, and whether the listing matches official county records.

Recorded access

Check road frontage, private-road language, easements, gates, driveway path, and road-maintenance questions before relying on access claims.

Wastewater path

Use TDEC and local health/environmental health paths as starting points, then ask what records or soil/site review applies to the parcel.

Water and utilities

Separate nearby utility language from actual service availability, extension costs, tap fees, easements, and provider confirmation.

Flood and drainage

Check FEMA/local floodplain and imagery for creeks, drainage paths, low-water crossings, culverts, and wet-weather access issues.

Restrictions and local rules

Ask for deed restrictions, subdivision plats, HOA/POA materials, short-term rental rules, mobile-home/RV rules, and local permitting paths where relevant.

Why Sevier County buyers should slow down

Rural land can look simple online while the expensive questions remain unresolved. Access, wastewater, water, power, driveway location, floodplain, drainage, slope, restrictions, and local process can all change the practical due-diligence path.

Treat the listing as a lead, not proof. Build a question list before making an offer, and leave time for records, local-office questions, and professional review where needed.

County-specific site caution

Mountain terrain, steep roads, creek and drainage paths, wooded lots, and rental-oriented listings can make access, driveway, wastewater, floodplain, and utility questions especially important.

Cabin, rental, RV, tiny-home, and mountain-view language should be treated as a question list until records and local-office paths are checked.

Nearby homes, cabins, farms, rentals, or subdivisions do not settle the question for the parcel you are considering. Ask what applies to this parcel, this access path, and this intended use.

Seller questions

What to ask the seller

  • What documents support the listing claims about access, utilities, septic, water, restrictions, terrain, or homesite location?
  • Can you provide the deed, plat, survey if available, recorded easements, restrictions, and any private-road or maintenance agreement?
  • Has any septic, soil/site, perc, or onsite wastewater review been completed for this parcel? If yes, provide the document, date, reviewer, parcel identifier, and intended use.
  • Are there creeks, springs, wet-weather drainage paths, floodplain areas, steep slopes, gates, shared driveways, or utility easements affecting the likely use area?
  • Has any prior buyer, builder, installer, surveyor, soil consultant, county office, or utility provider identified issues or next steps?
  • Does the seller know which office handles septic/wastewater, building, driveway, floodplain, and local-use questions for this parcel?

Local office

What to ask local offices

  • Which Sevier County or state office should a buyer ask first for this parcel-specific question?
  • What parcel records, GIS layers, tax records, deed/plat records, or prior permits should be checked before making an offer?
  • If public sewer is not available, what onsite wastewater records or review steps should the buyer ask about?
  • Does the intended use, structure type, bedroom count, mobile home, cabin, RV use, short-term rental use, or accessory structure change the review path?
  • Are there driveway, floodplain, stormwater, steep-slope, creek, road-frontage, or private-road questions that require a local office or professional review?
  • What should a buyer request in writing during the offer or due-diligence period before spending more money?

Public sources

Public sources and office paths to start with

Use official public sources as a starting point. Then confirm the current parcel-specific path with the county, state, local office, utility provider, title path, surveyor, or qualified professional as appropriate.

Red flags

Red flags and unknowns

  • Listing says unrestricted, great homesite, septic needed, perc available, utilities nearby, or road access without documents.
  • The likely use area appears steep, wooded, wet, rocky, crossed by drainage, or close to a creek, lake, spring, or low area.
  • Access depends on a private road, shared driveway, gate, neighbor permission, or easement that is not attached to the listing file.
  • The seller cannot identify the local wastewater, building, planning, floodplain, utility, or records path to ask first.
  • An old septic system, old permit, old survey, old driveway, or old utility service is mentioned without current records or location details.
  • The parcel is marketed for cabins, mobile homes, tiny homes, RVs, rentals, homesteads, or multiple structures without a clear local process path.

When to order

Use a Parcel Pre-Screen Report when the parcel is close to offer stage

A Parcel Pre-Screen Report can organize Sevier County seller claims, public-source paths, access questions, wastewater unknowns, flood/drainage questions, utilities, restrictions, and next-step questions into a source-cited due-diligence starting point. It does not confirm final land use, wastewater outcome, recorded access, utility availability, title status, permit outcome, or final purchase-risk decisions.

Related Tennessee and septic/perc guides

Sevier County land buyer FAQ

Can I tell from a listing whether Sevier County land is ready for my intended use?

No. Listing language is a seller claim to verify. A buyer should check records, local-office paths, seller documents, and parcel-specific conditions before relying on the property.

Who should I ask about septic or wastewater in Sevier County?

Start with the relevant Tennessee/TDEC or local health/environmental health path and ask which office handles onsite wastewater for the parcel. Then ask what records or soil/site review apply to the intended use.

Does this page confirm access, septic, utilities, or title for Sevier County land?

No. This is a screening-grade public-source guide. It does not provide legal, title, survey, engineering, septic, wastewater, permit, utility, or final land-use conclusions.

When should I order a Parcel Pre-Screen Report for Sevier County land?

Order when the parcel looks promising but access, wastewater, water, utilities, flood, restrictions, terrain, or seller-claim questions could affect offer terms or due-diligence timing.

Source and methodology

This page uses official public-source paths, including Tennessee state environmental and health resources, federal soil and flood starting points, and county government source paths where available. It translates those paths into buyer-safe due-diligence questions.

Public sources can help organize the first pass, but they do not replace parcel-specific records review, local-office guidance, title/survey review, or professional evaluation.

Scope and disclaimer

Before You Buy Land helps identify red flags, unknowns, public-source links, and verification questions. We do not provide legal, title, survey, engineering, appraisal, septic, wastewater, permitting, utility, or final land-use advice.