Planning · 5 min
Single-Wide vs Double-Wide
Compare transport, floor plan, land fit, setup, cost, resale, and financing considerations.
Single-wide homes can be more affordable and easier to fit on narrow lots, but floor plans are more compact. Double-wides offer wider living areas and stronger site-built-home feel, but transport and setup are more involved.
The best choice depends on land shape, road access, buyer budget, family needs, lender expectations, and local installation rules.
Practical buyer checklist
Ask for written details instead of relying on verbal estimates. Separate the home price from delivery, setup, foundation, utility, permit, tax, insurance, and land costs.
Confirm whether the home will be titled as personal property or real property, because that can change financing, taxes, resale, and closing documents.
Call the local jurisdiction before committing to land or a used home move. Zoning, setbacks, flood/fire overlays, foundation standards, and inspection rules can block an otherwise attractive deal.
Keep copies of quotes, title documents, HUD label information, installer paperwork, lender conditions, insurance binders, and final inspection records.
Common mistakes to avoid
Treating the dealer quote as the full project budget before site work, utilities, permits, and inspections are priced.
Assuming any manufactured home can go on any parcel without checking local rules, deed restrictions, road access, and utility feasibility.
Buying a used home before verifying title, liens, taxes, community approval, condition, and whether the home can legally be moved.
This guide is educational and is not legal, financial, tax, insurance, construction, or zoning advice. Verify requirements with local officials and qualified professionals.