In NC, most mobile home parks do not sell the land.
I thought the point of buying a property is to eventually own it outright.
If you pay off the mobile home but find yourself unable to pay the lot rent… you can still get evicted. This situation persists forever, unless you move the home.
Buying land with utilities and moving the home is so expensive that most people would have to take out a personal loan or multiple loans to do it.
Personal loans are usually restricted to people with high incomes and/or credit scores. (People who can simply skip the park and buy a house on land in the first place).
Paying the lot rent and mobile home combined also makes it not a particularly cheap alternative to renting a house.
But so many people do it that I feel like I must be missing something that connects the dots and makes this make sense (logically and financially).
What am I missing?
ETA – sorry if this is a very stupid question. My parents were city people so I genuinely do not know how people benefit from using parks
In: Economics
I think that is pretty common in mobile home parks. You generally lease the land that your mobile home sits on. In Hawaii, it’s not uncommon to have your brick and mortar home built on leased land. The leases can be fairly long. 40 or 50 years in some cases. Problem is, when the lease is up, they can sell the land and you are shit out of luck. Or, god forbid, you want/need to sell the house with 5 or 10 years lift on the lease. No one is going to touch it. Source: I bought a couple houses when I was living in Hawaii. Never touched a leasehold, though. A little more info… When you when you buy a house in Hawaii that includes the land, it’s called “Fee Simple”.
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