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Home»Real Estate»Comparing RV and manufactured housing data sheds critical light on U.S. affordable housing crisis 
Real Estate

Comparing RV and manufactured housing data sheds critical light on U.S. affordable housing crisis 

February 2, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read
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Revealing what two former Manufactured Housing Institute Presidents/CEOs said undermines narratives

There is a widely spread narrative that has circulated for years in what we lovingly call MHVille. According to that narrative, the Manufactured Housing Institute (MHI) represent “all segments” of the factory-built housing industry. Quoting MHI, they are: “Leading advocates” for manufactured housing. The MHI home page tells the credulous: “We are your trusted partner, advocate and industry leader.” Indeed, casual looks at the MHI website may appear much like other trade association websites. It is only with a closer look by the well-informed that a different reality begins to emerge to what they claim.

Under “Issues and Advocacy” on the MHI website states: “MHI is the federal policy voice for all segments of the offsite built housing industry, serving as the industry’s leading advocate on federal and legislative matters. MHI ensures the manufactured housing industry speaks as a unified voice in Washington.” With those thoughts in mind, a series of facts and quotes from past MHI presidents and chief executive officers (CEOs), combined with data points from the recreational vehicle (RV) and manufactured housing industries shed a sobering light on the Arlington, VA based trade association’s bold claims.

In an interview with The Wall Street Transcript (TWST) the following question was asked of then Manufactured Housing Institute (MHI) president and CEO, Chris Stinebert. “Are all these issues [that depressed manufactured housing sales] pretty much behind you?” MHI’s Stinebert said the following. “I would have to say yes. Inventory levels are very good and back to balanced levels. The high level repossessions from loans made during the 1990s, which have plagued the industry, have returned to manageable levels. The performance of loans made over the last several years continues to improve. The underwriting guidelines and terms for financing the homes has been vastly improved to the extent that some feel that there has been an over-reaction and an over-tightening and that some credit-worthy purchasers or customers do not have the ability to purchase a manufactured home but easily qualify for a site-built home. But there are other positive factors as well.”

That was 2004 when the entire industry produced only 130,748 new HUD Code homes. Fast-forward to 2015.

MHI President and CEO Richard “Dick” Jennison said the following to dozens of industry professionals in video recorded remarks at the Louisville Manufactured Housing Show.

“Why not half-a-million” new manufactured homes sold annually, Jennison rhetorically asked. “We can get there,” MHI’s CEO assured his listeners.

To frame the context, in the mid-to-late 1990s, the manufactured housing (MH) industry produced 2,033,545 new HUD Code homes from 1995 to 2000. That’s an average of some 338,924 new manufactured homes a year for six years.

According to the latest data from the Manufactured Housing Association for Regulatory Reform (MHARR) in November 2025: “Just-released statistics indicate that HUD Code manufacturers produced 7,203 new homes in November 2025, a 16.2% decrease from the 8,597 new HUD Code homes produced in November 2024. Cumulative production for 2025 now totals 95,938 new HUD Code homes, as compared with 96,236 over the same period in 2024, a .3% decrease.” From 2021 to 2024, the manufactured home industry produced 411,137 new homes. That’s just over 102,784 new homes annually for the most recent full four years.

So, the industry was performing at a 3.297x higher rate of annual performance a quarter of a century ago, when the population was smaller than now. While that does come up on occasion, why isn’t that data point a routine factual statement in mainstream reporting on the affordable housing crisis?

Next, let’s compare manufactured housing insights to the RV industry. From 1995 to 2000, the RVIA reported there were 1,663,104 or 277,184 new RVs a year average. The manufactured home industry was averaging over 18 percent higher production totals compared to RVs shipped during those years. Fast-forward to the years 2021 to 2024. When manufactured housing produced 411,137 new homes, the RV industry shipped 1,740,415 new units of all types (towable and motorized). Meaning, RVs trailed manufactured housing by about 18 percent from 1995-2000. But from 2021 to 2024, RVs outpaced manufactured housing by 4.23 to 1.

4.23 new RVs shipped to for every 1 new manufactured home.

RVs are discretionary for most people, or a ‘luxury item.’

By contrast, manufactured homes are an affordable housing necessity for some 22 million Americans.

But if someone is reading pro-MHI commentary, either directly from MHI or from bloggers/trade media that are MHI members who are mimicking MHI talking points, one would think the manufactured housing industry’s leaders at MHI are doing a terrific job. But if so, then why is the manufactured housing industry operating at only about 27 percent of its last high in 1998?

In November, HousingWire published an evidence-packed op-ed that cited MHI board member Sam Landy, J.D.

Landy explained that zoning and financing barriers were keeping manufactured housing from achieving its potential. That is curiously similar to the “bottlenecks” terminology that MHARR has been saying for years are throttling manufactured housing’s true potential. Perhaps that is coincidental, or perhaps Landy has been comparing what MHARR has said to what MHI says and does?

What is clear is from the HousingWire op-ed here is that it has drawn no known public rebuke from Landy. Landy is the leader of the billion-dollar UMH Properties operation, so he certainly has the ability to issue a press release any time he wants to do so.

According to legal sources tied to the still-pending antitrust litigation in manufactured housing to MHProNews: “We plan to file an amended complaint by January 26.” Time will tell, but there are reasons to believe those attorneys may expand their pleadings in a fashion that more directly points the legal finger at MHI as an integral part of their pleadings. If so, you read it here first. As a HousingWire op-ed stated: “MHI is the apparent trade group referenced by [Judge] Valderrama and plaintiffs.

MHI no longer publicly discloses its members, but a previous list found in an MHI publication indicates that 8 out of the 11 defendants are MHI members.

The significant disparity between RV shipments and manufactured housing production since 2000 raises several questions.

– How have educated and experienced leaders in the manufactured housing industry, both corporate and senior MHI staff, failed to take legal action to enforce existing laws that could boost new home sales and production?
– MHARR consistently advocates for robust enforcement of the Manufactured Housing Improvement Act and its “enhanced preemption” provision, as well as full implementation of the Duty to Serve (DTS) for manufactured housing.
– While MHI states support for federal “enhanced preemption” and DTS, they have distanced themselves from MHARR in recent years and aligned with traditional housing trade groups. If MHI is serious about enforcing federal laws to overcome zoning barriers, why haven’t they partnered with MHARR?
– When two MHI members requested the Biden-Harris administration to enforce DTS for chattel loans, why didn’t MHI join MHARR in this effort?

An AI-powered analysis suggests that a proactive Manufactured Housing Institute would have utilized the Manufactured Housing Improvement Act of 2000, pushed for Duty to Serve implementation, fought against zoning discrimination, protected independent businesses, expanded consumer access, and grown the industry back to its full potential. MHI could have accepted MHARR’s offer to sue for federal preemption enforcement in 2019.

Mark Weiss, J.D., President and CEO of MHARR, emphasizes the importance of addressing real challenges facing the manufactured housing industry, beyond superficial legislative changes.

While it’s understandable that the NAHB advocates for conventional builders, it’s perplexing why MHI’s key members prioritize consolidation and optics over industry growth. AI systems suggest that state and federal investigators, as well as mainstream media, should scrutinize MHI’s consolidation-focused approach.

An AI-powered fact evidence-analysis (FEA) check highlights the originality of critiquing trade association effectiveness in relation to RV and manufactured housing industries. The article also points out the shrinking manufactured housing sector compared to the expanding RV industry, despite population growth.

Tony Kovach, a managing member of LifeStyle Factory Homes, LLC, shares these insights, which do not necessarily reflect the views of HousingWire’s editorial department.

[Original article content continues…]

Affordable Comparing crisis Critical data Housing Light manufactured sheds U.S
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