Most real estate investors spend their careers chasing single-family homes, apartment buildings, and commercial properties. Meanwhile, a much smaller group of savvy investors has been quietly building serious wealth in a niche market that most people completely overlook: mobile home park investment.
When I first started exploring passive income outside of dentistry, mobile home parks weren’t on my radar either. I had the same reaction most doctors do when they first hear about it.
It doesn’t sound glamorous.
But once I dug into the numbers and understood why this asset class performs the way it does, it completely changed how I think about real estate investing. It’s now the primary vehicle we use at Perdido Capital to generate passive income for our investors.
This guide breaks down everything you need to know about mobile home park investment, including why it works, what to look for, how it’s valued, and what separates a great deal from a costly mistake.
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Why Mobile Home Park Investing Works
Before getting into the mechanics, it helps to understand why this asset class has attracted the attention of institutional investors, veteran real estate investors, and even Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway over the past decade.
The short answer is this: affordable housing is in crisis in the United States, and mobile home parks are one of the last remaining sources of truly affordable housing options for millions of Americans. That consistent demand doesn’t go away during economic downturns. It actually gets stronger.
The Affordable Housing Crisis Creates Built-In Demand
Housing costs across the United States have skyrocketed. For a large segment of the population, traditional homes and apartment units are simply out of reach. Mobile home park residents pay lot rents that are often a fraction of what they’d pay for a comparable apartment unit, and they own their own homes. That combination of affordability and ownership creates strong demand that doesn’t disappear when the economy gets rocky.
Baby boomers on fixed incomes, working families, and people priced out of traditional real estate markets all represent a growing population of long-term tenants who aren’t going anywhere. That’s not a niche. That’s a structural reality of the housing market in this country.
Related: What Is Lot Rent? A Guide to Mobile Home Parks
New Supply Is Essentially Zero
Here’s something most people don’t know: it’s nearly impossible to build new mobile home parks in the United States today. Zoning laws, local regulations, and community opposition make permitting a new park in most markets a non-starter.
That means the existing supply of parks is essentially fixed while demand keeps growing. Less supply plus growing demand equals pricing power for mobile home park owners. That’s a good position to be in as an investor.
Tenant Turnover Is Extremely Low
When someone owns their mobile home and rents the lot it sits on, moving is a major undertaking. It costs thousands of dollars to relocate a manufactured home, and many older homes can’t be moved at all.
That reality keeps mobile home park residents in place for years, sometimes decades. Low turnover means lower vacancy, lower maintenance costs, and more stable cash flow compared to apartment buildings where tenants come and go every year.
How Mobile Home Parks Generate Income
Understanding how the income model works is essential before you evaluate any potential deal.
Lot Rents Are the Primary Income Driver
The core of mobile home park investing is lot rents. As the park owner, you own the land and the infrastructure. Residents own their individual mobile homes and pay you a monthly lot rent to place their home on your land.
You’re not responsible for maintaining the homes themselves. You’re responsible for the roads, utilities, and common areas. This is fundamentally different from owning rental properties where you own the structure and everything that can break inside it.
Here’s a simple look at how mobile home park income compares to other types of real estate investments:
Asset Type
Who Owns the Structure
Tenant Turnover
Maintenance Burden
Mobile Home Park
Tenant owns the home
Very low
Low (land and infrastructure only)
Apartment Building
Investor owns units
High
High (all unit repairs and upkeep)
Single-Family Rental
Investor owns the home
Moderate
Moderate to high
Commercial Property
Investor owns building
Variable
High
How Mobile Home Parks Are Valued
This is where mobile home park investment gets really interesting for anyone coming from a background in traditional real estate.
Cap Rate Is Everything
Mobile home parks are valued as commercial properties using a capitalization rate, also called a cap rate . The cap rate is the ratio of a park’s net operating income to its purchase price.
A lower cap rate means a higher valuation relative to income. A higher cap rate means a lower valuation relative to income and typically a better return for the buyer.
The formula is straightforward:
Term
Definition
Example
Gross Income
Total lot rents collected
$300,000/year
Operating Expenses
Taxes, insurance, management, maintenance
$120,000/year
Net Operating Income
Gross income minus expenses
$180,000/year
Cap Rate
NOI divided by purchase price
$180k / $2M = 9% cap rate
One of the reasons mobile home park investing has attracted institutional investors is that parks in many markets trade at higher cap rates than comparable apartment buildings. That means buyers often get a better return on their purchase price.
Below Market Lot Rents Create Value-Add Opportunities
Many parks, especially those owned by longtime mom-and-pop mobile home park owners, haven’t raised rents in years. When lot rents are below market rate, a new owner can gradually raise rents toward market rate.
That increase in net operating income directly increases the overall value of the park. This is one of the primary value-add strategies in the mobile home park industry and one of the reasons experienced operators can generate strong returns even after paying a fair purchase price.
What to Look for When Evaluating a Mobile Home Park
Due diligence on a mobile home park is different from evaluating a single-family home or apartment building. Here are the key factors that separate a strong deal from a problematic one.
Occupancy Rates
High occupancy rates signal a healthy park with consistent demand. You want to see occupancy above 80% as a baseline, with 90% or higher being ideal.
Parks with lower occupancy can still be attractive if there’s a clear path to filling vacant lots. But you need to understand why the lots are empty before you buy.
Lot Rent Relative to Market Rate
Below market lot rents represent an opportunity. But you need to verify what the actual market rate is in that specific location.
A park charging $200 per month in a market where comparable parks charge $400 is sitting on significant upside. A park already at market rate has less room to grow income without adding lots or improving amenities.
Utility Infrastructure
This is one of the most critical due diligence items in mobile home park investing. Parks with public water and sewer connections are generally preferable to parks with private wells and septic systems.
Private utilities create maintenance headaches and potential environmental liability that can turn a good deal into a nightmare. Always get a thorough inspection of all utility systems before closing.
Park Owned Homes vs Tenant Owned Homes
There’s an important distinction between parks where residents own their homes and parks where the owner rents out individual units. Tenant-owned homes are preferable because you’re not responsible for maintaining the structures.
Park-owned homes can generate more income but also create more management complexity and higher maintenance costs. Most experienced operators prefer to transition park-owned homes to tenant ownership over time.
Local Market Dynamics
Population growth, job market strength, and demand for affordable housing in the area all influence long-term performance. A well-maintained park in a growing market is a fundamentally different investment than the same park in a declining area with shrinking population.
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Financing a Mobile Home Park Purchase
Financing a mobile home park is different from financing traditional residential real estate. Here’s what you need to know.
Conventional and Commercial Lending
Most mobile home parks are financed through commercial lenders rather than traditional residential mortgage products. Loan terms, interest rates, and down payment requirements vary based on the size of the park, its occupancy rate, and the strength of its financials.
Higher interest rates in recent years have affected purchase price negotiations across the mobile home park sector just as they have in other types of real estate.
Seller Financing
Seller financing is common in mobile home park transactions, especially with mom-and-pop current owners who have held their park for decades and are looking to exit. Seller financing can offer more favorable terms than a private lender or commercial bank.
It can also make deals work that might not pencil out with conventional financing at today’s rates. This is one reason experienced operators often target parks with motivated sellers open to carrying the note.
Syndications for Passive Investors
If you want exposure to mobile home park investing without buying an entire park yourself, real estate syndications offer a passive path in. As a limited partner in a syndication, you contribute capital alongside other investors, a general partner operator manages the asset, and you receive distributions from the rental income the park generates.
This is exactly the model we use at Perdido Capital. It allows busy professionals like doctors and dentists to participate in mobile home park investments without any of the day-to-day operational responsibilities.
The Tax Benefits of Mobile Home Park Investing
Like other types of real estate investments, mobile home parks come with meaningful tax advantages that can significantly improve your overall return.
Depreciation
The infrastructure, roads, and any park-owned structures can be depreciated over time. This creates paper losses that offset rental income and reduce your taxable income.
Cost segregation studies can accelerate this depreciation, allowing investors to front-load the tax benefits in the early years of ownership.
Capital Gains Treatment
When you sell a mobile home park you’ve held long-term, profits are typically taxed at long-term capital gains rates rather than ordinary income rates. For high-income professionals already in the top tax brackets, this distinction matters enormously.
Passive Income Offset
For investors participating as limited partners in syndications, the passive losses generated by depreciation can often be used to offset other passive income.
This further reduces your tax burden and is one of the reasons real estate syndications are particularly attractive for doctors and dentists generating significant earned income from their practices.
The Risks to Understand Before You Invest
Mobile home park investing isn’t without risk. Here’s what you need to go in with eyes open about.
Risk Factor
What It Means
How to Mitigate It
Utility infrastructure problems
Aging wells, septic systems, or water lines can require major capital
Thorough inspection and environmental review before closing
Park regulations and zoning
Local ordinances can restrict rent increases or redevelopment
Research local laws before making an offer
High vacancy
Empty lots mean lost income and increased costs to fill them
Understand why lots are vacant and model realistic fill rates
Operator quality
Poor management destroys returns regardless of asset quality
Invest with experienced operators who have a verified track record
Higher interest rates
Increased cost of debt can compress returns and affect purchase price
Stress test your deals at higher rate scenarios before buying
Past performance of any specific park or operator is never a guarantee of future results. Always do thorough due diligence on both the asset and the people running it.
Is Mobile Home Park Investing Right for You?
Mobile home park investing isn’t the right fit for everyone. But for investors who want stable cash flow, strong demand fundamentals, and less competition than traditional real estate, it deserves serious consideration.
For busy doctors and dentists specifically, the syndication model makes mobile home park investing accessible without requiring you to become an operator yourself.
Here’s a quick summary of who this asset class tends to work well for:
It May Be a Good Fit If…
It May Not Be the Right Fit If…
You want stable cash flow from a recession-resistant asset
You need quick liquidity since real estate isn’t easily sold on demand
You’re looking for passive income without being a landlord
You aren’t an accredited investor and don’t qualify for syndications
You want real estate exposure with meaningful tax benefits
You want to be hands-on and control every decision yourself
You want to diversify beyond the stock market
You’re uncomfortable with a multi-year hold period
The Bottom Line
Mobile home park investing has moved from a niche market whispered about in real estate circles to one of the most talked about asset classes among institutional investors and individual real estate investors alike. The fundamentals driving it aren’t going away.
Affordable housing demand is growing, new supply is practically nonexistent, and tenant turnover remains far lower than any other residential asset class.
For the right investor, a well-run mobile home park or a passive investment in a mobile home park syndication can deliver stable cash flow, meaningful tax benefits, and long-term appreciation that’s difficult to match in traditional real estate.
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