Financial Benefits of Mobile Home Living

This article originally appeared on Dollar Stretcher by Debra Karplus

According to the BBC News, in a September 2013 report, approximately twenty million Americans are living in a mobile home. South Carolina, with nearly 17% of its housing being mobile homes, takes the lead in US states. Mobile homes often get a bad rap, sometimes in the form of jokes about being in a mobile home during a storm and put-downs about the types of people who live in mobile homes. But, if you have calculated the cost of your current living situation, you may quickly discover that owning and living in a mobile home may be the most cost effective way of having affordable housing, whether you currently rent a place or own one. Estimates state that the cost of mobile home ownership is approximately $4,124 per square foot compared to more than double the cost, about $8,389, for a traditional house. That's a very convincing argument for seriously considering mobile home life.

Actually, mobile homes were built only until 1976. After 1976, these were called "manufactured homes," a different name because of US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) standards that greatly raised the standards and requirements, improving the quality of these housing units.

Modular homes, on the other hand, are similar, yet different. These are built on-site and cannot be moved. History buffs may recall the Sears mail order homes sold out of their catalogue from 1908 until 1940. Over 70,000 of these homes were sold with there were nearly 500 different styles and designs. Today, you can buy a house on eBay in much the same way!

Mobile home ownership has similar types of costs to traditional home ownership, but cheaper.

Unlike your current home, with a mobile home, you typically pay a monthly rent for the lot, plus the one-time cost of the mobile home itself. Lot rental varies by geographic area but expect to pay about $200 for monthly rent.

A mobile home can cost anywhere between $30,000 and $70,000 depending on what you choose. There are single wide and double wide and a choice of amenities as there are with traditional homes. If you have every visited someone living in a mobile home, you already know that many of them are quite luxurious inside and seem very much like any home.

Purchasing a new mobile home or manufactured home and transporting it to your desired location can add a one-time cost of about $25,000 to the equation of mobile home ownership. It may be financially prudent to begin your search for a mobile home with homes that are already situated on a lot in an area that you like. But, if you prefer a brand new, never been lived in before mobile home, it may be worth it to start fresh. If you plan to live in it for ten years for example, that moving cost calculates to a little over $200 monthly in overall cost of mobile home life.

Recollections of the 1953 Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz film, The Long, Long Trailer, might have you imagining yourself or some friends hauling your new large trailer home around the country, but companies that sell mobile homes are geared up and equipped to move your new manufactured home to its new location.

The utilities in your mobile home will cost about $1,000 annually. This depends, of course, on the size and layout of your mobile home and the cost of these utilities in your community. You'll also want homeowners insurance for your mobile home. Expect to pay about $20 monthly, less than half what your friends in traditional homes are probably paying for their insurance. Routine maintenance and repair costs should be significantly less with your mobile home than with a traditional housing unit.

You might still be skeptical about mobile home ownership.

Depending on the design of your mobile home, storm safety, particularly lightning or tornadoes, could be a serious concern. As you would with any home, have a plan of where to go, just in case.

If your mobile home is anchored properly according to HUD regulations with a proper foundation, you should have no more problem with vermin that a family living in a traditional home.

If your mobile home looks shoddy from the outside or is located in an undesirable part of town, you might hear a few snide remarks. But don't most neighborhoods carry with them some preconceived notions about the types of people who live there? Choose a nice part of town for your mobile or manufactured home or have "deaf ears" to any derogatory comments regarding the stigma of mobile homes. Landscape your mobile and manufactured home with class and you will be the envy of friends and other visitors.