FGL House Nashville — Florida Georgia Line
```mediawiki FGL House Nashville is a branded entertainment venue and former celebrity residence in Nashville, Tennessee, associated with country music duo Florida Georgia Line. The property has drawn sustained attention from fans, real estate observers, and music industry journalists since the band's rise to commercial prominence in the early 2010s. Florida Georgia Line was formed in 2009 by Brian Kelley and Tyler Hubbard, who met while attending Belmont University in Nashville.[1] The duo achieved breakthrough success with "Cruise" (2012), which became one of the best-selling country singles in history, and went on to record a string of platinum-certified albums before announcing an indefinite hiatus in 2022.[2][3]
The property's name reflects the band's long-standing connection to Nashville, a city that served as their professional base throughout the peak years of their career. While the house itself is not open to the public as a formal tourist attraction, its association with one of country music's commercially successful acts of the 2010s has made it a reference point in discussions about celebrity culture, Nashville real estate, and the music industry's geographic concentration in Middle Tennessee. The band's 2022 split and subsequent onstage reunion in 2026 have added new layers of public interest to the property and its place in country music history.[4]
History
Florida Georgia Line's roots in Nashville trace directly to Belmont University, where Kelley and Hubbard met and began writing songs together around 2009. Their early recordings attracted the attention of Big Loud Mountain, a publishing company that helped launch their professional careers, and they signed with Republic Nashville shortly thereafter.[5] The success of "Cruise," released in May 2012, transformed the duo from regional act to national phenomenon. The song spent 24 weeks at number one on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart and, following a remix featuring rapper Nelly, crossed over to mainstream pop audiences.[6]
As the band's income and profile grew, both Kelley and Hubbard made substantial investments in Nashville real estate. The property known informally as FGL House Nashville was acquired in the early-to-mid 2010s, during a period when Nashville's housing market was experiencing rapid appreciation driven partly by an influx of entertainment industry wealth.[7] The purchase reflected a broader pattern among commercially successful Nashville artists who chose to anchor their personal lives in the same city where they built their professional ones.
The house served for years as a gathering point for the band's inner circle, hosting private events, industry meetings, and informal gatherings. The property attracted periodic media coverage, particularly when used for events tied to Florida Georgia Line's philanthropic work, including their FGL House charity initiatives.[8]
Florida Georgia Line announced their hiatus in 2022, with both Kelley and Hubbard subsequently pursuing solo careers. Hubbard released his debut solo album 5 Foot 9 in 2022, while Kelley launched his own solo project.[9] The split raised questions about the long-term status of shared assets, including Nashville properties associated with the band's brand. In March 2026, the two reunited publicly for the first time in roughly four years, performing together at a Nashville event honoring Jason Aldean — a moment that generated significant coverage and renewed speculation about a full professional reunion.[10][11]
Geography
FGL House Nashville sits within Davidson County, the consolidated city-county government that encompasses Nashville proper. The property is located in a residential area near the city's core entertainment and music industry districts, placing it within reasonable proximity to Music Row — the stretch of 16th and 17th Avenues South that houses the majority of Nashville's major record labels, publishing companies, and recording studios. The Grand Ole Opry, located in the Opryland area of East Nashville, and the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, situated downtown on Fifth Avenue South, are both accessible within a short drive.[12]
The area surrounding the property exemplifies the changes that have reshaped Nashville's residential neighborhoods since roughly 2010. Nashville added more than 100 people per day to its population between 2010 and 2020, according to U.S. Census Bureau data, and that growth fundamentally altered housing density, property values, and neighborhood character across Davidson County.[13] Single-family blocks that once sat well outside the city's commercial orbit have seen infill development, short-term rental conversions, and rising land values — dynamics that directly affect neighborhoods associated with celebrity residences.
Nashville's location at the intersection of several Interstate highways, including I-24, I-40, and I-65, makes any point within the urban core relatively easy to reach by car. The Metropolitan Transit Authority operates bus routes throughout the city, though Nashville remains more car-dependent than peer cities of comparable size.
Culture
FGL House Nashville sits within a city that has undergone a dramatic cultural reorientation since the early 2000s. Nashville's identity, long built almost entirely around country music and the institutions that support it, has broadened to absorb a growing tech sector, a professional sports presence, and an increasingly diverse population — changes that have altered but not displaced the city's musical character.[14] Celebrity residences and branded properties tied to artists have become a visible feature of this environment, functioning simultaneously as private homes, public symbols, and economic signals.
Florida Georgia Line's brand was particularly well-suited to Nashville's evolving image during the 2010s. Their music incorporated hip-hop production techniques and pop song structures into a country framework, drawing criticism from traditionalists but connecting with a younger, more demographically diverse audience than the genre had historically reached.[15] The band's Nashville presence — including their investments in local real estate and hospitality — mirrored this commercial ambition. The duo launched FGL House as a Lower Broadway honky-tonk bar in 2016, adding a public-facing commercial dimension to the FGL brand in Nashville that extended well beyond their private residence.[16]
Country music's relationship with celebrity culture is well-documented. Nashville's tradition of artist-owned businesses along Lower Broadway, from honky-tonks to merchandise stores, reflects an industry in which artists have historically maintained visible community presences rather than retreating entirely into private life. Florida Georgia Line's approach followed this model while scaling it to reflect the commercial reach of a band that had sold tens of millions of records.
The 2022 hiatus introduced uncertainty about the future of FGL-branded properties and initiatives. The 2026 reunion performance at the Jason Aldean event in Nashville reignited public conversation about whether the partnership would be formally restored.[17] The event drew wide coverage in the country music press and social media, with the performance described as emotionally charged and well-received by those in attendance.[18]
Florida Georgia Line
Brian Kelley was born on August 26, 1985, in Ormond Beach, Florida. Tyler Hubbard was born on January 31, 1987, in Monroe, Georgia. Both enrolled at Belmont University in Nashville, where they met around 2009 and began collaborating on original material.[19] Their early songwriting caught the attention of publishers and producers on Music Row, and their independently released EP gained traction before they signed a formal label deal.
"Cruise," the lead single from their debut EP, was re-released through Republic Nashville in 2012 and became a genre-defining hit. It spent 24 weeks at number one on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart — a record at the time — and the Nelly remix version peaked at number four on the Billboard Hot 100.[20] Subsequent albums, including Here's to the Good Times (2012) and Anything Goes (2014), produced multiple number-one singles and earned the duo a reputation as among the most commercially potent acts in country music.
Their style — often labeled "bro-country" by critics — blended rural imagery with party-focused lyrics set to production that drew heavily from contemporary pop and hip-hop. The approach polarized country music audiences and critics but proved enormously effective commercially. The duo won numerous awards, including multiple American Music Awards and Billboard Music Awards.[21]
Both members married and started families during the band's peak years, and Nashville served as the primary home base for both households. The 2022 hiatus announcement came after years of public signals that the two were pursuing increasingly independent paths. Hubbard's debut solo single "5 Foot 9" was released in early 2022 and reached number one on the country airplay charts.[22] The March 2026 reunion performance marked the first time the two had appeared onstage together since the split, prompting widespread speculation, including from Hubbard himself in a subsequent interview, that a full reunion could be forthcoming.[23][24]
Notable Residents
Brian Kelley and Tyler Hubbard are the principal figures associated with FGL House Nashville. Both maintained Nashville as their primary residence throughout the band's active years and into their solo careers. Hubbard and his wife Hayley have been particularly visible in the Nashville community, participating in local charitable initiatives and speaking publicly about their ties to the city.[25]
The property, given its role as an informal gathering space during the band's peak years, hosted visits from collaborators, producers, and fellow artists whose work intersected with Florida Georgia Line's. The band co-wrote and recorded with artists across genres during their career, and Nashville's compact music industry geography made their home a natural extension of professional relationships formed on Music Row and in recording studios across the city.
Venue and Public Presence
Distinct from the private residence, the FGL House brand has a formal public presence on Lower Broadway in downtown Nashville. The FGL House bar opened in 2016 at 120 Second Avenue North, operating as a multi-story honky-tonk offering live music, food, and drinks in the mold of the broader Lower Broadway entertainment corridor.[26] Lower Broadway has long served as the city's most visitor-facing entertainment strip, with venues ranging from historic institutions like Tootsie's Orchid Lounge to newer celebrity-branded establishments opened by artists including Luke Bryan, Jason Aldean, and Alan Jackson.
The commercial venue should not be confused with the private residential property, though both are associated with the Florida Georgia Line brand and contribute to the band's public identity in Nashville. The bar's location in the heart of downtown makes it accessible to the millions of tourists who visit Nashville annually — the city drew approximately 15 million visitors in 2019, according to the Nashville Convention and Visitors Corp.[27]
Attractions
Visitors interested in Florida Georgia Line's Nashville presence are most likely to engage with the city through the FGL House bar on Lower Broadway rather than through the private residential property, which is not open to the public. Lower Broadway itself is one of Nashville's primary tourist destinations, running along the Cumberland River and packed with live music venues operating most hours of the day. The strip is within walking distance of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, Bridgestone Arena, and the Ryman Auditorium — the historic venue known as the Mother Church of Country Music, which has hosted performances since 1943.[28]
Music Row, located roughly a mile southwest of downtown along 16th and 17th Avenues South, offers a different dimension of Nashville's music history — one focused on the industry infrastructure rather than performance. Many of the historic studios where foundational country, soul, and rock recordings were made are located along this corridor, and the area includes the Country Music Hall of Fame's Frist Library and Archive.[29] The Grand Ole Opry, still broadcasting weekly from its Opryland home, remains one of the most historically significant live music institutions in the United States.[30]
Getting There
Nashville's core entertainment districts are accessible from most points within Davidson County via major Interstate routes. Interstate 65 and Interstate 40 converge near downtown, and Interstate 24 approaches from the southeast. Lower Broadway and the surrounding area offer a mix of surface parking lots and parking garages; the city's parking infrastructure downtown has expanded considerably alongside its tourism growth.
The Metropolitan Transit Authority operates bus service throughout Nashville, with several routes serving downtown and the Lower Broadway corridor. Nashville does not have a rail transit system, and car travel remains the dominant mode for both residents and visitors. Rideshare services operate throughout the city and represent the most common way visitors without cars reach entertainment venues. Nashville International Airport (BNA), located approximately eight miles southeast of downtown, is served by most major carriers and provides direct flights to dozens of cities.[31]
Neighborhoods
The residential neighborhoods surrounding Nashville's music industry core have experienced significant change since 2010. Areas such as 12 South, Hillsboro Village, Green Hills, and the Gulch — all within a few miles of Music Row — have seen substantial new construction, rising property values, and shifting demographic profiles as Nashville attracted new residents and investment. Home prices in Davidson County's most desirable ZIP codes more than doubled between 2012 and 2022, according to data from the Greater Nashville Realtors association.[32]
This transformation has produced recurring tensions between longtime residents and new arrivals, between preservation advocates and developers, and between the city's working-class musical heritage and its increasingly affluent present. These are not abstract dynamics. They play out in zoning decisions, in the fate of independent music venues, and in the character of streets that once housed recording studios and modest bungalows now occupied by boutique hotels and luxury condominiums. Celebrity real estate investment, including purchases by successful musicians, has been both a symptom and a driver of these changes.
The specific neighborhood in which the private FGL House residential property sits has not been widely disclosed in press coverage, reflecting the owners' preference for maintaining residential privacy. The commercial FGL House venue on Lower Broadway sits within Nashville's Central Business District, one of the most densely developed and heavily visited parts of the city.
Education
Nashville's higher education sector is closely intertwined with the music industry. Belmont University, where Kelley and Hubbard met, offers one of the country's most respected music business programs, regularly placing graduates in positions across the recording, publishing, and live performance industries.[33] Vanderbilt University, also in Nashville, maintains a Blair School of Music with strong academic and performance offerings. Tennessee State University and Lipscomb University round out a higher education presence that gives the city an unusually large student population relative to its size.
Public K–12 education in Nashville is administered by
- ↑ ["Florida Georgia Line Biography"], Billboard, accessed 2025.
- ↑ ["Florida Georgia Line's 'Cruise' Becomes Best-Selling Country Ringtone"], Billboard, August 2013.
- ↑ ["Florida Georgia Line Going on Hiatus"], Taste of Country, 2022.
- ↑ ["Florida Georgia Line Reunite for First Performance Since 2022 Split"], People, March 20, 2026.
- ↑ ["Florida Georgia Line's Road to Stardom"], Rolling Stone, 2013.
- ↑ ["Florida Georgia Line 'Cruise' Chart History"], Billboard, 2012–2013.
- ↑ ["Nashville's Celebrity Real Estate Boom"], Nashville Business Journal, 2016.
- ↑ ["Florida Georgia Line's Charitable Work in Nashville"], The Boot, 2017.
- ↑ ["Tyler Hubbard Releases Debut Solo Album"], Taste of Country, 2022.
- ↑ ["Florida Georgia Line Reunites Onstage for First Time in 4 Years"], Page Six, March 20, 2026.
- ↑ ["Florida Georgia Line Reunite for First Performance Since 2022 Split"], People, March 20, 2026.
- ↑ ["Nashville Music Row: A Geographic Overview"], Nashville Scene, 2019.
- ↑ [U.S. Census Bureau, "Nashville-Davidson County Population Estimates, 2010–2020"], census.gov.
- ↑ ["How Nashville Became America's It City"], The New York Times, 2013.
- ↑ ["Bro-Country: The Rise and Backlash"], The Atlantic, 2014.
- ↑ ["FGL House Bar Opens on Lower Broadway"], Nashville Scene, 2016.
- ↑ ["Here's Why We Think a Florida Georgia Line Reunion Is Finally Happening in 2026"], Holler Country Music, 2026.
- ↑ ["Florida Georgia Line Reunite for First Performance Since 2022 Split"], People, March 20, 2026.
- ↑ ["Florida Georgia Line Members' Biographies"], Billboard, accessed 2025.
- ↑ ["Florida Georgia Line 'Cruise' Breaks Country Chart Record"], Billboard, 2013.
- ↑ ["Florida Georgia Line Awards History"], Billboard, accessed 2025.
- ↑ ["Tyler Hubbard's '5 Foot 9' Hits Number One"], Taste of Country, 2022.
- ↑ ["Is a Florida Georgia Line Reunion Actually a Big Possibility?"], Kiss Country 99.9 / Facebook, 2026.
- ↑ ["Tyler Hubbard on Possible Florida Georgia Line Reunion"], Instagram (@the615house), 2026.
- ↑ ["Tyler Hubbard on Nashville Life and Family"], People, 2021.
- ↑ ["FGL House Bar Opens on Lower Broadway"], Nashville Scene, 2016.
- ↑ ["Nashville Tourism Statistics 2019"], Nashville Convention and Visitors Corp, 2020.
- ↑ ["Ryman Auditorium History"], Ryman Auditorium official site, accessed 2025.
- ↑ ["Music Row: Nashville's Recording District"], Nashville Scene, 2018.
- ↑ ["Grand Ole Opry History"], Grand Ole Opry official site, accessed 2025.
- ↑ ["Nashville International Airport Facts & Figures"], Nashville Airport Authority, accessed 2025.
- ↑ ["Davidson County Home Price Trends"], Greater Nashville Realtors, 2022.
- ↑ ["Belmont University Music Business Program"], Belmont University official site, accessed 2025.