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The Cabarita by Removed Tiny Homes: A Spacious Tiny House With a Ground-Floor Bedroom and Loft

Most tiny houses ask you to climb a ladder to bed, but the Cabarita by Removed Tiny Homes keeps the main bedroom right on the ground floor and saves the loft for everyone (and everything) else. Built by the Gold Coast, Australia–based maker Removed Tiny Homes and delivered nationwide across Australia, this 9.6-meter (about 31’6″) transportable home wraps clean vertical cladding around large sliding-glass doors and opens up inside to roughly 33 square meters (355 sq ft) of light-filled living — a full-size downstairs bedroom, a walk-through ensuite, a generous kitchen, and a living room anchored by a signature picture window, all topped by a spacious upstairs loft. Removed describes it as “spacious, grounded, and designed to flow,” and with a starting price around AU$145,990 it’s pitched squarely at the families and downsizers who simply need a little more room to spread out.

The Cabarita by Removed Tiny Homes, a white-clad tiny house on a triple-axle trailer with a raised loft and large sliding glass doors

Images courtesy of Removed Tiny Homes


A Ground-Floor Bedroom Changes Everything

If you’ve seen Removed’s dual-loft Byron Bay, the Cabarita is its grounded sibling. Instead of stacking two sleeping zones overhead, it places a full-height main bedroom on the ground floor and dedicates the entire upstairs to one big, flexible loft. The payoff is a home that lives like a proper one-bedroom: you walk in to a vaulted, white-lined interior with light timber floors running the length of the home, a full timber staircase (no ladder) leading up to the loft, and clever drawer-and-cabinet storage built right into the stairs. It feels open and connected rather than compartmentalized, which is exactly what makes the modest footprint work.

Interior of the Cabarita tiny house looking down the length, with a timber kitchen on the left, full staircase to the loft on the right, and the bedroom visible at the far end

Image courtesy of Removed Tiny Homes

A Kitchen Built for Real Cooking

The kitchen runs along one wall in a clean galley layout, pairing white cabinetry with a warm timber-look benchtop and matte-black hardware. A picture window sits above the black sink and gooseneck tap so you get a view (and daylight) while you cook, and there’s room for the appliances that make a house livable full time: an induction cooktop, an under-bench oven, a dishwasher, and a tall fridge. Overhead cabinets and full-height pantry storage round it out, so you’re not sacrificing storage to get a kitchen you’ll actually want to use.

The Cabarita kitchen with white cabinetry, a timber benchtop, black sink and tap, induction cooktop, and a picture window over the sink

Image courtesy of Removed Tiny Homes

A Living Room Wrapped in Glass

At the far end of the home, the living zone is built around the Cabarita’s signature picture window — a tall expanse of glass flanked by a clerestory window above and a sliding glass door alongside that opens the room to the outdoors. A sofa tucks neatly beneath the window, and because the floor plan is open, whoever’s on the couch stays connected to whoever’s at the kitchen bench. The vaulted ceiling and the bank of glazing make this little lounge feel far airier than its dimensions suggest, and it’s an easy spot to read, relax, or watch the weather roll by.

The Cabarita living area with a grey sofa beneath a tall signature picture window, clerestory glazing above, and a sliding glass door to the outside

Image courtesy of Removed Tiny Homes

A Walk-Through Ensuite With Laundry Built In

Between the living area and the bedroom sits a walk-through ensuite that doubles as the home’s laundry — a smart use of the floor plan that keeps everything you need on the ground level. The shower is the showpiece: a black-framed glass enclosure with a rainfall head and tiled niches, paired with a modern toilet and a louvre window for natural ventilation. Across the walkway, a timber vanity holds a sculptural white vessel sink under a large mirror, and a full-size front-loading washing machine is tucked neatly beneath the bench beside a full-height linen cupboard. It’s a genuinely residential bathroom, not a token wet room.

The Cabarita walk-through ensuite with a black-framed glass shower, rainfall head, tiled niches, a modern toilet, and a louvre window

Image courtesy of Removed Tiny Homes

The Cabarita ensuite vanity with a white vessel sink, black tap, large mirror, and a front-loading washing machine built in beneath the bench, with the bedroom visible beyond

Image courtesy of Removed Tiny Homes

A Private Downstairs Bedroom

The main bedroom is the Cabarita’s headline feature, and it’s a true full-height room rather than a loft you crawl into. A queen bed sits beneath a run of overhead cabinetry, flanked by built-in bedside tables with timber tops, and windows on both sides — plus a sliding glass door — flood the space with light and air. For couples it means a real, private bedroom you can stand up and get dressed in; for downsizers it means the comfort of a conventional bedroom without the conventional house around it.

The full-size downstairs bedroom in the Cabarita tiny house with a queen bed, overhead cabinetry, built-in bedside tables, and windows on both sides

Image courtesy of Removed Tiny Homes

A Loft With Room to Spare

With the bedroom handled downstairs, the entire upstairs is freed up as one large, carpeted loft — and it’s big. Lit by a skylight and its own windows, it’s easily roomy enough for two beds plus a play area, which makes it a natural kids’ room, a guest retreat, or a home office and hobby zone. Because you reach it by a proper staircase, it’s the kind of upper level you’ll actually use day to day, and the view back down over the living area shows just how much vertical volume the Cabarita packs into its frame.

The spacious carpeted upstairs loft in the Cabarita tiny house set up with two beds, a skylight, and windows, with room for a play area

Image courtesy of Removed Tiny Homes

View from the Cabarita loft looking down over the staircase, living area, and kitchen, showing the home's vaulted volume

Image courtesy of Removed Tiny Homes

Two Widths and a Layout That Flows

The Cabarita is offered in two shell widths so you can match it to how (and where) you want to live. The standard 2.4 m (7’10”) version stays within Australia’s caravan classification for easier towing, while the wider 3 m (9’10”) option adds noticeable elbow room indoors — though, because it exceeds 2.5 m wide and 4.5 tons, it sits outside caravan classification and needs low-loader truck transport rather than simple towing. Either way the core layout stays the same: bedroom and ensuite at one end, kitchen and living at the other, and the loft overhead, all designed to flow from one zone to the next.

A 3D cutaway floor plan of the Cabarita tiny house showing the downstairs bedroom, walk-through ensuite, kitchen, living area, and upstairs loft

Image courtesy of Removed Tiny Homes

Design Details

  • Builder: Removed Tiny Homes (Gold Coast, Australia; nationwide Australian delivery)
  • Model: Cabarita
  • Length: 9.6 m (about 31’6″)
  • Width: 2.4 m (7’10”), with a 3 m (9’10”) option
  • Height: 4.3 m (about 14’1″)
  • Interior space: approximately 33 m² (355 sq ft)
  • Bedrooms: full-size downstairs bedroom plus a large upstairs loft
  • Bathroom: walk-through ensuite with glass shower, toilet, vanity, and integrated laundry
  • Kitchen: induction cooktop, under-bench oven, dishwasher, tall fridge, timber benchtop
  • Build: transportable on a trailer (3 m width requires low-loader transport)
  • Starting price: AU$145,990

What Makes the Cabarita Special

  • A ground-floor bedroom. A full-height main bedroom you reach without a ladder — rare in a transportable tiny house.
  • One big, usable loft. With sleeping handled downstairs, the upstairs becomes a roomy kids’ room, guest space, or office.
  • An ensuite that does double duty. A proper glass shower, vanity, and toilet share space with a built-in front-loading washing machine.
  • A residential-grade kitchen. Induction cooktop, oven, dishwasher, and a full-height fridge make full-time living comfortable.
  • Light and flow everywhere. A signature picture window, clerestory glazing, and a vaulted ceiling keep the interior bright and open.
  • Two widths to choose from. A tow-friendly 2.4 m shell or a roomier 3 m version for those who want more space inside.

Learn More

Highlights

  • Modern 9.6 m tiny house with vertical cladding and large sliding-glass doors
  • Roughly 33 m² (355 sq ft) of open, light-filled living space
  • Full-size downstairs bedroom — no ladder required
  • Spacious upstairs loft for guests, kids, or a home office
  • Walk-through ensuite with a glass shower and built-in laundry
  • Large kitchen with timber benchtop, induction cooktop, oven, and dishwasher
  • Living room anchored by a signature picture window
  • Available in 2.4 m and 3 m widths; built on a trailer for delivery across Australia
  • Starting from AU$145,990

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Alex

Alex Pino is the founder of Tiny House Talk, a leading resource on tiny homes and simple living since 2009. He helps readers discover unique homes, connect with builders, and explore alternative living.
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