Mobile Home Park Store
The Best Place to Buy, Sell, and Learn about Mobile Home Parks

Phone: 800-950-1364
Fax: 970-856-4883


For Sale
Mobile Home Parks & Land For Sale

Manufactured Homes For Sale

Top Resources


Mobile Home Park Financing

Mobile Home Park Books and Audios

Mobile Home
Park Bootcamp

Due Diligence

MHP Investors Forum

Industry Services


Mobile Home Park Brokers

Mobile Home Financing

Mobile Home Community Management

Mobile Home & Park Insurance

Attorneys, Consulting & Developers

Mobile Home Park Appraisers

Auction Companies

1031 Companies

Private Utilities & Phase 1 Services

Property Management Software

Aerial Photographers

FREE Employment and Seeking Employment Ads

Investor Services


Mobile Home Park Investors

Mobile Home Investors

Mobile Home Note Investors

Seeking Partners or Investors

Find Lonnie Dealers and Parks that Allow Lonnie Dealers

Directories


Mobile Home Parks - over 40,000 listed!

Manufactured Home Dealers/Retailers

Mobile Home Moving & Transporting Companies

Mobile Home Parts, Supplies, Repair and Service Companies

Miscellaneous


Upcoming Events & Seminars - New!

Advertise Options

Affiliate Program

View comments from our customers
Terri,

Since our broker has started listing all of our mobile home parks for sale on your site our phone rings 300 - 400% more than it ever has. He has been writing offers like a mad man!

Thanks for the job security!

Bill S., Personal Assistant


WHY THE MOBILE HOME BUSINESS WORKS AND THE MANUFACTURED HOME BUSINESS DOESN’T 

By Frank Rolfe

When I got in the mobile home park business, many of the sellers I bought from called the mobile homes “coaches” and “trailers”. Roger Miller even wrote a hit song with the lyrics “trailers for sale or rent”. But manufacturers and dealers thought the business needed an upgrade, so they changed the name to “mobile home”. Of course, the name was misleading, because mobile homes are far from mobile. Some can’t survive any movement at all, and moving one can cost $3,000 or more. And I guess they stuck the word “home” on there to make it sound reassuing or folksy (as opposed to saying “mobile unit”), or to give you greater direction on what you were supposed to do with the thing. But I embraced the new moniker, and so did everybody else.

The mobile home is a fine symbol of affordable housing. It represents the collective efforts of manufacturers and the government to build the cheapest detached housing unit in the world. Although it is not always appealing to the eye, and has been a notorious incubator for some of the wildest living conditions in mankind, it is cheap. Sometimes, real cheap. I have seen used mobile homes sell for $1,000 – that’s 94 cents per square foot. That’s about 100 times cheaper than a comparable stick-built house.

Mobile homes were inhabited by people who didn’t earn much – but they were at least inhabited. Nobody expected much besides four walls and a roof, and they were seldom disappointed. If you didn’t have much money, you always felt safe that there would be a mobile home in a park to fit any budget.

But then in the 1990s they decided to re-invent the industry again, this time under the moniker “manufactured home”. Out with the concept of “mobile” and in with the concept of building a thing in a factory. First off, I’m not so sure that you want to beat the customer over the head with the idea that their housing unit was built in a factory. That’s not exactly a crowd-pleaser or reason to boast at a cocktail party “my house was built just like my car”. Most things built in a factory are impersonal, cheaply made and often prone to breaking. Wait a minute – maybe that is a pretty accurate impression.

With the new “classy” name came new pricing for the homes – about two to three times what mobile homes cost. But they still sold O.K. due to impossibly low standards by lenders such as Greentree. Suddenly, mobile homes that cost $10,000 now cost $40,000 as manufactured homes. And therein lies the problem.

Manufactured housing has lost its roots as affordable housing. Now it wants to pretend that it is something more than it is – and make the consumer join in the fun. I think the American public has voted with its pocketbook. Sales of manufactured homes have fallen about 75% since 2000. The sad truth is that nobody wants an expensive manufactured home. They want cheap mobile homes.

There is talk that the industry wants to change the name again. Perhaps “executive mansions on the go” is on the table. I would urge the industry, instead, to go back to the “mobile home business”. Everyone knew what it meant – affordable housing – and they could afford it. Homes sold briskly and parks were full. That demand has not gone anywhere, but nobody can afford, or wants to buy, affordable housing for $40,000. Instead of straining to find out how to build and sell the most expensive manufactured home, let’s refocus the industry on how to build the least expensive. I know it’s not as profitable, but you can make it up in volume.

“Coaches”, “trailers” and “mobile homes” are where the demand is. “Manufactured homes”? Nobody’s interested. And forget any new names – you’ve already embarrassed yourselves enough.

 

Sign up here to receive free tips,
information & special offers!

Mobile Home
Park Bootcamps

October 22nd - 24th, 2010
Columbus, OH


Mobile Home Park Financing Quote
 

 

The information on the NicheInvestment.com network of sites has been obtained from sources we believe to be reliable.  However we make no guarantee, warranty or representation on the information provided and it has not been independently verified.  It is your responsibility to verify its accuracy and completeness.  In all cases you should enlist the the services of competent counsel to aid you in the verification.  Copyright 1999 - 2010.

Visit our other NicheInvestment.com Websites

Mobile Homes for Sale     RV Parks for Sale     Self Storage and Mini Storages for Sale     Motels and Hotels for Sale     Outdoor Advertising Investments & Rentals

     

Site Map     Contact Us        About Us        MH Associations        Landlord Tenant Laws        Articles        Advertise        Privacy Policy       Terms of Service

Thank you for Visiting!