PAGE 6 - REAL ESTATE & HOME BUILDERS GUIDE - AUGUST-SEPTEMBER 2015 Traditional vs. manufactured homes traditional home or the manufactured home will be a “good” investment; we are trying to get you to look at the costs over the next several years. If you were to live in the manufactured home, what would your costs be for the first five years, including repairs to the home? What would that cost be for a traditional home? With that information, you can then try to determine if the cost of either changes your decision in any way. Tribune Content Agency your purchase would be that the manufactured home be a newer home By llyce Glinkand Samuel J.Tamkin, and that the home complies with the ; Tribune Content Agency Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Code. In part, this code : My husband and I just looked at a requires that the home be permanently house that is in the perfect location installed on a foundation. We’d also tor us. We haven’t seen anything like to make sure that the home was similar within our price range. The built after 1976 and complies with all catch is that it’s a manufactured home HUD standards. in a park, on a rented space. A manufactured home is quite different We are debating whether living in our from a traditional home. In a ideal location is worth purchasing a traditional home, the owner will hold home under these conditions, title to the home and land. The particularly if that home will require mechanism for conveying title to the rental payments for the land for as long home is usually via a warranty deed (or as we own the home. Some people have other similar document) that gets said that manufactured homes recorded with the office that is in depreciate over time, while others say charge of land records in the county in that they can actually appreciate. All which you buy the home. homes in our area seem to at least hold their value. Would this be a truly bad On the other hand a manufactured investment? home is more akin to a car or boat. The home has a title and that title is : I don’t think we can tell you from transferred in the same way that a car here whether an investment in a or boat title might be transferred. The manufactured home would be a good secretary of state office in the location or bad investment. The reality is that in which the manufactured home is you have to live somewhere and your located would issue a new title to the home is first and foremost a place to home when you purchase that home. five. That place to live should be in a good location for you and where you The market for manufactured homes is can thrive in a community. quite limited when you compare it to the general real estate market and the A couple of things we’d like to see in availability of lenders willing to lend Q A you money to buy a manufactured home is a fraction of the size of the overall real estate market. Where you might find hundreds of lenders and mortgage brokers willing to offer you financing on a traditional single family home, you might only have a handful or less willing to offer you financing in the manufactured home. Frequently, the operator or manager of the facilities or development in which the manufactured home is situated has one or more lenders that can offer financing for the purchase of the manufactured home. However, as you have observed, one thing is to pay for the manufactured home — thais only part of the cost — the other part, is paying the rent on the land. That rent might be high or might push you to consider a single family community over the manufactured home community. We can’t tell you what to do, but you need to look at the costs of owning the manufactured home along with the costs of renting the land. Then you can make a side by side comparison as to what the costs are and what you get for those costs, and see what it would cost you to live in each community over the next five years. We won’t assume that either a If you can get any information on how the prices of manufactured homes in that development performed owe&the W last 10 years, how did that compare with single family homes? The single home got battered during the Great Recession and you’d do well'* to compare it with the development you’re considering. If the prices didn’t change much, you might assume that the prices might not change much in the future either. But if it’s cheaper for you to live in the manufactured home and it’s in a better location and development, it might not be the best investment, but it might be the right home solution for you. Finally, one last thing to consider is how quickly do homes in the manufactured housing development sell? Have they sold quickly for the last several years? Do people nave trouble selling them? The answers to these Questions can also influence your ecision to buy. If manufactured homes in this “subdivision” have always sold briskly, you know that if this turns out not to be the right place for you, you should be able to sell and move elsewhere. But if these homes don’t sell easily, having a manufactured home for sale will tie you down. We suggest -taking out a piece of paper and a pen and writing down the pros and cons, as you know them today, doing some research to fill out the fist. Then make a decision. Good luck. (Ilyce Glink is the creator of an 18-part webinar+ebook series called “The Intentional Investor: How to be wildly successful in real estate,” as well as the author of many books on real estate. She also hosts the “Real Estate Minute,” on her YouTube channel. Samuel J. Tamkin is a Chicago-based real estate attorney. Contact Ilyce and Sam through her website, ThinkGlink.com.)