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Buying Land For a Manufactured Home and Choosing Your Model
December 8 2022
1. The first thing you should do is form a project budget. Knowing how much you have to spend will help you narrow choices to what is affordable. You might also want to look at manufactured homes and have some idea of the home you want. This could help with later decisions about where to live, as the size of the home you like will determine the property you should select.
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2. How much should you borrow? You should get approved for the maximum amount you have available. You don’t have to use it all. But often, unforeseen expenses can trip you up, and you don’t want to be short on funds if this occurs. Costs can increase if the home doesn’t fit for some reason right away, if there are delays or problems with transit from the factory to your home location, or if there are permit issues that come up. Make sure to have some financial breathing room to deal with eventualities.
3. Now, decide where you want to live. Do you want to live in a mobile home park? Do you want to be in the city or the outskirts? Maybe you want to live in a rural area away from it all. Knowing what you are looking for will immediately narrow the choices you have to consider.
4. If you want a rural property, some prime considerations will be getting your home on the site (access), utilities, septic, zoning, and water. You don’t want to invest in a property only to find out you can’t place a home there.
5. If you choose to live in a mobile home park, your first decision is whether to rent or own the land you’ll be occupying. If you rent, you will want assurances that the rental rates won’t spike. It has become common in recent years for large corporations to buy up rental parks and massively increase lot rents. Mobile homes have mobile in the name but aren’t very easy to move. It is extremely expensive, and older units often can’t survive being moved. So the people who rent these spaces are stuck paying whatever price is forced on them. In light of this, if you can afford it, you would be better off owning the property your home is on so you can’t be evicted or gouged. Many mobile home parks have private ownership of the lots, but you must call around to find out which parks have ownership.
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6. Additional issues:
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