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.
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.
Beyond tiny houses, Spindrift Homes in Bend, Oregon also builds mobile saunas, and the Silverado is the larger of the two. It is a 12-foot, fully towable cedar sauna built for serious heat and good company, with stadium-style benches that seat six to eight, a remote-start electric stone heater, and a 5-by-5-foot picture window that opens the hot room to the view. Wrapped in cedar with a slanted metal roof, it is designed to be parked anywhere, ideally near cold water for hot-cold contrast therapy. It starts at $40,000. Here is a closer look.
The Sonoma is the most popular model from Spindrift Homes, the family-owned builder in Bend, Oregon, and it is easy to see why. It is a 26-foot tiny house on wheels with 220 square feet of living space, a vaulted shiplap ceiling, and so many windows and skylights that the forest practically becomes part of the room. It is sold fully furnished for a base price of $110,000, and like every Spindrift build, it is designed to live comfortably off-grid and put natural light and healthy, largely reclaimed materials front and center. Here is a full look inside.
There’s nothing quite like the freedom of hitting the open road with everything you need tucked into a van or bus. This July, we’re celebrating that spirit of independence with 9 incredible van conversions that prove life on wheels can be beautiful, functional, and totally unique. From a Victorian-styled ProMaster to a pink recording studio bus, and from wheelchair-accessible rigs to builds by folks in their 70s and 80s, these conversions show that van life is truly for everyone.
The Olympic is one of the largest models from Spindrift Homes in Bend, Oregon, and it is built around a single obsession: storage. It is a 30-foot tiny house on wheels with 255 square feet of space, a wall of windows, and clever hideaways tucked into nearly every surface, from a staircase that conceals the refrigerator to a sunken lounge whose benches all lift up and a full-size bed that pulls out of the floor. It is offered fully furnished for $120,000. Here is the full tour.
This beautifully furnished, all-electric Escape N2 in the gated Escape Tampa Bay community is now available in the peaceful Palm Court neighborhood, listed at $119,700. Inspired by timeless mid-century design and built for effortless Florida living, the N2 pairs a bright, open one-bedroom interior with a brand-new screened Florida room spanning nearly 300 square feet, so the living space flows right out into the tropical outdoors.
The Black Butte is the bold, design-forward flagship from Spindrift Homes in Bend, Oregon, and it feels less like a tiny house than a tiny piece of modern architecture. At 30 feet long and a full 10 feet wide, it wraps charred, dark wood siding and a clean shed roof around a warm, light-filled interior built from Baltic birch, honey oak, and stone. The showpiece is a raised platform living room anchored by a massive 8.5-foot picture window, with eight-foot-deep storage drawers hidden beneath it. It is the priciest model in the lineup at $160,000, fully furnished. Here is the full tour.
For a growing number of Americans, retirement no longer means a paid-off four-bedroom house with rooms that sit empty and a yard that demands every Saturday. It means freedom: less to clean, less to pay for, less to worry about, and a great deal more money and time for the things that actually make these years worth looking forward to. That is exactly why tiny houses have become one of the most talked-about retirement strategies of the past decade.
A tiny home can let you unlock the equity trapped in a large house, slash your monthly cost of living, plant yourself near family or in a community of like-minded people, and design a space that will keep working for you as your needs change. But retiring into a tiny house is not as simple as buying the cutest model you can find online. The lofts, ladders, and clever-but-cramped layouts that suit a 28-year-old can become genuine hazards at 70. Zoning, healthcare access, financing, and long-term resale all deserve careful thought.
This guide walks through everything you need to weigh before downsizing into a tiny home for retirement: the real financial picture, the design choices that matter most as you age, where you are actually allowed to put a tiny house, how to pay for one, and how to make the transition without regret.