
Cost Of Trailer House On Wheels

“America returns again in the 1970s, when millions of families lived in trailers, tells Justin Cary, a vehicle sales consultant. - Except the buyer's portrait has changed to inconsciousness. It's not a hippie-pacifist who's celebrating a way of life, but a former successful man. ♪ ♪ ”
Not only homeowners who have lost the ability to pay a mortage, but also tenants of apartments are moving to trailers. " Our family decided to take the annual time-out, tells Rick Gross, former resident of New York. Since July 2008, we've been living in a trailer in the south of Alabama. We pay $250 a month for gas, water and land rental. This is better than $1300 for 2 BDR in Queens. "
Gross claims that the main reason why his family was forced to live in a trailer is to save during the crisis: " As long as we cannot find decent work again, we have to spend savings from the savings account. ♪ ♪ ”
Thus, buying houses on wheels for many Americans has become a kind of “economic journey” that is necessary to overcome financial constraints.
" Two years ago, I worked at a car factory in Detroit, had my home and a sum of four zeros on the bank account, telling the 45-year-old father of four kids, Matthew Beckman. - Unforeseeable dismissal put me in a dead end. Had to sell the house, buy a trailer and go to Arizona. The former boss said that the job would not be until four years later. ♪ ♪ ”
People living in trailers don't think they're homeless. In a movable house comunit, there's everything that's necessary. Electricity, water, cable television and even the Internet are connected to trailers. The cost of utilities and land leases is approximately $250 to $400 per month. In some states, this amount does not reach $150.