Why Mobile Homes?
By Steven Gillman
There are mobile homes for sale, for much less than
stick-built houses, in most areas of the country. Despite persistent predjudice
against them, and sometimes the people living in them, mobile homes are the
cheap housing choice of millions. The advantages
are not always obvious, but they are real.
First of all, let's acknowledge the
big "truth" about
href="http://www.dollarsfromrealestate.com/?hop=urbanhot">mobile homes and appreciation or depreciation. It's true in most
areas that mobile homes in parks go down in value over time. That's why I don't
recommend buying in a park, unless you absolutely
can't buy real estate, and you have done the math to see if you are better off
than renting a nice apartment.
To "do the math" consider lot rent,
payment, and the remaining value of the mobile when you put it up for sale, minus
what you will still owe, when you are likely to move. These are guesses, but
still better than nothing if you are as objective as you can be.
Mobile Homes For Sale With
Real Estate
When looking at mobile homes for
sale on land, however, you are looking at an entirely different investment. My mobile home in Michigan doubled in value in
the twelve years I lived in it. That's because even as the home deteriorated a
little over time (don't all houses?), the value of the land continued to rise.
You also can do what you like with the home when you own the land. For example,
I took in more money from my home than it originally cost, by
renting out a room or two over the years.
As mentioned, mobile homes usually sell for less than other
houses, and this means lower payments. Also, because of the shortened
amortization and
lower loan amount, you will often build equity faster in a mobile home than in a
more expensive house. A quick example follows, for the skeptical among
you.
Equity Building With Mobile
Homes
If you buy a house with a $100,000 mortgage loan amortised over 30 years at 6% interest,
you'll have a payment of $599.60. Of the first payment, $500 will go towards
interest, $99.60 towards principal. In other words, you only built equity of
$99.60 (I'm ignoring appreciation, but only for the moment).
Second scenario: Find a nice mobile
home for sale, and borrow only $30,000, at 8% interest, amortised over 10 years.
Note that higher interest is always the case with "factory built home
mortgages." The
shorter term is normal too, but least you'll own your home free-and-clear in 10
years instead of 30. Despite higher interest and a shorter term, the payment
will be only $363.99, and the first month only $200 will go towards interest.
That means the other $163.99 goes towards principal. You bought more house (built more equity) in this
scenario.
It's true that a mobile home on land might appreciate more
slowly than a "regular" house, but the faster loan pay-down probably more than
covers this factor. If you also chose to bank the difference in payments
($235.61 per month), you'd definitely be better off financially with the mobile
home versus the more expensive home.
Pay less per month and build more
equity! Don't expect your real estate agent to tell you this. Don't expect him
to even agree with me after you explain it. I sold real estate years ago, and
math skills were not a big part of the licensing requirements.
Mobile Homes For Sale; Other
Advantages
Mobile homes are cheaper to maintain. Years ago
I had a mobile home as a rental, and the furnace in it died. This is the most
expensive repair you'll have in a mobile. I had to replace it for $1,200, but
that was still less than a furnace for a larger home. Consider that
for $200 you can tar the roof of your home, or $30 if you do it yourself,
instead of $5,000 to re-shingle a traditional roof. The windows, plumbing, doors
- all cheaper.
Property taxes will cost less, because they're
based on the value of the property, and mobile homes for sale on land have lower
value than stick-built houses. Insurance may cost less too, again because you
are insuring less value. The only precaution to remember here is to be sure you
can get insurance. Very old mobiles may be uninsurable in some
areas.
Should You Buy A Mobile
Home?
Don't buy a mobile home if prices
for houses in the area are just as low.
Believe it or not, this is the case in some areas. We bought a house near Butte,
Montana for $17,500 - less than mobile homes for sale there (See a photo on our
site www.HousesUnderFiftyThousand.com).
Houses do generally hold up better.
Then there are the issues of
whether your own
needs and predjudices will let you be comfortable in a mobile home. They are
sometimes for sale in areas you don't want to live in (Certainly true of houses
as well). These are personal things you have to consider.
The advantages are clear for many
young people starting out. It may be their only option, but it may be your
better option. Besides a lower initial price, you get simpler, cheaper
maintainance, lower monthly
payments, less
property tax, less for insurance, and faster equity build-up. So don't
automatically pass on those mobile
homes for sale
when you're out home-hunting.
Steve Gillman and his wife Ana have
converted their mobile home in Michigan to a rental and moved
to Tucson, Arizona. He and his wife also lived for a while in Montana, where
they bought a beautiful house (not a mobile) for $17,500. That
experience lead to the creation of their website,
http://www.HousesUnderFiftyThousand.com
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