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How to Buy a Modular Home in Nebraska — The 2026 Legal + Financing Guide
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The state where the Omaha-Lincoln corridor built a modular category on Berkshire-adjacent stability and unusually short permit timelines.
This guide walks through what's legal in Nebraska, which financing paths actually close, how long the timeline runs county-by-county, and what the all-in cost really looks like once every line item settles. Written for buyers who want the honest number, not the brochure number.
What's Legal in Nebraska
Nebraska treats modular construction as residential construction — built to the state's residential code, installed on a permanent foundation, and appraised and financed the same way a stick-built home is. That distinction matters because "modular" and "manufactured" (HUD Code) sit under different legal regimes and different financing products. According to the Federal Manufactured Home Construction and Safety Standards, the split is federal HUD Code (manufactured) versus state residential code (modular) — and every Nebraska county underwrites the two differently at the permit desk.
ADU pathways. Omaha permits ADUs by-right in most residential zones as of the 2022 code update; Lincoln expanded pathways in 2023. LB 866 (2024) required first-class cities to permit at least one ADU pathway by right. Practical upshot: on most residential lots in Omaha and the surrounding counties, an ADU is a by-right or lightly-conditional pathway, not a discretionary variance fight.
THOW rules. THOW (tiny home on wheels) in Nebraska is permitted with variance in most rural counties; Douglas and Lancaster counties are conditional. If you're buying THOW as a primary residence, confirm your target county's permanent-foundation-conversion rules before ordering — the conversion cost swings the total build number by fifteen to thirty thousand dollars.
County-by-county variance. Nebraska law preempts some municipal restrictions, but counties still control the permit desk. The five counties currently moving fastest for modular buyers are Hall, Buffalo, Lincoln, Dawson, Adams. Metro-core counties tend to run longer permit timelines and higher fees; exurb counties tend to move faster with lower fees but more site-prep responsibility on the buyer.
For state-by-state ADU legality context beyond Nebraska, PERCH maintains a 52-state ADU legality reference with by-right pathways per state.
Financing Paths in Nebraska
Six financing paths cover almost every modular purchase in Nebraska:
Chattel loan — treats the home as personal property. Higher rates (typically 8-11 percent), shorter terms (15-20 years), lower down payment. Common when the home sits on leased land or when the buyer prioritizes speed to close over long-term interest cost. 21st Mortgage, Cascade Financial, and Triad Financial are the most active chattel lenders in Nebraska.
Personal property loan — similar to chattel, sometimes offered by regional credit unions at slightly lower rates than national manufactured-housing specialists.
Construction-to-perm loan — funds the build progress-by-progress, then converts to a permanent mortgage on completion. Requires a permanent foundation and owned land. Rates track conventional mortgage rates plus a construction premium.
Conventional mortgage — available when the modular home is on a permanent foundation, owned land, and titled as real property. Rates match any conventional loan. Requires an appraisal that treats the modular as equivalent to stick-built (which the state residential-code build supports).
USDA Rural Development — for eligible rural areas of Nebraska, zero down payment for qualifying buyers. Practical for buyers targeting the exurb counties named above.
Cash. Roughly twenty-two percent of modular purchases in Nebraska close cash, per HUD manufactured-housing shipment data — higher than the national single-family average.
The lenders currently active in Nebraska: 21st Mortgage, Vanderbilt Mortgage, Triad Financial, plus regional credit unions that vary by metro.
Nebraska tax context. Progressive state income tax with a top bracket of five and eighty-four hundredths percent as of 2025. Property tax varies by county — factor the assessed value of the modular plus land into your monthly all-in before you shop for a payment.
Typical Timeline in Nebraska
From decision to key-in-hand, expect 25 to 80 days in most Nebraska counties. The variance comes from three places: county permit desk speed, site prep complexity (well and septic drive the swing), and the specific builder's factory lead-time.
Fastest-permitting counties in Nebraska: Hall, Buffalo, Lincoln. Slowest-permitting: any coastal or metro-core jurisdiction with a discretionary review layer.
The build itself — factory production to on-site install — typically runs 60 to 120 days once permits are pulled. The whole timeline stretches when buyers don't have land pre-selected. Land-first, permit-second, order-third is the sequence that keeps the timeline honest.
Total Cost Breakdown in Nebraska
Here's the honest all-in for a two-to-three-bedroom modular home in Nebraska, single-story, roughly 1,000-1,400 square feet, delivered and installed on owned land with typical site conditions:
| Line item | Range |
|---|---|
| Modular home (factory + finish) | $75,000 – $195,000 |
| Land | $7,000 to 35,000 per acre outside the Omaha-Lincoln corridor |
| Site prep (well, septic, power drop, grading) | $18,000 to 38,000 (well + septic + Nebraska frost-line foundation) |
| Permits + impact fees | $3,500 – $12,000 |
| Delivery + crane set | $8,000 – $18,000 |
| Install + tie-in | $6,000 – $14,000 |
| Financing origination + close costs | $2,500 – $8,500 |
All-in typical range: $115,000 to 225,000. The wide range reflects real market variance — you can be at the low end if you already own land and site conditions are simple; you can be at the high end if you're buying land in a metro county with full-service utilities and a full-finish package.
PERCH-Certified Builders Serving Nebraska
PERCH works with a curated group of PERCH-Certified builders who ship to Nebraska. Each Certified builder is vetted for unit-count history, warranty transferability, financial stability, and delivery reliability. We don't sell certification publicly. We route it to qualified buyers on request.
Land-eligible, financed, and ready to sign. That's the buyer profile PERCH's Certified builder network is built for. If that's you, apply for access via the PERCH marketplace or grab our Field Guide for the 22 questions to ask any builder before signing.
Related Guides & Tools
- Modular vs prefab vs container homes — which is right for you
- How much does a container home cost — understanding the expenses
- Nebraska rental yield leaderboard — top 10 ZIPs
- Nebraska modular rental yield report · Q3 2026
- Nebraska ADU legality reference
- PERCH Yield calculator · Find Yours quiz
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