Some tiny homes are built to a spec sheet. This one was built to be lived in. Handcrafted in 2017 by a professional house framer in Lakeway, Texas, the Storybook Cedar is a warm, character-filled cottage on wheels that has served as both a private retreat and a well-loved Airbnb. At 9′ x 24.5′ and roughly 220 square feet, it packs a full kitchen, a downstairs sleeping area, a real walk-in shower, a lofted bedroom, and a covered porch into a footprint you can tow to your own land.
It’s currently listed at $59,500 OBO and located in Lampasas, Texas, ready to be relocated to your property. Here’s a full tour of what makes this one special.
Images courtesy of the owner via Tiny Home Builders Marketplace
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Every so often a tiny house comes along that has clearly been lived in and loved, and this deep-plum creekfront home in the Acony Bell Tiny Home Community near Asheville, North Carolina is exactly that. Built by Liberation in 2023, this 362-square-foot home on wheels pairs a crisp modern shed roof with a warm, plant-filled interior, two spacious lofts, and one of the best outdoor setups we have seen on a tiny house lot: a massive covered porch and direct frontage on a mountain creek.
It is listed for $189,900 and is being sold move-in ready and partially furnished, with all of the owner’s improvements — the porch, the boardwalks, the storage shed, and the established gardens — included in the asking price. Let’s take a look at what makes this one special.
Images courtesy of Tiny Home Builders Marketplace (listed by Gerry Woods)
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A $75,000 budget goes a lot further in the tiny house world than most people expect. From a move-in-ready THOW under $25K to a solar-powered, rooftop-deck retreat that still squeaks in under our cap, there are real, full-time-capable homes for sale right now at every price point below $75K.
We pulled this roundup from homes we’ve featured most recently, so the prices reflect today’s market rather than a listing from years ago. Here are six of the best tiny homes under $75K, ordered from most to least affordable. Which one would you tow home?
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The eVista by Escape is a modern tiny house on wheels that trades the usual sleeping loft for a single-level, studio-style layout — a bright open room where the kitchen and a built-in window bed share one space, with a full private bathroom just off the entry. Wrapped in blackened, board-textured siding on the outside and warm birch inside, it feels like a design-forward cabin you can tow anywhere.
What makes this particular eVista worth a serious look is timing and price. The build is complete and ready for immediate delivery, offered at a special price of $55,480 with financing available and no production wait.
Images courtesy of Escape
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Can a family really live in a tiny house? Thousands do — and many say it brought them closer together, out of debt, and into a simpler, more intentional life. The trick is choosing a design built for more than one or two people: separate bedrooms, a bunk room or kids’ loft, and a layout that gives everyone a little space to call their own.
We’ve toured countless family tiny homes over the years, from three-bedroom park models to skoolies full of bunk beds. Here are the best of them, organized by the features that matter most when you’re going tiny with kids.
What Makes a Tiny House Family-Friendly
- Separate sleeping spaces — a second bedroom, bunk room, or dedicated kids’ loft so everyone has their own zone
- A longer or wider footprint — goosenecks, 10-foot-wide builds, and park models add real square footage
- A parents’ retreat — a private primary bedroom that’s separated from the kids’ space
- Durable, kid-proof finishes and smart storage to keep clutter (and toys) under control
- A flexible gathering space the whole family can actually fit in together
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Plenty of people dream about ditching rent, hitting the road, and living out of a camper van — and then talk themselves out of it with three words: “I can’t build.” A creator who goes by VanLifeNate is living proof that you don’t need a background in carpentry, electrical work, or plumbing to pull it off.
Starting with zero prior experience, Nate took an ordinary low-roof Mercedes-Benz Sprinter cargo van and transformed it into a warm, full-time home on wheels. Even better, he documented the entire journey as a start-to-finish timelapse, so you can watch a bare metal box turn into a cozy, wood-lined camper in just a few minutes.
The result is a stealthy little rig that looks like a plain work van from the curb but hides a surprisingly polished living space inside.
Image via VanLifeNate/YouTube
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Tiny homes and retirement are a natural match. Less to clean, less to pay for, and far less to worry about — with the freedom to plant yourself near family or in a welcoming community. But the lofts, ladders, and clever-but-cramped layouts that suit a 28-year-old can become real hazards at 70.
The good news: over the years we’ve featured dozens of tiny homes that are genuinely well suited to seniors — single-level designs, main-floor bedrooms, roomy park models, and even fully wheelchair-accessible builds. We’ve gathered the best of them here, organized by the features that matter most as you age. (For the bigger-picture decisions — financing, zoning, and aging-in-place design — see our companion Retirement Tiny House Guide.)
What to Look for in a Tiny Home for Seniors
- Single-level or a main-floor bedroom — no ladders or steep loft stairs to navigate at night
- A walk-in or roll-in shower and a bathroom with room to move and add grab bars
- Wider doorways and an open floor plan that stay comfortable if a walker or wheelchair is ever needed
- Low-maintenance materials and easy-care systems (mini-splits, induction cooktops, durable flooring)
- A spot in a community for connection, shared amenities, and a little help close by
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Tucked into 45 acres of rolling Middle Tennessee farmland, Tiny Homes Village is exactly the kind of place the tiny house movement has been dreaming about for years: a real, legal, pet-friendly community built from the ground up for tiny living. No fighting city hall over zoning, no parking your tiny house in a friend’s backyard and hoping nobody notices — just a designated village where small homes belong.
Located in Rock Island, Tennessee — about 20 minutes from McMinnville and 90 minutes from Nashville — the village sits within easy reach of Rock Island State Park and Cumberland Caverns. With room for up to 200 lots spread across the property, it is one of the more ambitious purpose-built tiny home communities we have come across, and the setting is hard to beat.
Images courtesy of Tiny Homes Village
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The River West is the second mobile sauna from Spindrift Homes in Bend, Oregon, and it takes a more traditional, Scandinavian approach than its larger sibling, the Silverado. It is a 10-foot, fully towable sauna clad in cedar shingles and heated the old-fashioned way, with a wood-fired Harvia stove. Designed for four to six people, it pairs a warm cedar hot room with a small changing room, and it is built to be parked by the water for that classic sauna-then-cold-plunge ritual. It starts at $35,000. Here is a closer look.
Images courtesy of Spindrift Homes
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