Which Mobile Home Repairs Give The Highest Return?

Welcome back,

As active mobile home investors it can be wise to eliminate wasteful overspending in your investing business. We already understand that every dollar we spend to repair and hold a vacant mobile home is a dollar that we will have to collect from our buyer or renter before we receive a profit. Some repairs are absolutely critical to quickly and safely selling a mobile home, however certain repairs are of little consequence to most serious buyers.

When you save money, you are able to pass this along to your end-buyers.

Disclaimer: While there is value to be created in almost every market around the country, the repairs and exit strategies will vary. Remember that you are in a unique area of the country. While the advice given below does fit many areas of the country there are certainly markets, cultures, homes, populations, and situations that require additional or less repairs due to a variety of reasons. Never hesitate to comment below or reach out to us personally at the email address below.

Understanding your finances:

Before you invest in any property you should ideally understand the full procedure moving forward, time involved, and capital required to complete the deal at hand. Often times we can underestimate both the repair costs and time required to rehab a particular investment manufactured home to our liking. It may be wise to add a 10%-30% margin to your repair estimates. Take these repair costs into account while creating purchase offers for any potential investment.

Popular ways to sell a used mobile home:

1. Bank Financing

Lending is available both from well-established nationwide manufactured home lenders and your hometown banks/credit unions. When your borrower wishes to be approved at a bank, the buyer, the home, the foundation, and possibly the mobile home park (if applicable) may all be required to pass underwriting guidelines before final approval. This makes some mobile homes unfinanceable.

Related Article: What Mobile Home Repairs To Make Based On Exit Strategy? 3 Deals, 3 Lessons

2. Cash

In most areas around the country there are more mobile home sellers than there are serious buyers with $10,000+ cash looking to buy a used mobile home. This means in many areas of the country the mobile home market may be described as a buyer’s market.

However some areas of your state or city may be labeled as “massively growing”. In these areas there are drastically more people coming into the city, then leaving. This increased demand typically pushes home prices upward; it can do the same for mobile home prices as well. In areas with very little supply [single-family home buyers] with cash are willing to pay seemingly-large-amounts for used/average/below-average mobile homes due to location. Driving outside of these “massively growing” areas may drastically change the supply and demand of the marketplace. The red areas on the map are a rough outline of some areas around the country experiencing a surge in population growth.

3. Owner Financing

The concept is easy enough to understand, an approved buyer pays a down-payment and monthly payments in exchange for ownership in a property. Once the property is paid-in-full there is no longer any debt owed on the home.

While the concept is fairly simple, newer laws have limited seller held financing when selling to end-buyers living in the subject property. Make certain to follow all state and federal guidelines when advertising, negotiating, and creating paperwork while selling a mobile home via seller held financing.

Pro Tip: A local mortgage loan originator may be able to help with the process of negotiating and originating your seller financed notes. Ask for references at your local real estate investors association.

Budget conscious mobile home repairs

There are certain repairs that most sellers will run away from. On the other hand, there are certain repairs that many sellers will happily perform themselves if they are able to save money to get into a home of their own. If money is limited and you’re looking to make your mobile home attractive to the largest number of serious buyers than please consider the list below.

Related Article: Mobile Home Rehab – Before & After Rehab Pictures 

1. Mobile home Roof & Ceiling Free Of Leaks

Before you purchase any mobile home feel free to safely walk around on the roof to verify its condition. To solve a roof leak, first locate and patch the roof-hole where the water is entering the home. Next it is important to remove and replace any damaged material including insulation, paneling, and drywall inside of the mobile home.

Pro Tip: If possible, aim to walk-through the mobile home after a recent rainstorm to inspect for active leaks.

2. Sub-Floor Free Of Soft-Spots & Holes

Fix a manufactured home’s sub-floor if it is noticeably damaged, noticeably soft, or missing. New plywood should not be laid atop old/damaged sub-floor. Instead, any old or damaged sub-floor material should be removed and replaced with an equal thickness plywood.

3. Interior Mobile Home Walls Free Of Substantial Holes

Any holes larger than 2″ in diameter should ideally be corrected. Use the same material to stay consistent with this construction of the mobile home. If drywall is being used then patch the drywall or replace with new drywall. If paneling is being used then you may choose to remove the entire 8′ x 4′ panel and replace with a new matching 8′ x 4′ panel.

Pro Tip: Remember the first thing you notice about a mobile home will typically be the first thing a potential buyer notices as well.

4. Plumbing Works

Most plumbing repairs should be handled by a professional.

Pro Tip: It may be wise to turn off the water while showing a property. Make sure the hot water heater is drained and the breaker to the hot water heater is shut off. Also aim to tape down the toilet seats to prevent potential buyers from using the restroom accidentally.

5. Electric Works

Most electrical fixes should be handled by a professional.

Pro Tip: Always disclose any known defects to any renters or buyers. When in doubt, disclose-disclose-disclose. Make sure your buyers know exactly what they are purchasing. Never aim to mislead anyone.

6. Appliances/AC/Heat Source Functions Properly

In many parts of the country it is customary that a mobile home for sale include a refrigerator and stove in the sale. Most end-users that are purchasing the home to move-in will not have a spare refrigerator or stove they will be bringing with them. While it may be wise to include refrigerators and stoves for your end-users, clothes washers and dryers are not typically provided.

When purchasing a used mobile home: Broken appliances in a mobile home is not a deal-breaker when you purchase, however these repairs should be taken into account when making purchase offers to the sellers. Before purchasing any real estate always make sure you know the condition of all appliances, air conditioning systems, swamp pumps, heating sources, hot water heater, etc. If you are unable to test these items due to the power being off or the temperatures being too extreme than a professional should be called in and/or power should be turned-on to verify condition. Without verifying these items are in proper working order it is wise to assume that the appliances are broken and you will have to repair them or replace them accordingly.

Pro Tip: As an active real estate investor make sure to be very conservative in your estimates. Overestimate the cost and time repairs will require.

7. Sweep & Vacuum Inside (if needed)

Cleaning the inside of a mobile home can make a big impact. Allow the potential buyer to envision themselves living inside a clean and vacuumed home.

8. Remove Furniture & Junk (if needed)

Hire inexpensive laborers or advertise for people to come locally to take your furniture and miscellaneous items from your property. For most light rehabs a designated roll-away dumpster will not be needed.

Pro Tip: If the mobile home includes any items of mild/moderate value that you do not want but other people (on Craigslist, etc) may be very interested in, it may be wise to require the person taking the valuable item(s) also remove 100% of the other junk and items in the home for you. This may require a truck and/or trailer from the picker. This allows a motivated person (the picker) to take away all/most of your junk/items/furniture for free and in exchange they get to keep all the items of value (win-win).

9. Remove Bad Smells (if needed)

Try vacuuming and/or disinfecting away any smells as a first plan of action. If the odors persist then the smell may be trapped in the carpets, walls, and/or sub-floors. If the smell is trapped in the carpet, pad, and/or sub-floor – then the carpet and pad may need to be removed and a coat of primer/paint be applied liberally to the plywood/OSB sub-floor. This primer-paint helps trap the smell into the sub-floor allowing you to place new carpet or tile without the smell coming through.

10. Remove Stray Animals & Bugs (if needed)

Remove animals and bugs. Hire a professional if needed.

11. Pressure Wash Exterior (if needed)

If your first impression while driving up to the mobile home was, “This is a dirty mobile home!” then a pressure wash may be needed. Hiring a professional to pressure wash the roof and exterior walls will take less than a few hours of work and ideally less than $200 for a singlewide and $300 for a doublewide. Make sure to call around to local companies/handymen to compare rates.

12. Carpet/Paint (if needed)

Aim to salvage a mobile home’s floor covering if possible. If the current carpet is usable then it may be wise to keep it for now. Recarpeting and repainting an entire mobile home may typically cost between $1000-$3000+ depending on the time and materials used. Before investing this significant amount of capital understand your exit strategy and the mindset of your buyers. (Ask for help if you have questions.) Listen to all the potential buyers walking through your property; if many of them are mentioning the carpet and/or paint than it may be time to address these issues. After helping multiple local buyers you will naturally become more experienced with your local market and understand the mindset/wants/needs of your buyers.

Pro Tip: In areas with a fast growing population it is very possible to sell mobile homes for a high-retail cash price. In these areas aim to replace/upgrade carpet and fresh paint if selling for a high-retail cash or bank financed price

In conclusion, please keep in mind that some mobile homes you look at will need none of the repairs listed above. Other mobile homes may require a great deal more to rehab before selling. As investors we not only have to think of our sellers when we are purchasing our mobile homes, however we have to understand the mindset of our buyers and sell with our buyers in mind. After you’ve purchased and resold a number of mobile homes the process of buying, selling, repairs, and management will become a bit more predictable. Until then aim to invest safely and help others daily.

Anything we missed? Any additional mobile home repairs you would make?

Love what you do daily,
John Fedro
support@mobilehomeinvesting.net

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22 Comments

  • MArk Bowman

    Reply Reply July 28, 2017

    I am blown away with all the content you provide. Thank you. I’m just now starting my career with mobile homes. Would you suggest getting started with mobile homes inside parks or attached to land I would be buying as well? Also, do you do most of your work or do you have other people do this for you? My thought is that there are bigger profits with mobile homes on real land however my credit and available money are not the best they could be. Any thoughts or help you could provide would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.

    • John Fedro

      Reply Reply July 28, 2017

      Hi Mark,

      Thank you for reaching out and connecting. Additionally, thank you so much for your kind words. I truly hope that these articles and videos have been somewhat helpful to you thus far. Please see my thoughts below in bold with regards to your questions.

      Would you suggest getting started with mobile homes inside parks or attached to land I would be buying as well? The answer is, “it depends”. With that said I truly know nothing about you or your financial goals moving forward. However I can definitely tell you that there are absolutely owners of mobile homes that mismanage their finances, don’t make repairs, don’t pay their bills, and are motivated to sell. These mobile home owners own mobile homes in pre-existing parks and also attach to their own private land. The point I’m making is that mobile home owners on private land are often times just as motivated as mobile home owners in parks. There are many reasons for this however ultimately the lack of bank approved and serious mobile home buyers on land contributes to mobile home sellers with land being motivated. I hope this make sense so far. The reason I mention all of this is because I would encourage you to invest in both types of mobile homes. In addition I would encourage you to purchase mobile homes that “must be moved” to a new location after you purchase them. I would encourage you to take a massive approach and talk to almost every mobile home seller locally that you can, make offers to everyone and move forward with the path of least resistance. You will be surprised to learn that in certain instances you do not need much capital or any credit to invest in mobile homes attached to private land. Also, do you do most of your work or do you have other people do this for you? For my first few mobile homes I did a majority of the work. I quickly learned that this was not my best use of time and that I was not a very good handyman. Since then I outsource almost everything to professionals that can make the home look much better than me. My thought is that there are bigger profits with mobile homes on real land however my credit and available money are not the best they could be. I hope my answers above help and make sense. As always, if you ever have any follow-up questions or concerns please never hesitate to reach out any time. All the best.

      Talk soon,
      John

  • Jonathan Cherno

    Reply Reply July 28, 2017

    Hi John,

    I really like your suggestion to get other people to haul away your junk. I have never heard of this before. Any tips you can add? I plan to try this soon with a traditional property I just got back that is full of normal house stuff, and of course some junk too. Thanks in advance.

    Cheers,
    Jonathan Cherno

    • John Fedro

      Reply Reply July 28, 2017

      Hi Jonathan,

      Thanks for reaching out and connecting. I do hope this article and video has been somewhat helpful to you thus far. With regards to the “curb sale” I usually advertise this on Craigslist and in very detailed. I take a lot of pictures from a lot of different angles of all the junk and material and items in the mobile home. I am very clear and articulate when I mentioned that only one person is going to get all of this stuff. If you want one item you need to take everything and that the person coming should have a large truck or even trailer if required. It usually doesn’t take longer than a day or two to get somebody interested to come out and start the work. I’ve done this over a handful of times and it is never taken anyone longer than one day to remove all the items from the home. If the home is mostly junk and of course you will probably not get too many people interested in doing this free labor for you. However if there are obviously some items of value then this can certainly be a win-win proposition. Make sure you are in the property as well to babysit and make sure they do not steal anything that they are not supposed to take, like appliances. I hope this all helps and starts to point you in the right direction. As always, if you have any follow-up questions or concerns never hesitate to reach out any time. Additionally, if you do this and notice any other tips never hesitate to comment back and let us all know. Have a great rest of the week.

      Talk soon,
      John

  • Yasser

    Reply Reply July 28, 2017

    Hi John

    I live in Georgia, I am thinking about the Mobil home project since long time , I was waiting to know more about it, I am very busy in my current business, but I would love to diversifying to other business, I do rather the mobile homes because it’s fast and cheap, I might be wrong don’t know what do you think , what is stopping me from starting is to find a broker or someone local doing that in Georgia to learn more about the business, also a broker where he can help me find the Mobile homes for sale in Georgia, en few words I don’t know in which state do you live , but if we asume out of Georgia and you moved to Georgia how would you start ? Keeping in mind that every time I start a new business I would like to learn everything about it and start from where others ends , please I need your help,
    Best Regards John

    • John Fedro

      Reply Reply July 31, 2017

      Hi Yasser,

      Thank you for reaching out and connecting. It sounds like you are in Georgia and are considering getting started investing in mobile homes. If that is correct and I’m curious if you are interested in mobile homes on private land or mobile homes inside pre-existing parks? Or both? Either way I would definitely encourage you to take a massive approach and really understand your local community. Whenever I work with somebody new we aim to talk to every local seller that fits our criteria and make them offers accordingly. You will then move forward with the path of least resistance. This is obviously a 30,000 foot view and there are many fine details however I hope this make sense and starts to point you in the right direction. As always, if you ever have any follow-up questions or concerns never hesitate to reach out any time.

      Talk soon,
      John

  • Robert G.

    Reply Reply July 29, 2017

    Hi John

    I’m not a real estate investor yet , but I’m enjoying all the videos you put out. I do own some properties and I was wondering if putting two or three mobile homes and rent them out would make good business sense ?
    Or should I start investing one used mobile home at a time ?

    Best Regards

    Robert G.

    • John Fedro

      Reply Reply July 31, 2017

      Hi Robert,

      Thank you for reaching out and connecting. Thanks for following along and watching these videos. I do hope they have been somewhat helpful to you thus far. Great job owning some properties already. With regards to your questions, the answer is definitely, “it depends”. I’m curious if your properties are vacant land or if they already have utilities connected to the property? Was there a mobile home there one time? Were there multiple mobile homes there one time? I typically find that it is best to purchase used mobile homes from the owner-occupants who are living inside or who have moved out of them recently. You may also want to purchase them directly from mobile home parks or people having them on their land that “must be moved”. I hope this all helps and makes a bit a sense. You will definitely have follow-up questions or concerns never hesitate to reach out any time. All the best. Keep in touch.

      Talk soon,
      John

  • Najee

    Reply Reply July 29, 2017

    Hi John
    do you think it would be a good idea to sell a mobile home as is to an end buyer with seller financing and also finance the repairs as a separate but connected deal?

    • John Fedro

      Reply Reply July 31, 2017

      Hi Najee,

      Thank you for reaching out and connecting. The answer to many questions I answer is, “it depends”. That is because there are many scenarios when it comes to real estate and certain factors definitely change other outcomes/factors involved. With all of that said, the answer to your question is “no”, at least in my opinion. I want the tenant-buyer to spend their own money and time to put sweat equity into the mobile home so that they are able to bond with the property and fall in love with it. I hope this makes sense. There are definitely other reasons why I would not want to do this however this is the main one. With that said, there may be one or two reasons why would finance the repairs however most the time the answer would definitely have to be no. I contradicted myself a bit in this response so if you have any follow-up questions or concerns never hesitate to reach out any time. Additionally, if you’re working on a specific deal and have any specific questions never hesitate to reach back out or email me anytime.

      Talk soon,
      John

  • Robinson

    Reply Reply August 19, 2017

    Dude do you ever sleep? WOW you have a ton of great content and you are writing ESSAYS back to patrons of your comments section! Impressive man. This stuff takes time and your are taking and making that time. Found your channel on youtube- will be nosing around some more! Keep it up. Looks like you’ve earned those vacation destinations with hard and smart work! Keep up the good work man- and thanks for sharing your dedication and insights into this unique field! – Robinson

    • John Fedro

      Reply Reply August 31, 2017

      Hi Robinson,

      Thank you so much for taking the time to write that lengthy message. Thats probably one of the best comments I’ve received in a long time. It really means more than you know. I do hope that these comments, articles, and videos have been somewhat helpful to you thus far. Additionally, I hope you’ve put some of this stuff into action. 🙂 Moving forward if you ever have any follow-up questions or concerns never hesitate to reach out to me anytime. Always here and happy to help if I can. Keep in touch. All the best.

      Talk soon,
      John

  • Eric

    Reply Reply June 3, 2019

    Hey I am purchasing a 3 bedroom double wide trailer on a quarter acre of land for 10 k the plumbing and electric is shot along with ac what do you recommend a quick sell or is the project worth it?

    • John Fedro

      Reply Reply June 5, 2019

      Hi Eric,

      Thank you for reaching out and connecting. A three-bedroom double wide mobile home on a quarter acre of land for $10,000 certainly sounds like an attractive opportunity in most areas of the country. With that said even in some areas this can be too much for the home and land depending on how the home looks. If the mobile home is a complete tear down than you are really purchasing it for the land only, in addition to the cost of the double wide mobile home having to be removed. Completely fixing plumbing and electric may take a few thousand dollars or more to get fixed. Same with the air conditioner as well. However depending on your area make sure that you are able to resell the mobile home for a substantial profit either cash, via renting, or owner financing. This answer is a bit vague as I do not want to give you any wrong or misleading information. While this reply is not very specific I hope that it does help and start to point you in the right direction moving forward. If you have any follow-up questions or concerns now or moving forward never hesitate to reach out any time.

      Talk soon,
      John

  • cris

    Reply Reply August 13, 2019

    im currently trying to buy a repossessed home from a mortgage company not the mobile home park. The mobile home park is trying to cover the lost rent and saying its not the companies mobile to sell. would you recommend buying the mobile home? if so would i be able to resell it if its in the mobile home park and i pay off the liens on it( this includes the lost rent or would it be too much trouble? just seems like i might lose it to the mobile home park if i do decide to buy it.

    • John Fedro

      Reply Reply August 14, 2019

      Hi cris,

      Very good to hear from you. Thank you for reaching out and connecting. Please see my thoughts below in bold.

      im currently trying to buy a repossessed home from a mortgage company not the mobile home park. Great job talking to this park and mortgage company. The mobile home park is trying to cover the lost rent and saying its not the companies mobile to sell. would you recommend buying the mobile home? Only if you are willing to pay the back lot rent to the mobile home park. Or, perhaps the mobile home park is really trying to get the mobile home for itself. With that said you could find this out by having a heart-to-heart conversation with the park manager. With that said if your goal is to simply get the title and sell the home to someone that wants to move it out, that is a different story and you do not need the park’s approval for that. If so would i be able to resell it if its in the mobile home park and i pay off the liens on it( this includes the lost rent or would it be too much trouble? If you are okay with paying the back lot rent, and this will still be a profitable deal, then this should not be any trouble as long as the park understands what you are doing. just seems like i might lose it to the mobile home park if i do decide to buy it. Would you want to make monthly payments to the same mortgage company? If so you will have to work this out with the mortgage company for sure. Additionally, the park will have to know what’s going on in be okay with this as well. It sounds like there is definitely some budding of heads going on between the park management and the bank. With that said the park will win most of the time in my experience. Keep in touch moving forward. If I did not answer your questions fully or you have any follow-up questions never hesitate to reach out any time. All the best. Keep in touch.

      Talk soon,
      John

      • cris

        Reply Reply August 14, 2019

        thank you for answering my concern. the bank decided to pull the mobile out of the market because the manager was giving them a hard time. The manager wouldnt give us her attorney or send in approval papers for the fees settled. And wanted us to pay attorney fees on top. They wanted in total 5000 dollars to move forward without anything concrete. At the end the bank said that most likely the park will end up buying it from them.

      • Samantha A

        Reply Reply December 30, 2021

        Good morning and Happy New Years!
        I have a couple questions. I am totally new to this and would like to know if you have a video on how to dive right in, get contracts, find the correct people to buy or seller finance to? Second, if the seller finance deal is establish but the buyer stopped paying the monthly payments with interest what would be the next steps? Thanks so much for helping us little people try to get some financial freedom. I am currently a nurse in this covid battlefield. Lol.

        • John Fedro

          Reply Reply January 3, 2022

          Hi Samantha.

          Thanks for reaching out and connecting. Happy new year as well! I hope you are safe and doing well in the front lines in the hospitals. I cannot imagine how much you are running around normally, let alone the past few years. If you want to click the following link you’ll be taken to a series of different video playlists. https://www.mobilehomeinvesting.net/videos/ There are definitely videos discussing and showing what to do when folks default in the different avenues we have as investors. There are number of videos in this free video collection that discuss seller financing when it comes to mobile homes. Glad you are looking at seller financing as well as flipping or wholesaling for cash. When it comes to contracts, this really only something I discuss with investors I’m working with one-on-one and that have access to private training modules and lessons. However contacting a local real estate attorney can also be helpful to get you the contracts and paperwork that you need moving forward. Either way feel free to keep in touch if you have any mobile home related follow-up questions never hesitate to reach out any time.

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