McCaysville is a border town — the Toccoa River divides it from Copperhill, Tennessee, and the main street straddling two states is not a gimmick. It’s a real town with a working history, and the buyers who find it tend to stay found. Less foot traffic than Blue Ridge, more character, meaningfully lower prices.
The copper mining history is in the soil — literally, in the river’s red tinge — and in the architecture. McCaysville buyers are a specific type: they want authenticity, not a mountain-town facsimile.





