When purchasing a mobile home that is already situated on a parcel of land (land is included with the purchase, not leased), how is this financed? Is it something one takes out a mortgage for or does is not qualify?
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Silly question about mobile homes
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Originally posted by riverwed070707 View PostWhen purchasing a mobile home that is already situated on a parcel of land (land is included with the purchase, not leased), how is this financed? Is it something one takes out a mortgage for or does is not qualify?Brian
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Part 2 of question - what other financing options would be available? If I were going to purchase it and then possibly try to sell the mobile home (but keep the land) what options should I be looking at? Would it have to be an unsecured loan? I don't have enough equity in my existing home so that's not an option.
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Originally posted by riverwed070707 View PostPart 2 of question - what other financing options would be available? If I were going to purchase it and then possibly try to sell the mobile home (but keep the land) what options should I be looking at? Would it have to be an unsecured loan? I don't have enough equity in my existing home so that's not an option.Brian
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Originally posted by bjl584 View PostYou may be able to just buy the land (and finance it as such) if you make it clear to the lender that you are not going to be living in the mobile home and that you will be having it removed from the property once you take ownership.
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Originally posted by riverwed070707 View PostSo how is that typically done -- is there a separate loan option for land or is it just a personal loan?Brian
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Originally posted by riverwed070707 View PostWhen purchasing a mobile home that is already situated on a parcel of land (land is included with the purchase, not leased), how is this financed? Is it something one takes out a mortgage for or does is not qualify?
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RiverWed, see this BankRate article. It may answer some of your questions:
Mortgages: Financing a manufactured home
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I was looking at an unusual source of mortgage financing today and just happened to notice that they did finance mobile homes. I skimmed past the info, except that I did notice that they required that the unit not be below what the average buyer in the area would want (so I guess that means nothing of less than average mobile home value?). Oh, and it had to be at least 24 feet wide and have a steel undercarriage. That's all I recall."There is some ontological doubt as to whether it may even be possible in principle to nail down these things in the universe we're given to study." --text msg from my kid
"It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men." --Frederick Douglass
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I'm hitting a lot of dead ends with this. In short, the house is old (22 years) and I can't find a single bank that will finance a mobile home that is more than 15 years old. Not one. The home + land is still appraising at $30k and I don't have that kind of cash in the bank. The places I have found that will finance will only finance 50-65% of the value of the *land* alone. The land accounts for about half the value which means I'm still having ot come up with $20k. It's not that I'm not qualifying financially, it's that the home isn't qualifying. IDK what else to do. I need new ideas.
I have considered asking if they will owner finance, but I feel like that's a huge thing to ask of 7 other people who will be waiting on this to close. There is a possibility I could pay cash at the end of next year, but obviously not guaranteed.
What haven't I thought of? I'm going to be really crushed if I have to let this go
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Could you buy the mobile home (cash--what is it worth?) and then finance the land? Could you get a bank loan for the land, but then finance the mobile home with the owners?
How about making an offer for the land, telling them you are not interested in the mobile home? Let them decide to move it off the land or offer it to you at a greatly reduced cost which you could pay out of pocket. If owning the mobile home is not a big piece of your dream, let it go. Or shall I say even--get rid of it. Just go for the land.
I imagine anyone interested in owning both the land and the mobile home is running into the same finance problems as you. So that would buy you some time. In fact, I think that if they turn down an offer from you, you might have opportunity to make a new offer once they see that no other better offers are coming along."There is some ontological doubt as to whether it may even be possible in principle to nail down these things in the universe we're given to study." --text msg from my kid
"It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men." --Frederick Douglass
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Originally posted by riverwed070707 View Postthe house is old (22 years)
The home + land is still appraising at $30k
The land accounts for about half the valueSteve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
* Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
* There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.
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Originally posted by disneysteve View PostI find it very difficult to believe that a 22-year-old mobile home is worth $15,000. I'd work on negotiating that price down to something much lower.
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