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.
The Shasta is the most cabin-like model from Spindrift Homes in Bend, Oregon, and it is built for people who want a tiny house that actually lives like a small home. At 26 feet long and a full 10 feet wide, it skips the climb-up loft as the main bedroom in favor of a real main-floor bedroom, then adds the things that make a cabin feel like a cabin: cedar siding, a dormer roof, a wood-burning stove, two sets of French doors, and a proper soaking tub. A guest loft sits above for visitors. It is offered fully furnished for $135,000. Here is the full tour.
The Ochoco is the extra-wide flagship from Spindrift Homes in Bend, Oregon, and it solves the one thing that makes most tiny houses feel tight: width. While nearly every tiny house on wheels is capped at the road-legal 8.5 feet, the Ochoco stretches to a full 10 feet, and those extra inches change everything. Built on a triple-axle trailer at 30 feet long, it is essentially a wider, upgraded take on the Sonoma, dressed in a crisp modern-farmhouse palette of white and black with a true peninsula kitchen. It is offered fully furnished for $140,000. Here is the full tour.
Choosing a tiny house builder could be the single biggest decision you’ll make on your downsizing journey. The right company turns a 200-square-foot trailer into a home you’ll love for a decade; the wrong one can leave you with a leaky, poorly insulated box and a voided warranty. With hundreds of builders now operating across North America, separating the proven craftspeople from the fly-by-night operators takes some homework.
We’ve spent years featuring tiny homes from builders large and small, and this guide gathers the companies we come back to again and again. These are builders with real track records, distinctive design points of view, and the certifications that make financing, insurance, and parking possible. Whether you want an architect-designed showpiece, a four-season home that shrugs off a Canadian winter, or simply a rock-solid trailer to start your own build, there’s a name here for you.
The Joshua Tree was the second tiny house Spindrift Homes ever built, and it helped launch the Bend, Oregon company. It is a 24-foot home on a double-axle trailer that pairs weathered, rustic wood with a bright, modern interior, and it is built to sleep two comfortably full time while still making room for guests. The trick is two separate sleeping areas: a loft tucked over the bathroom and a downstairs living room that converts into a bed wider and longer than a queen. It is offered fully furnished for $105,000. Here is the full tour.
Spindrift Homes is a family-owned tiny house builder based in Bend, Oregon. Husband-and-wife team Bijan and Sarah built their first home on California’s Redwood Coast, named it The Westhaven, and have since grown it into a full lineup of custom tiny houses on wheels. What sets them apart is the focus on sustainability: they build with nontoxic, eco-friendly materials, design their homes to run off-grid, and plant 104 trees for every house they sell through a partnership with Ecologi. They’re NOAH certified and made the Tiny House Authority International Top Builders list. We’ll be touring each of their models in the posts ahead, so consider this your introduction to the builder behind them.
Over the past few weeks we’ve toured the entire lineup from Removed Tiny Homes, the Gold Coast, Australia–based builder turning out some of the most design-forward tiny houses coming out of Australia — and the range is impressively broad. There are four signature models that span everything from a compact, budget-friendly loft build to a single-level, no-ladder home, plus four one-of-a-kind custom builds that push tiny living into genuine architecture, including an award-winning off-grid retreat. We’ve pulled all eight together here in one place so you can see the full collection at a glance — tap any one to take the complete tour.