Fully Rebuilt. Bank-Approved. Mountain Views Included. Most renovated manufactured homes stop at the cosmetic layer. New paint, new flooring, maybe new counters. This one went further. Every system in this home has been replaced: subfloor, LVP flooring, electrical, plumbing, insulation, sheetrock, roof, kitchen cabinets, and appliances. The only thing original is the frame. What sits above it, in every meaningful sense, is a new home. That scope of renovation earned this home something most manufactured homes can never claim: an Idaho Mobile Home Compliance Rehabilitation Certificate. That certificate matters to you as a buyer because it means the home qualifies for standard homeowners insurance and opens access to a significantly broader pool of lenders than a conventional manufactured home purchase. If you've been told mobile homes are hard to finance, this one is the exception. Your conventional lender can likely write this loan. At 1,000 square feet, the addition gives it a footprint and feel that the square footage and photos alone don't fully communicate. Skylights in the bedrooms bring in natural light, making the space feel open rather than compact. The kitchen is finished with white granite countertops and includes a Samsung Bespoke refrigerator and a full appliance package. And the kitchen window frames a direct, unobstructed view of the mountains that no renovation budget can manufacture. Step outside onto the front deck, and that view expands. This is the kind of morning that people move to Idaho for. The lot is fully fenced with a gate; the park has recently been upgraded; and the community runs quietly. Lot rent is $500 per month and covers water and septic. This home's quality is better than that of a new manufactured home, with upgrades more similar to those of a stick-built home.