Thanks flashoflight. My Heating/Hvac provider attempted to repair and said its beyond repair (the coil went). I checked with other HVAC providers and they agree (the HVAC and heating is 17 years old - typical for manufactured home is 20 years). The floor needs replacing after a flood damaged the laminate flooring. We haven’t been able to afford replacing it so just have a rug over the wood (which is the subfloor due to it being a manufactured home). But I understand what you’re saying. There are no mobile homes near me - all real homes and almost all have garages And all have basements. The only 2 manufactured homes near me were on basement foundations with other very nice amenities we don’t have (Large 4 season sunrooms, beautiful decks, a small barn). Just a foundation with useable basement is worth $25,000. I live on a private lane and the other 2 homes are real homes with basements, garages, new roofs, etc. Same with the homes on our rural surrounding streets (some minus new roofs).
Also, unlike the 2 with foundations - only 1 bank in our area will approve a mortgage for a manufactured home on piers And you can’t escrow taxes or homeowners. Only 1 insurance company in the state will provide homeowners insurance and they don’t call it that - they call it mobile home insurance and it’s double regular home insurance. Therefore, unlike the ones on foundations it is much harder to sell (which we didn’t know until we were already very late in the buying process).
Even if the trustee values it higher I’m still safe as long as it’s under $96,000. My attorney said he has never seen a home like mine appreciate $40,000 in 4 years without very substantial upgrades - forget the repairs. He said comparing my home to real homes is apples to oranges. Real homes have real walls and real floors. Manufactured homes have 1/2 In basically pressboard walls and plywood floors. They have all plumbing, pipes and wires under the home protected by insulation and belly wrap susceptible to animals. This is why manufactured homes on foundations especially with full basements are so much more valuable.
Now I’m very nervous again. This is why I didn’t do this last year. But I do trust my attorney but still freaking out.
Also, unlike the 2 with foundations - only 1 bank in our area will approve a mortgage for a manufactured home on piers And you can’t escrow taxes or homeowners. Only 1 insurance company in the state will provide homeowners insurance and they don’t call it that - they call it mobile home insurance and it’s double regular home insurance. Therefore, unlike the ones on foundations it is much harder to sell (which we didn’t know until we were already very late in the buying process).
Even if the trustee values it higher I’m still safe as long as it’s under $96,000. My attorney said he has never seen a home like mine appreciate $40,000 in 4 years without very substantial upgrades - forget the repairs. He said comparing my home to real homes is apples to oranges. Real homes have real walls and real floors. Manufactured homes have 1/2 In basically pressboard walls and plywood floors. They have all plumbing, pipes and wires under the home protected by insulation and belly wrap susceptible to animals. This is why manufactured homes on foundations especially with full basements are so much more valuable.
Now I’m very nervous again. This is why I didn’t do this last year. But I do trust my attorney but still freaking out.
Comment