Christina Haack’s $4.5 Million Tennessee Home Has Been Listed and Delisted Three Times Now

Christina Haack bought Parker Branch before Josh Hall was even in the picture.

February 2021. 23 acres in Leiper’s Fork, Franklin, Tennessee. $2.5 million, paid by her alone, during a personal reset after her second divorce. It was supposed to be her clean slate.

What followed was two HGTV seasons, a marriage, a very public split, and a property battle that played out in court filings and Instagram Stories for nearly two years. The divorce is done now. Hall is gone. The property is fully hers.

So why can nobody seem to sell it?

Three Times Down, Once Back Up and Now Gone Again

The timeline of Parker Branch’s market history is worth knowing, because most articles skip it.

Christina first listed the six-bedroom, six-bathroom farmhouse in October 2024 at $4.5 million. Hall, who was still living there under a temporary court order, filed an emergency motion to block the sale within days.

His argument: mortgage payments made during their marriage gave him a financial stake in a home he never helped buy. The listing came down three weeks later.

It reappeared December 3, 2024. Same price. Same agent. Gone again February 11, 2025, as Realtor.com first reported, days after Hall’s legal team filed a fresh round of confidential court documents.

The divorce eventually settled in August 2025 after 10 months and a 12-hour mediation session. Christina retained full ownership of both Parker Branch and her Newport Beach home.

She paid Hall a $300,000 equalization payment. Both waived spousal support. She was candid about how it felt on SiriusXM’s Jeff Lewis Live: “It’s not great, but I guess it’s done.”

Then, nearly a year later, she came back to market.

The June 2026 Listing That Nobody Saw Coming Off

On June 9, 2026, Christina relisted Parker Branch at $5.3 million, a $800,000 jump from the original ask. The 5,200-square-foot farmhouse on 23.82 acres was described as a “fabulous modern farmhouse,” with its HGTV appearance noted in the listing.

christina haack removes tennessee home from market josh hall divorce
Image Credit: SheKnows

Her close friend Kelly Dougherty of Onward Real Estate held the listing again.

One day later, June 10, the same property appeared as a rental at $20,000 a month.

Two options. One property. Sell it or rent it, whichever comes first.

Weeks later, both listings were quietly removed. No announcement. No explanation. No new court filings in the news. Just gone, per a Realtor.com exclusive report.

That is four times this property has come off the market. The divorce drama is behind her. The legal battle is settled. She has full ownership and full control. And still, Parker Branch keeps disappearing.

What This Pattern Tells You About Celebrity Real Estate

This is where most coverage stops at the headline and misses the actual story.

A property that comes off the market four times is not just a celebrity curiosity. It is a signal. Either the pricing is not landing, the buyer pool is not there at that number, or something about the property’s history is making serious buyers pause.

The same pattern shows up regularly. Diddy’s $55 million Star Island deal collapsed entirely and ended in a lawsuit even after both parties had signed a contract and agreed to a closing date. Legal history and public drama around a property changes how buyers approach due diligence.

Kristen Wiig had to drop the price on her Pasadena home before generating real movement, despite it being a genuinely unique listing in a high-demand market. Celebrity name on a property does not equal buyer urgency.

If you follow stories like this as they develop, channel on WhatsApp covers celebrity real estate and luxury market moves as they break. Useful place to track these without waiting for the news cycle.

Why This Matters

Parker Branch was listed at $4.5 million in 2024. It came back in 2026 at $5.3 million, an 18% price increase on a property that has publicly failed to sell three times.

That pricing logic is hard to follow in the current Tennessee luxury market. According to Coldwell Banker Southern Realty’s 2025 Tennessee market recap, luxury buyers that year conducted thorough due diligence and expected realistic pricing.

Sellers who tested the market with aspirational numbers ended up making multiple reductions and netting less than if they had priced correctly from the start.

A jump from $4.5 million to $5.3 million on a property with a complicated public history is a bold call in that environment. And the market answered within weeks.

This same buyer selectivity is showing up in other high-profile listings. A stunning all-glass house in Washington DC had to cut its price by $710,000 before generating real interest, despite being a rare architectural listing designed by an internationally recognized architect.

What makes Parker Branch complicated is not the property itself. The farmhouse is genuinely impressive: 23 acres, six bedrooms, wood-burning fireplace, private barn, extensively renovated by an HGTV renovation expert. On paper, it should sell.

The weight attached to it is the issue. Four market removals, a public divorce battle, court filings, Instagram callouts, and two years of on-and-off listing history follow this address everywhere a buyer looks it up.

Key Takeaways

  • Christina relisted Parker Branch on June 9, 2026 at $5.3 million, up from the original $4.5 million ask
  • One day later, it was also listed as a rental at $20,000 per month
  • Both listings were quietly pulled weeks later with no explanation given
  • This marks the fourth time the property has been removed from the market
  • The divorce with Josh Hall settled in August 2025. Christina paid him $300,000 and retained full ownership
  • Hall’s original legal argument: mortgage payments during marriage gave him rights over a pre-marital asset
  • The property is a 6-bed, 6-bath, 5,200 sq ft modern farmhouse on 23.82 acres in Leiper’s Fork, Tennessee
  • No buyer, no renter, and no public explanation for the latest removal

What do you think is actually stopping this property from selling? The price, the history, or something else entirely? Drop your take in the comments. Genuinely curious what people think about this one.

Wrapping Up

Parker Branch has been bought, renovated, filmed in, fought over, legally disputed, settled, relisted, and pulled. Again.

Whatever happens next with this property, it is no longer just a real estate story. It is a case study in what happens when personal history gets permanently attached to an address.

If this kind of story is your thing, Build Like New covers celebrity real estate, luxury market shifts, and the real side of big transactions regularly. Worth bookmarking if you want more than just the headline.

For more stories as they break, follow Build Like New on X (Twitter) and join the conversation on the Facebook community. That is where these stories get discussed the moment they drop.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. All details are based on publicly available reports at the time of publication.

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