Thank you for being an educational resource for the modular industry. We as a company are always trying to educate on the differences without sounding "salesy"
Thanks for a great video! My wife and went to a modular homes "builder" and were shown several "modular" homes that were all built on metal chassis. (They were double-wides with wheels.) It was very frustrating to say the least.
Yes, there does need to be a vocabulary difference between all homes built in a factory. The way I personally get around getting modular, prefab, etc, is I will ask if a home is off-frame or on-frame. For sales people, at least with the ones I’ve had conversations, those terms are clear cut. Asking which building code also helps.
This really makes me think of how some states have beefed up their codes so much to be "green" that you can't afford to build. Some areas require you to build net zero. At a point it's diminishing returns and just prices people out. Modular and Manufacture can be a great option. Totally agree there needs to be regulation on the terms and clarity in what the standards are, because people aren't going to get the codes out and compare.
Absolutely 100% there should be clear and transparent descriptions for modular vs manufactured homes Real estate agents and lenders should be clear as to the differences as well.
Manufactured shouldn't be able to use "modular" or "cross-mod" or "prefab" or "tiny home" in any of their promotionals because they aren't build to that code. They should only be permitted to use "manufactured". Tiny home codes are being developed. The new standards for tiny homes are going to be different from "manufactured" homes or "RV"s. Yes, State terms should be clearer.
HUD VS MOD need not be a confusing issue for consumers, but as with every other major purchase research is important. In either case the most critical construction element is still the on-site general contractor, some things never change:)
Would you make a video with the list of true companies that truly build the homes that people are looking for I believe it would help people really get what they are looking for
There should be a GLOSSARY OF TERMS that can end the confusion. Can you create a comprehensive list of terms in a video that can be screenshot'd by your viewers? That would be extremely helpful. Gratzi Kristina!
Thank you very informative video .i think the company where you go view these homes should make you watch a video on the difference between modular & manufactired & one on hidden cost should you buy youre own land etc. The truth of the warranties all that stuff .& questions you should ask them & they should have to show the videos to ya before they can sell you anything
WHAT A PHENOMENAL ONE OF YOUR BETTER INTERVIEWS. ABSOLUTELY 💯 INFORMATIONAL AND TOM WAS AWESOME TOO. WOW WHAT A JAM PACKED FULL OF INFO VIDEO. THANKS ❤
As someone who films these for TH-cam, what I see from comments, it that people expect a large modular home for the price of a small (1400 Sq Ft) board and batten home. Meaning they are wanting 2000 Sq Ft, fully optioned modular, not HUD with full tape and texture, for under $150K. I hear it all the time in the comments that they are overpriced.
Even 30 years ago as a Young military family we couldn't afford a single family home. We bought a townhouse. Eventually, when we were not young, we bought a single family house. This was normal even years ago. The people thinking single family houses ought to be affordable to entry level job people are delusional and entitled.
Build To Rent communities exist for just that reason. Why sell to individuals when you can reap the profits from a corporation who buys the whole neighborhood? The REIT then has rent as guarenteed income as long as there is limited inventory
'Why can't they just have entire modular neighborhoods of homes for sale?' Because it would bring the whole real estate Ponzi scheme crashing down. Housing is being kept artificially low in order to maintain the high cost and to concentrate a basic need into the hands of a few.
1) Regulating the terminology is important. 2). It wasn't clear from this video what the difference between HUD standards and [state/local/etc. local standards &/or federal? standards] are.
Modular is built to local codes as if it was built on site like a stick built home and must go to those codes. Manufactured are HUD codes which are built to HUD codes which are codes for double wides and homes remaining on the trailer frames. So think manufactured - cheap and modular - quality.
A true modular home that is built to higher code standard will be inspected quite differently than a manufactured home that's built in a factory to HUD standards you're going to get a little higher quality of a product because of oversight and the level of materials required in the build, but it will definitely cost more too.
Modular construction can be applied to different products. The code--HUD = cheap, a house that is basically a livable car. IRC = stick built standards.
Kristina, watch this video I just watched and consider doing a video on the subject. I didn’t fully take it all in. (I’m a near future buyer.) I know it affects sellers, more than buyers. Buying a Home in 2025? Don’t Fall For This Sneaky Loophole!
I am planning to buy a MODULAR home in east Texas, have cash. I want something I can customize a small amount. Every website I look at for the places I find on Google have slick presentations but all seem to have no options. Help! Looking for a 2 bedroom...but NOT tiny! All of them seem single/double wide etc., like manufactured. Seems the only way to get a bigger one is to get 5 bedrooms I don't want or need. Since once there it is like a normal home, so changes could be made? Ready to get started, any advice? 🙏
Talk directly to the modular home companies and tell them what you want. You can even have your own architect draw the plans. They can do a lot more than what they showcase on their web sites.
Seniors have homes. Seniors are at ages when living in a house is a waste of energy and they need more care. Thats why seniors move to retirement communities, assisted living apartments, or nursing homes. Seniors that try to live in houses are why a communication device was made to alert people far away that they fell and can't get up. Seniors in houses have lower life expectancy than those who live where there is qualified medical assistance just down the way.
Why can't the government make the term "HOME" a LEGAL DEFINITION, so that ONLY a dwelling where you are issued a DEED is legally called a "HOME". NOTHING MORE, AND NOTHING LESS. For example, you can't call yourself a "BANK" legally, unless you are one!
They kinda already do, the official term is "domicile". A domicile is one's official fixed address, no other type of residence is included. By the way, if you live in a habitable vehicle, you're officially homeless.
Manufactured homes have to be one of the most foolish investments one can make in real estate and housing. For starters, they're the weakest structurally, even most tropical storms easily damage the houses. Also, these homes can not be as strongly attached to the land as site built homes, causing their values to plummet as fast as cars.
Sorry, wrong. Manufactured homes cost less, and you get less. They are great for a family that cannot afford (due to bidenomics) a modular home. All the extra money down and interest for a real home are pricing people out. It’s a much better life in a manufactured home for a family than in an apartment complex.
Manufactured homes built to HUD standards should be called HUD homes or Trailer Homes. If ANY part of the home is HUD, then it can only be called HUD even if modules are added. NO hybrid designations to confuse people. Modular homes should be called Factory Built Local Code Homes or Factory Built State Code Homes. It's a mouthful but it should make it clear what you are buying.
Maybe the gov can stop throwing money around for people not to work and create dependency. Those people can then join the workforce and build homes for Americans.
@@Libertaro-i2u what makes them weaker? They use the same framing as site built, built for the same snow and wind loads as site built, and the same codes. Modulars are NOT mobile homes
@Thaz-u4r Kristina has made sure to keep her channel about policies and not politics. When you make things about politics (right or left), nothing gets done.
Thank you for being an educational resource for the modular industry. We as a company are always trying to educate on the differences without sounding "salesy"
Thanks for a great video! My wife and went to a modular homes "builder" and were shown several "modular" homes that were all built on metal chassis. (They were double-wides with wheels.) It was very frustrating to say the least.
You were shown trailers - nothing wrong in principle, but the blurring is dishonest.
Yes, there does need to be a vocabulary difference between all homes built in a factory. The way I personally get around getting modular, prefab, etc, is I will ask if a home is off-frame or on-frame. For sales people, at least with the ones I’ve had conversations, those terms are clear cut. Asking which building code also helps.
This really makes me think of how some states have beefed up their codes so much to be "green" that you can't afford to build. Some areas require you to build net zero. At a point it's diminishing returns and just prices people out. Modular and Manufacture can be a great option. Totally agree there needs to be regulation on the terms and clarity in what the standards are, because people aren't going to get the codes out and compare.
And these codes do nothing to “save” the planet. It’s all about virtue signaling.
A lot of those codes get crafted by people who are really NIMBYs. They forge their own chains by not allowing people to become part of the tax base.
Absolutely 100% there should be clear and transparent descriptions for modular vs manufactured homes
Real estate agents and lenders should be clear as to the differences as well.
Modular and manufactured homes are basically the same thing, they'll never be as strong as their site built brethren.
Manufactured shouldn't be able to use "modular" or "cross-mod" or "prefab" or "tiny home" in any of their promotionals because they aren't build to that code. They should only be permitted to use "manufactured".
Tiny home codes are being developed. The new standards for tiny homes are going to be different from "manufactured" homes or "RV"s.
Yes, State terms should be clearer.
HUD VS MOD need not be a confusing issue for consumers, but as with every other major purchase research is important. In either case the most critical construction element is still the on-site general contractor, some things never change:)
Would you make a video with the list of true companies that truly build the homes that people are looking for I believe it would help people really get what they are looking for
Thank you for this information.
There should be a GLOSSARY OF TERMS that can end the confusion.
Can you create a comprehensive list of terms in a video that can be screenshot'd by your viewers?
That would be extremely helpful.
Gratzi Kristina!
Great information…
Thank you very informative video .i think the company where you go view these homes should make you watch a video on the difference between modular & manufactired & one on hidden cost should you buy youre own land etc. The truth of the warranties all that stuff .& questions you should ask them & they should have to show the videos to ya before they can sell you anything
WHAT A PHENOMENAL ONE OF YOUR BETTER INTERVIEWS. ABSOLUTELY 💯 INFORMATIONAL AND TOM WAS AWESOME TOO. WOW WHAT A JAM PACKED FULL OF INFO VIDEO. THANKS ❤
I really just want a simple home for my family but I can't afford anything that isn't a dump
Buy a townhouse. My neighborhood sells them at $60,000.
💙👏👍Looove this gal !! ❤
As someone who films these for TH-cam, what I see from comments, it that people expect a large modular home for the price of a small (1400 Sq Ft) board and batten home. Meaning they are wanting 2000 Sq Ft, fully optioned modular, not HUD with full tape and texture, for under $150K. I hear it all the time in the comments that they are overpriced.
Even 30 years ago as a Young military family we couldn't afford a single family home. We bought a townhouse. Eventually, when we were not young, we bought a single family house. This was normal even years ago. The people thinking single family houses ought to be affordable to entry level job people are delusional and entitled.
Why can't they just have entire modular neighborhoods of homes for sale???????? That's what we need. Spec homes.
Build To Rent communities exist for just that reason. Why sell to individuals when you can reap the profits from a corporation who buys the whole neighborhood? The REIT then has rent as guarenteed income as long as there is limited inventory
'Why can't they just have entire modular neighborhoods of homes for sale?' Because it would bring the whole real estate Ponzi scheme crashing down. Housing is being kept artificially low in order to maintain the high cost and to concentrate a basic need into the hands of a few.
1) Regulating the terminology is important. 2). It wasn't clear from this video what the difference between HUD standards and [state/local/etc. local standards &/or federal? standards] are.
This was a nice talk but did nothing to tell me if I want a HUD house or a modular construction house
Neither.
Modular is built to local codes as if it was built on site like a stick built home and must go to those codes. Manufactured are HUD codes which are built to HUD codes which are codes for double wides and homes remaining on the trailer frames. So think manufactured - cheap and modular - quality.
A true modular home that is built to higher code standard will be inspected quite differently than a manufactured home that's built in a factory to HUD standards you're going to get a little higher quality of a product because of oversight and the level of materials required in the build, but it will definitely cost more too.
Modular construction can be applied to different products. The code--HUD = cheap, a house that is basically a livable car. IRC = stick built standards.
The word TRAILER is the problem !
Kristina, watch this video I just watched and consider doing a video on the subject. I didn’t fully take it all in. (I’m a near future buyer.) I know it affects sellers, more than buyers.
Buying a Home in 2025? Don’t Fall For This Sneaky Loophole!
Yep.
Yes. Naming has to be controlled.
When there are issues with modular houses and no assistance from the manufacturer, who can you turn to for help?
Agreed
Thank you so much for this!🙏🏽🫶🏽
You have HUD and IRC. Can a state that follows IRC code reject a home that meets Hud standards or vice versa?
I am planning to buy a MODULAR home in east Texas, have cash. I want something I can customize a small amount. Every website I look at for the places I find on Google have slick presentations but all seem to have no options. Help! Looking for a 2 bedroom...but NOT tiny! All of them seem single/double wide etc., like manufactured. Seems the only way to get a bigger one is to get 5 bedrooms I don't want or need. Since once there it is like a normal home, so changes could be made? Ready to get started, any advice? 🙏
The point of factory built is sameness. Look into kit homes.
Talk directly to the modular home companies and tell them what you want. You can even have your own architect draw the plans. They can do a lot more than what they showcase on their web sites.
Most senior people, want a home to call their own. Why does this have to be so hard? 😢
Seniors have homes. Seniors are at ages when living in a house is a waste of energy and they need more care. Thats why seniors move to retirement communities, assisted living apartments, or nursing homes. Seniors that try to live in houses are why a communication device was made to alert people far away that they fell and can't get up. Seniors in houses have lower life expectancy than those who live where there is qualified medical assistance just down the way.
Manufactured home sellers are causing the confusion. Try to make it seem it’s both. Intentionally
Why can't the government make the term "HOME" a LEGAL DEFINITION, so that ONLY a dwelling where you are issued a DEED is legally called a "HOME". NOTHING MORE, AND NOTHING LESS. For example, you can't call yourself a "BANK" legally, unless you are one!
They kinda already do, the official term is "domicile". A domicile is one's official fixed address, no other type of residence is included. By the way, if you live in a habitable vehicle, you're officially homeless.
Manufactured homes have to be one of the most foolish investments one can make in real estate and housing. For starters, they're the weakest structurally, even most tropical storms easily damage the houses. Also, these homes can not be as strongly attached to the land as site built homes, causing their values to plummet as fast as cars.
Sorry, wrong. Manufactured homes cost less, and you get less. They are great for a family that cannot afford (due to bidenomics) a modular home. All the extra money down and interest for a real home are pricing people out. It’s a much better life in a manufactured home for a family than in an apartment complex.
@@new2000car Trump coasted off the Obama economy, who had to rebuild it from Bush's debacle. Biden had to spend years fixing Trump's idiocies.
They should have separate, distinct names. This current deceit is not acceptable. The terms should also apply nationally.
You are not ridiculous. Words are important when it comes to a contract. The terminology needs to be updated. This will really help the consumer.
People just need to do their research before spending money. It's not that difficult...
I think my birdhouse is modular
I guess your bird is living affordably.
Most bird homes are stick built. 😁
Manufactured homes built to HUD standards should be called HUD homes or Trailer Homes. If ANY part of the home is HUD, then it can only be called HUD even if modules are added. NO hybrid designations to confuse people. Modular homes should be called Factory Built Local Code Homes or Factory Built State Code Homes. It's a mouthful but it should make it clear what you are buying.
So we’re touting government incentivized houses that can be built in 6 days? What could possibly go wrong? Boy, we have really lowered the bar.
Maybe the gov can stop throwing money around for people not to work and create dependency. Those people can then join the workforce and build homes for Americans.
When I see "MODULAR" I see "TRAILERS", as a BOOMER.
@charletonzimmerman4205 but they aren't.
@@metallitrunks1 Yes they are. Don't let their fancy new features and amenities fool you, those houses are far weaker than conventional construction.
@@Libertaro-i2u what makes them weaker? They use the same framing as site built, built for the same snow and wind loads as site built, and the same codes. Modulars are NOT mobile homes
@@metallitrunks1 Because they're made of weaker materials.
@@Libertaro-i2u what? It's the same material. 2x's, sheathing, etc. Exact same.
This guy wants us to go to the government to solve a problem he has? Perplexing!
Wasn’t Clayton homes a disaster?
Ugh.. Michael Bordenaro is starting to get political. I hope that doesn't happen to this channel. 🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾
@Thaz-u4r Kristina has made sure to keep her channel about policies and not politics. When you make things about politics (right or left), nothing gets done.
Then who sells a modular home that is decentand stuff?
Thank you for this information.