TX guide
Manufactured Homes in Texas
Texas has broad manufactured housing demand, especially around rural land, family compounds, workforce housing, and fast-growth metro edges.
Zoning warning
County and city rules vary widely; deed restrictions and utility district requirements can matter as much as zoning.
Title and registration
Confirm title status, tax records, and whether the home is personal property or converted with land.
Setup considerations
Longer transport distances, septic planning, floodplain checks, and foundation choices can change the project budget.
Climate notes
Heat, wind exposure, hail, and flood risk should be part of site planning.
Financing notes
Chattel, FHA, VA, USDA, conventional, and land-home options may each fit different buyer profiles.
Provider questions
Before requesting options in Texas, ask about service area, model availability, delivery radius, setup coordination, financing familiarity, and experience with local permit offices.
Texas buyer checklist
Ask the city or county whether the parcel allows HUD-code manufactured homes, what foundation is required, and whether any age, size, roof-pitch, or exterior standards apply.
Price delivery, setup, foundation, driveway access, utility extensions, septic or sewer, well or water, inspections, and insurance before treating a home quote as the total project cost.
For used homes, verify title, liens, taxes, HUD labels, park approval, move eligibility, and whether the destination jurisdiction will permit that specific home.
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Start Your Manufactured Home Plan
Buying new, buying used, selling, financing, or checking land feasibility all need a slightly different next step.