Some residents in Nabatiyeh, a city in southern Lebanon, return after a US-Iran truce but find their homes destroyed or damaged, according to reporting from multiple outlets. The articles describe how residents who have moved back to the city encounter significant damage from earlier fighting and, in some cases, incomplete access to housing and infrastructure. Even with the truce, fighting continues in the wider area, and that uncertainty affects whether more people choose to come back. As a result, returnees in Nabatiyeh face practical and safety concerns, including the extent of war damage and the possibility of renewed strikes or clashes nearby. The reporting indicates that the truce has not immediately translated into conditions that allow widespread, full-scale reoccupation. Overall, the situation in Nabatiyeh reflects a limited and cautious pattern of return, shaped by continuing insecurity in the region and the physical destruction left by earlier hostilities.