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Just saw Dave Ramsey break down why are mobile homes a bad investment and honestly, his math checks out. He's not being classist about it - he gets that for a lot of Americans, a mobile home is the only affordable option. But here's the thing: they depreciate the moment you buy them.
Ramsey's whole point is simple: don't put money into things that lose value. If you're trying to climb out of a lower income bracket, buying a mobile home feels like the move, but it's actually a trap. The numbers just don't work.
Here's what people miss though. When you buy a mobile home, you're not really buying real estate in the traditional sense. You buy the structure, sure, but the land underneath? That's usually not yours unless you own the lot. And that's the key difference. The land might appreciate over time, especially in desirable areas, but the mobile home itself? Going down in value the whole time.
Ramsey put it bluntly: the land appreciates faster than the mobile home depreciates, so it just looks like you're making money. You're not. The land is basically saving you from a bad decision.
So if are mobile homes a bad investment is the real question, his answer is yeah, financially speaking they are. Which is why he says renting actually makes more sense. When you rent, you're paying for shelter without losing equity. When you buy a mobile home, you're paying and losing money simultaneously. That's the fundamental problem with are mobile homes a bad investment - the math just doesn't favor the buyer. If you're in that position, renting keeps more money in your pocket than taking on a depreciating asset ever will.