How to Reduce the Influence of Private Equity in Affordable Housing

The risk of onerous lot rent increases and the fear of eviction are more threatening than ever as private equity enters the manufactured housing market.

1 minute read

August 9, 2019, 11:00 AM PDT

By Shelterforce


Apartments for rent signage

Taber Andrew Bain / Flickr

In March, C & C Community in Billings, Montana, became the 11th resident-owned manufactured housing community in the state. With technical assistance from ROC USA partner NeighborWorks Montana, the conversion from a traditional land-lease community to a cooperative took homeowners about six months to accomplish. Manufactured homeowners are particularly vulnerable to market predations because they own their homes but pay a lot rent to the community owner. In nearly every state in the U.S., lot rents are unregulated. C & C Community’s transition to a cooperative helps secure the financial futures of the 60 families who live there; families who, when compared to the land-lease model that governs about 98 percent of all manufactured and mobile home communities, will not face the threat of excessive rent increases, closure, or displacement.

For owners of manufactured homes, the risk of onerous lot rent increases and the fear of eviction are more threatening than ever as private equity and other types of investors enter the market. The destabilizing impact of these new players has been raised by a few outlets, most notably on John Oliver’s “Last Week Tonight,” which recently aired a segment on this topic.

Investments in manufactured and mobile homes communities are among the most profitable in the real estate sector . . . 

Friday, August 2, 2019 in Shelterforce Magazine

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