From 1959 to 2019 is a period of 61 years. Using official U.S. Census Bureau records there were 13,302,000 total pre-HUD Code mobile home and post-HUD Code manufactured housing units shipped during that period (see Part I for details). That means that the average number of pre- and post-HUD Code housing units produced and shipped per that timeframe was 218,065.57, per Gemini. From 1959 to 2018 the math on shipments and average per year looks like this: 13,302,000/60 = 221,700. That is very close to the 222K claimed by then Skyline Champion (SKY, now Champion Homes) in a previous investor relations (IR) presentation shown with annotation at this link here. These are data points not easily found on the Manufactured Housing Institute (MHI or manufacturedhousing.org) website despite their claim that they represent “all segments” of the industry and are an “institute.” While the U.S. Census Bureau produced data on mobile and manufactured housing is itself literally historic, another set of data of Census Bureau data in this article is also significant. Namely, what the population was nationally, regionally, and by state from 1910 to 2020 (see Part II). What that means is the same period, 1959 to 2019, are covered by those Census Bureau data sets. That official data speaks volumes to those willing to look at some sobering facts.
For example. In 1960, per the Census Bureau, the U.S. nationally witnessed shipments of 103,700 per HUD Code mobile homes. That 103.7K was when the population was 179,323,175.
Fast forward to 2024. Per official data provided by the Manufactured Housing Association for Regulatory Reform (MHARR): “Cumulative production for 2024 thus totals 103,314 homes, a 15.8% increase over the 89,169 HUD Code homes produced during 2023.” Per the Census Bureau: “the U.S. population was an estimated 340,110,988 as of July 1, 2024.”
Had manufactured home production grown at the same proportional rate as the U.S. population grew, Gemini said there would have been 196,527 units. So, there was a deficit of some 93,000 homes at that pace.
But there is more to know. Because the mobile home industry was ‘young’ in 1960 and was just warming up.
See those additional ‘must see’ insights provided in Part III. It reveals the stark difference between where manufactured housing is vs. what manufactured housing could have been had production/shipments advanced at the proportionate rates.
This MHVille FEA is underway.
Part I
| Shipments of New Manufactured Homes: 1959 – 2019 | ||||
| (Thousands of Units) | ||||
| Period | Not Seasonally | Seasonal | Seasonally Adjusted | |
| Adjusted | Index | Annual Rate | ||
| 2019 | ||||
| January | 7.6 | 103.0 | 88 | |
| February | 7.2 | 95.5 | 91 | |
| March | 7.6 | 100.2 | 91 | |
| April | 8.0 | 103.6 | 93 | |
| May | 8.6 | 110.7 | 93 | |
| June | 7.8 | 99.1 | 94 | |
| July | 7.1 | 89.7 | 95 | |
| August | 8.6 | 107.4 | 97 | |
| September | 8.0 | 98.1 | 98 | |
| October | 9.4 | 114.6 | 99 | |
| November | 8.0 | 95.7 | 100 | |
| December | 6.7 | 82.1 | 98 | |
| Total: | 94.6 | |||
| 2018 | ||||
| January | 8.6 | 100.1 | 104 | |
| February | 8.1 | 95.0 | 102 | |
| March | 8.8 | 104.7 | 101 | |
| April | 8.3 | 100.8 | 98 | |
| May | 8.8 | 109.4 | 97 | |
| June | 8.3 | 102.6 | 97 | |
| July | 6.8 | 85.8 | 95 | |
| August | 9.2 | 113.8 | 97 | |
| September | 7.5 | 95.0 | 95 | |
| October | 8.6 | 112.1 | 92 | |
| November | 7.7 | 102.0 | 90 | |
| December | 5.9 | 79.4 | 90 | |
| Total: | 96.6 | |||
| 2017 | ||||
| January | 7.8 | 94.1 | 100 | |
| February | 7.3 | 93.7 | 94 | |
| March | 8.2 | 110.8 | 89 | |
| April | 7.2 | 97.1 | 89 | |
| May | 7.9 | 107.1 | 88 | |
| June | 8.2 | 109.9 | 89 | |
| July | 5.8 | 82.7 | 84 | |
| August | 8.4 | 112.7 | 90 | |
| September | 7.6 | 98.7 | 92 | |
| October | 8.6 | 107.2 | 97 | |
| November | 8.6 | 103.4 | 100 | |
| December | 7.2 | 80.8 | 108 | |
| Total: | 92.9 | |||
| 2016 | ||||
| January | 5.9 | 90.0 | 78 | |
| February | 6.1 | 95.3 | 77 | |
| March | 7.1 | 108.6 | 79 | |
| April | 6.7 | 101.8 | 79 | |
| May | 6.8 | 102.5 | 79 | |
| June | 7.3 | 109.9 | 80 | |
| July | 5.3 | 85.8 | 75 | |
| August | 7.4 | 109.8 | 80 | |
| September | 7.3 | 106.0 | 83 | |
| October | 7.2 | 102.2 | 84 | |
| November | 7.1 | 98.4 | 87 | |
| December | 7.0 | 89.4 | 94 | |
| Total: | 81.1 | |||
| 2015 | ||||
| January | 5.0 | 91.1 | 65 | |
| February | 4.8 | 88.2 | 65 | |
| March | 5.6 | 100.0 | 67 | |
| April | 6.1 | 109.5 | 67 | |
| May | 5.8 | 100.6 | 69 | |
| June | 6.1 | 107.1 | 68 | |
| July | 6.1 | 99.3 | 74 | |
| August | 6.3 | 103.3 | 74 | |
| September | 6.3 | 105.7 | 72 | |
| October | 6.8 | 110.5 | 74 | |
| November | 6.0 | 95.1 | 75 | |
| December | 5.7 | 88.8 | 76 | |
| Total: | 70.5 | |||
| 2014 | ||||
| January | 4.4 | 93.1 | 57 | |
| February | 4.4 | 86.0 | 61 | |
| March | 4.9 | 94.9 | 62 | |
| April | 5.7 | 108.3 | 63 | |
| May | 5.7 | 106.9 | 64 | |
| June | 5.6 | 106.3 | 63 | |
| July | 5.7 | 99.7 | 68 | |
| August | 6.0 | 107.4 | 67 | |
| September | 5.9 | 104.3 | 67 | |
| October | 6.5 | 117.4 | 67 | |
| November | 5.0 | 90.6 | 66 | |
| December | 4.7 | 85.2 | 66 | |
| Total: | 64.3 | |||
| 2013 | ||||
| January | 4.2 | 90.0 | 57 | |
| February | 4.2 | 83.9 | 59 | |
| March | 4.5 | 96.3 | 56 | |
| April | 5.3 | 105.6 | 60 | |
| May | 5.6 | 114.9 | 59 | |
| June | 5.3 | 105.0 | 61 | |
| July | 4.8 | 99.3 | 58 | |
| August | 5.9 | 114.5 | 62 | |
| September | 5.5 | 101.2 | 65 | |
| October | 6.1 | 116.4 | 63 | |
| November | 4.9 | 93.8 | 62 | |
| December | 4.0 | 78.8 | 61 | |
| Total: | 60.2 | |||
| 2012 | ||||
| January | 4.0 | 81.6 | 59 | |
| February | 4.1 | 85.9 | 58 | |
| March | 4.7 | 98.5 | 57 | |
| April | 4.6 | 101.5 | 55 | |
| May | 5.2 | 116.0 | 54 | |
| June | 5.1 | 113.6 | 54 | |
| July | 4.2 | 93.9 | 54 | |
| August | 5.6 | 123.6 | 54 | |
| September | 4.4 | 99.8 | 53 | |
| October | 5.1 | 116.2 | 53 | |
| November | 4.4 | 97.6 | 54 | |
| December | 3.5 | 74.2 | 56 | |
| Total: | 54.9 | |||
| 2011 | ||||
| January | 2.8 | 76.8 | 44 | |
| February | 2.9 | 79.8 | 44 | |
| March | 4.0 | 104.5 | 46 | |
| April | 3.9 | 101.4 | 47 | |
| May | 4.5 | 110.2 | 49 | |
| June | 5.0 | 119.8 | 50 | |
| July | 3.7 | 92.1 | 48 | |
| August | 5.2 | 123.5 | 50 | |
| September | 5.1 | 109.1 | 56 | |
| October | 5.4 | 103.6 | 63 | |
| November | 5.3 | 98.3 | 65 | |
| December | 3.8 | 78.4 | 58 | |
| Total: | 51.6 | |||
| 2010 | ||||
| January | 3.2 | 76.1 | 51 | |
| February | 3.5 | 78.8 | 53 | |
| March | 4.5 | 101.2 | 54 | |
| April | 4.8 | 105.5 | 55 | |
| May | 5.0 | 105.8 | 57 | |
| June | 5.4 | 119.0 | 55 | |
| July | 4.3 | 97.7 | 52 | |
| August | 4.9 | 117.1 | 50 | |
| September | 4.4 | 112.5 | 47 | |
| October | 3.8 | 106.7 | 43 | |
| November | 3.5 | 96.5 | 43 | |
| December | 2.7 | 82.5 | 40 | |
| Total: | 50.0 | |||
| 2009 | ||||
| January | 3.8 | 79.9 | 57 | |
| February | 3.6 | 79.2 | 54 | |
| March | 4.0 | 94.6 | 50 | |
| April | 4.3 | 107.2 | 48 | |
| May | 4.3 | 106.4 | 48 | |
| June | 4.5 | 115.4 | 46 | |
| July | 4.4 | 105.1 | 50 | |
| August | 4.5 | 113.0 | 48 | |
| September | 4.5 | 112.9 | 48 | |
| October | 4.6 | 111.0 | 49 | |
| November | 3.8 | 90.7 | 51 | |
| December | 3.5 | 82.5 | 51 | |
| Total: | 49.7 | |||
| 2008 | ||||
| January | 6.8 | 86.4 | 95 | |
| February | 7.0 | 85.1 | 99 | |
| March | 7.0 | 90.1 | 93 | |
| April | 8.1 | 105.6 | 92 | |
| May | 7.8 | 106.9 | 87 | |
| June | 7.5 | 107.2 | 84 | |
| July | 7.0 | 102.2 | 82 | |
| August | 7.4 | 113.3 | 79 | |
| September | 7.0 | 111.1 | 75 | |
| October | 7.0 | 121.5 | 69 | |
| November | 4.9 | 90.1 | 66 | |
| December | 4.4 | 85.3 | 62 | |
| Total: | 81.9 | |||
| 2007 | ||||
| January | 7.0 | 86.9 | 97 | |
| February | 6.6 | 81.8 | 97 | |
| March | 7.9 | 97.0 | 98 | |
| April | 7.9 | 97.8 | 98 | |
| May | 9.1 | 111.8 | 97 | |
| June | 9.1 | 111.1 | 98 | |
| July | 7.6 | 94.7 | 96 | |
| August | 9.7 | 124.2 | 94 | |
| September | 7.9 | 101.9 | 93 | |
| October | 9.4 | 120.6 | 94 | |
| November | 7.7 | 98.5 | 93 | |
| December | 5.8 | 75.7 | 92 | |
| Total: | 95.8 | |||
| 2006 | ||||
| January | 11.6 | 85.1 | 163 | |
| February | 10.4 | 85.3 | 146 | |
| March | 11.8 | 104.4 | 135 | |
| April | 9.9 | 94.6 | 126 | |
| May | 11.1 | 108.9 | 122 | |
| June | 10.9 | 113.1 | 116 | |
| July | 8.0 | 87.4 | 110 | |
| August | 10.8 | 120.1 | 108 | |
| September | 9.1 | 107.3 | 102 | |
| October | 9.4 | 115.4 | 98 | |
| November | 8.0 | 99.6 | 97 | |
| December | 6.3 | 77.4 | 97 | |
| Total: | 117.4 | |||
| 2005 * | ||||
| January | 10.1 | 81.4 | 149 | |
| February | 9.8 | 85.8 | 138 | |
| March | 11.0 | 104.9 | 126 | |
| April | 10.9 | 99.2 | 131 | |
| May | 10.9 | 103.0 | 127 | |
| June | 11.9 | 111.9 | 128 | |
| July | 9.3 | 87.4 | 128 | |
| August | 12.2 | 117.4 | 124 | |
| September | 13.0 | 114.7 | 136 | |
| October | 17.9 | 111.0 | 194 | |
| November | 17.4 | 99.3 | 210 | |
| December | 12.4 | 81.3 | 183 | |
| Total: | 146.9 | |||
| 2004 | ||||
| January | 8.7 | 86.0 | 122 | |
| February | 8.9 | 86.4 | 123 | |
| March | 11.3 | 102.2 | 133 | |
| April | 11.3 | 105.2 | 129 | |
| May | 10.5 | 98.2 | 129 | |
| June | 11.9 | 110.5 | 129 | |
| July | 10.0 | 93.1 | 129 | |
| August | 11.9 | 112.7 | 127 | |
| September | 12.7 | 114.2 | 134 | |
| October | 12.8 | 112.8 | 136 | |
| November | 11.2 | 99.2 | 135 | |
| December | 9.4 | 84.6 | 133 | |
| Total: | 130.7 | |||
| 2003 | ||||
| January | 10.4 | 88.4 | 141 | |
| February | 9.8 | 85.1 | 138 | |
| March | 10.3 | 96.4 | 128 | |
| April | 11.4 | 104.7 | 131 | |
| May | 11.5 | 105.6 | 130 | |
| June | 11.6 | 106.4 | 131 | |
| July | 11.4 | 99.2 | 137 | |
| August | 12.0 | 111.1 | 129 | |
| September | 11.9 | 111.3 | 128 | |
| October | 12.7 | 120.9 | 126 | |
| November | 9.4 | 89.9 | 125 | |
| December | 8.5 | 81.4 | 126 | |
| Total: | 130.8 | |||
| 2002 | ||||
| January | 14.5 | 89.8 | 194 | |
| February | 13.4 | 86.3 | 186 | |
| March | 13.7 | 96.4 | 171 | |
| April | 15.3 | 104.3 | 176 | |
| May | 16.2 | 111.9 | 173 | |
| June | 14.7 | 103.1 | 171 | |
| July | 13.7 | 97.4 | 169 | |
| August | 16.1 | 116.4 | 166 | |
| September | 14.2 | 105.1 | 162 | |
| October | 15.7 | 120.3 | 156 | |
| November | 11.6 | 92.7 | 150 | |
| December | 9.4 | 78.2 | 144 | |
| Total: | 168.5 | |||
| 2001 | ||||
| January | 12.6 | 90.4 | 167 | |
| February | 13.3 | 88.3 | 180 | |
| March | 15.7 | 103.3 | 182 | |
| April | 15.8 | 100.4 | 188 | |
| May |
|
110.9 | 191 | |
| June | 17.7 | 106.2 | 200 | |
| July | 15.0 | 91.6 | 196 | |
| August | 19.9 | 120.4 | 199 | |
| September | 16.9 | 99.9 | 203 | |
| October | 19.8 | 117.3 | 202 | |
| November | 16.3 | 98.2 | 199 | |
| December | 12.6 | 76.0 | 199 | |
| Total: | 193.1 | |||
| 2000 | ||||
| January | 21.5 | 84.7 | 304 | |
| February | 23.0 | 94.8 | 291 | |
| March | 26.2 | 109.6 | 287 | |
| April | 22.6 | 100.0 | 271 | |
| May | 24.6 | 111.2 | 265 | |
| June | 24.2 | 110.7 | 262 | |
| July | 18.2 | 87.0 | 251 | |
| August | 24.1 | 116.1 | 249 | |
| September | 19.3 | 100.6 | 231 | |
| October | 19.6 | 110.3 | 213 | |
| November | 15.9 | 97.6 | 196 | |
| December | 11.3 | 76.7 | 176 | |
| Total: | 250.4 | |||
| 1999 | ||||
| January | 27.5 | 84.6 | 390 | |
| February | 28.6 | 90.1 | 381 | |
| March | 34.2 | 107.4 | 383 | |
| April | 33.3 | 108.6 | 368 | |
| May | 30.6 | 100.5 | 365 | |
| June | 32.5 | 109.7 | 355 | |
| July | 26.2 | 93.7 | 336 | |
| August | 31.0 | 109.6 | 340 | |
| September | 28.6 | 107.1 | 320 | |
| October | 28.4 | 106.2 | 321 | |
| November | 25.5 | 96.9 | 316 | |
| December | 21.7 | 85.7 | 304 | |
| Total: | 348.1 | |||
| 1998 | ||||
| January | 26.7 | 88.8 | 361 | |
| February | 27.7 | 90.0 | 370 | |
| March | 31.7 | 102.9 | 370 | |
| April | 33.2 | 108.1 | 369 | |
| May | 31.3 | 101.2 | 372 | |
| June | 33.3 | 109.2 | 366 | |
| July | 30.9 | 97.6 | 380 | |
| August | 32.4 | 104.9 | 371 | |
| September | 33.1 | 106.6 | 373 | |
| October | 35.4 | 112.1 | 379 | |
| November | 30.1 | 92.8 | 389 | |
| December | 27.3 | 85.7 | 382 | |
| Total: | 373.1 | |||
| 1997 | ||||
| January | 26.7 | 92.6 | 347 | |
| February | 26.3 | 89.9 | 350 | |
| March | 28.8 | 98.3 | 351 | |
| April | 32.5 | 106.9 | 365 | |
| May | 31.3 | 106.4 | 353 | |
| June | 31.0 | 104.6 | 355 | |
| July | 28.9 | 97.6 | 356 | |
| August | 31.4 | 105.9 | 356 | |
| September | 31.3 | 106.1 | 354 | |
| October | 34.3 | 117.3 | 351 | |
| November | 26.3 | 89.7 | 352 | |
| December | 24.9 | 84.3 | 354 | |
| Total: | 353.7 | |||
| 1996 | ||||
| January | 27.1 | 91.8 | 355 | |
| February | 27.2 | 94.8 | 344 | |
| March | 30.1 | 98.9 | 365 | |
| April | 32.5 | 105.7 | 369 | |
| May | 33.5 | 110.9 | 363 | |
| June | 31.2 | 101.1 | 371 | |
| July | 29.1 | 96.0 | 364 | |
| August | 34.3 | 111.7 | 369 | |
| September | 31.5 | 101.5 | 372 | |
| October | 36.0 | 117.7 | 367 | |
| November | 28.0 | 93.8 | 358 | |
| December | 22.9 | 80.8 | 341 | |
| Total: | 363.3 | |||
| 1995 | ||||
| January | 25.7 | 88.4 | 348 | |
| February | 24.3 | 88.6 | 329 | |
| March | 29.2 | 107.7 | 325 | |
| April | 26.1 | 97.2 | 322 | |
| May | 30.0 | 109.4 | 330 | |
| June | 30.7 | 111.8 | 329 | |
| July | 24.7 | 88.2 | 336 | |
| August | 33.2 | 116.9 | 340 | |
| September | 29.7 | 102.6 | 348 | |
| October | 32.9 | 111.4 | 354 | |
| November | 29.4 | 98.6 | 358 | |
| December | 24.1 | 78.3 | 369 | |
| Total: | 339.9 | |||
| 1994 | ||||
| January | 20.9 | 84.7 | 296 | |
| February | 21.6 | 88.4 | 293 | |
| March | 26.6 | 107.2 | 298 | |
| April | 24.8 | 100.9 | 294 | |
| May | 26.0 | 104.9 | 297 | |
| June | 27.9 | 111.8 | 299 | |
| July | 22.3 | 88.9 | 301 | |
| August | 29.0 | 115.1 | 303 | |
| September | 27.4 | 107.8 | 305 | |
| October | 28.0 | 106.7 | 315 | |
| November | 26.0 | 98.3 | 317 | |
| December | 23.5 | 82.4 | 343 | |
| Total: | 303.9 | |||
| 1993 | ||||
| January | 17.2 | 83.6 | 248 | |
| February | 18.2 | 88.4 | 248 | |
| March | 21.0 | 104.7 | 241 | |
| April | 21.4 | 106.8 | 241 | |
| May | 20.3 | 101.2 | 240 | |
| June | 22.6 | 110.6 | 246 | |
| July | 19.9 | 94.5 | 253 | |
| August | 23.8 | 111.2 | 256 | |
| September | 23.4 | 106.9 | 263 | |
| October | 23.6 | 106.5 | 266 | |
| November | 22.3 | 97.4 | 275 | |
| December | 20.5 | 87.5 | 281 | |
| Total: | 254.3 | |||
| 1992 | ||||
| January | 13.4 | 88.1 | 183 | |
| February | 13.5 | 87.0 | 187 | |
| March | 16.1 | 99.2 | 195 | |
| April | 17.6 | 107.8 | 196 | |
| May | 17.0 | 103.7 | 197 | |
| June | 18.2 | 111.4 | 196 | |
| July | 18.0 | 100.5 | 215 | |
| August | 19.2 | 111.4 | 207 | |
| September | 19.8 | 107.6 | 221 | |
| October | 21.6 | 112.2 | 232 | |
| November | 18.5 | 92.3 | 241 | |
| December | 17.5 | 82.8 | 253 | |
| Total: | 210.5 | |||
| 1991 | ||||
| January | 11.7 | 85.8 | 164 | |
| February | 10.9 | 84.9 | 153 | |
| March | 12.8 | 95.6 | 160 | |
| April | 15.2 | 105.9 | 172 | |
| May | 16.6 | 114.3 | 174 | |
| June | 15.6 | 105.2 | 178 | |
| July | 14.7 | 100.2 | 176 | |
| August | 17.4 | 116.8 | 179 | |
| September | 15.1 | 104.6 | 174 | |
| October | 16.9 | 118.6 | 171 | |
| November | 13.1 | 91.8 | 171 | |
| December | 10.9 | 75.1 | 175 | |
| Total: | 170.9 | |||
| 1990 | ||||
| January | 13.4 | 82.9 | 194 | |
| February | 13.7 | 83.1 | 198 | |
| March | 16.2 | 100.3 | 194 | |
| April | 16.2 | 102.2 | 191 | |
| May | 18.1 | 116.0 | 188 | |
| June | 17.4 | 109.6 | 191 | |
| July | 15.1 | 96.6 | 188 | |
| August | 19.5 | 122.8 | 191 | |
| September | 15.9 | 102.9 | 185 | |
| October | 18.1 | 116.3 | 187 | |
| November | 14.2 | 95.0 | 180 | |
| December | 10.3 | 72.4 | 170 | |
| Total: | 188.3 | |||
| 1989 | ||||
| January | 15.3 | 80.0 | 230 | |
| February | 14.6 | 81.9 | 214 | |
| March | 18.2 | 103.7 | 211 | |
| April | 17.1 | 100.2 | 204 | |
| May | 19.1 | 112.8 | 203 | |
| June | 18.9 | 114.2 | 198 | |
| July | 14.4 | 96.4 | 179 | |
| August | 19.4 | 121.9 | 191 | |
| September | 16.5 | 105.9 | 187 | |
| October | 17.7 | 113.4 | 188 | |
| November | 15.1 | 96.4 | 188 | |
| December | 11.7 | 73.1 | 192 | |
| Total: | 198.1 | |||
| 1988 | ||||
| January | 13.0 | 78.0 | 199 | |
| February | 15.2 | 86.3 | 211 | |
| March | 18.8 | 105.2 | 215 | |
| April | 18.8 | 103.2 | 218 | |
| May | 20.0 | 109.0 | 220 | |
| June | 21.7 | 115.4 | 226 | |
| July | 16.7 | 95.7 | 209 | |
| August | 21.9 | 118.7 | 221 | |
| September | 20.6 | 109.9 | 225 | |
| October | 19.8 | 110.6 | 215 | |
| November | 17.6 | 93.9 | 225 | |
| December | 14.2 | 76.1 | 224 | |
| Total: | 218.3 | |||
| 1987 | ||||
| January | 16.0 | 80.7 | 238 | |
| February | 16.3 | 83.1 | 235 | |
| March | 19.6 | 100.6 | 234 | |
| April | 21.1 | 109.7 | 231 | |
| May | 20.2 | 106.8 | 227 | |
| June | 21.5 | 111.1 | 233 | |
| July | 21.0 | 103.1 | 244 | |
| August | 22.0 | 112.5 | 235 | |
| September | 21.7 | 109.9 | 237 | |
| October | 22.2 | 113.7 | 234 | |
| November | 17.0 | 91.0 | 224 | |
| December | 14.3 | 78.8 | 218 | |
| Total: | 232.8 | |||
| 1986 | ||||
| January | 18.9 | 83.2 | 272 | |
| February | 18.7 | 83.6 | 268 | |
| March | 20.5 | 100.1 | 245 | |
| April | 22.9 | 108.8 | 253 | |
| May | 22.5 | 110.8 | 243 | |
| June | 21.4 | 109.6 | 235 | |
| July | 20.3 | 103.2 | 236 | |
| August | 21.6 | 112.1 | 232 | |
| September | 21.5 | 107.8 | 239 | |
| October | 23.1 | 116.8 | 237 | |
| November | 17.2 | 88.4 | 234 | |
| December | 15.8 | 76.6 | 247 | |
| Total: | 244.3 | |||
| 1985 | ||||
| January | 18.6 | 82.1 | 272 | |
| February | 19.7 | 84.8 | 278 | |
| March | 24.0 | 100.7 | 286 | |
| April | 26.2 | 108.1 | 291 | |
| May | 28.0 | 115.4 | 291 | |
| June | 25.1 | 107.9 | 279 | |
| July | 24.3 | 101.9 | 286 | |
| August | 27.7 | 115.4 | 289 | |
| September | 24.5 | 105.5 | 279 | |
| October | 27.7 | 115.6 | 287 | |
| November | 20.9 | 88.8 | 283 | |
| December | 16.9 | 72.6 | 280 | |
| Total: | 283.5 | |||
| 1984 | ||||
| January | 20.0 | 77.6 | 310 | |
| February | 22.2 | 89.8 | 297 | |
| March | 25.6 | 105.0 | 292 | |
| April | 25.8 | 107.2 | 289 | |
| May | 29.0 | 116.0 | 300 | |
| June | 27.8 | 110.7 | 301 | |
| July | 24.6 | 98.2 | 300 | |
| August | 30.0 | 119.6 | 301 | |
| September | 24.4 | 102.4 | 286 | |
| October | 27.7 | 112.6 | 295 | |
| November | 21.8 | 91.1 | 288 | |
| December | 16.6 | 71.9 | 277 | |
| Total: | 295.4 | |||
| 1983 | ||||
| January | 18.2 | 76.1 | 286 | |
| February | 19.7 | 84.3 | 281 | |
| March | 25.4 | 109.8 | 278 | |
| April | 25.1 | 105.5 | 286 | |
| May | 26.9 | 111.1 | 290 | |
| June | 29.5 | 119.2 | 297 | |
| July | 23.4 | 95.0 | 295 | |
| August | 30.2 | 119.5 | 303 | |
| September | 28.1 | 107.6 | 313 | |
| October | 26.9 | 106.7 | 302 | |
| November | 23.5 | 91.3 | 309 | |
| December | 18.8 | 72.6 | 310 | |
| Total: | 295.8 | |||
| 1982 | ||||
| January | 13.9 | 75.3 | 221 | |
| February | 17.3 | 84.7 | 245 | |
| March | 22.1 | 108.3 | 245 | |
| April | 22.3 | 109.2 | 246 | |
| May | 21.9 | 109.4 | 240 | |
| June | 23.7 | 115.7 | 245 | |
| July | 19.5 | 98.2 | 238 | |
| August | 22.3 | 114.2 | 234 | |
| September | 21.3 | 113.1 | 226 | |
| October | 20.4 | 104.1 | 235 | |
| November | 18.9 | 89.2 | 254 | |
| December | 16.0 | 75.9 | 253 | |
| Total: | 239.5 | |||
| 1981 | ||||
| January | 15.9 | 78.0 | 244 | |
| February | 17.4 | 84.1 | 248 | |
| March | 21.6 | 104.3 | 249 | |
| April | 24.1 | 112.0 | 258 | |
| May | 22.9 | 107.4 | 256 | |
| June | 23.1 | 112.9 | 245 | |
| July | 21.8 | 101.0 | 259 | |
| August | 22.4 | 112.8 | 238 | |
| September | 21.6 | 111.7 | 232 | |
| October | 20.3 | 109.4 | 222 | |
| November | 15.7 | 87.9 | 215 | |
| December | 14.2 | 76.9 | 222 | |
| Total: | 240.9 | |||
| 1980 | ||||
| January | 18.4 | 82.0 | 269 | |
| February | 18.9 | 84.8 | 267 | |
| March | 19.3 | 102.3 | 226 | |
| April | 18.2 | 108.1 | 202 | |
| May | 15.5 | 110.0 | 169 | |
| June | 15.4 | 109.6 | 169 | |
| July | 17.0 | 100.0 | 204 | |
| August | 20.0 | 112.5 | 213 | |
| September | 21.5 | 109.6 | 235 | |
| October | 23.7 | 117.8 | 241 | |
| November | 17.8 | 87.5 | 244 | |
| December | 16.0 | 78.0 | 246 | |
| Total: | 221.6 | |||
| 1979 | ||||
| January | 19.2 | 82.2 | 280 | |
| February | 18.7 | 82.2 | 274 | |
| March | 23.6 | 103.5 | 274 | |
| April | 24.8 | 104.0 | 286 | |
| May | 27.7 | 116.2 | 286 | |
| June | 26.3 | 107.1 | 295 | |
| July | 22.5 | 92.6 | 291 | |
| August | 29.1 | 121.4 | 288 | |
| September | 23.8 | 105.9 | 269 | |
| October | 27.2 | 117.2 | 279 | |
| November | 19.8 | 93.2 | 255 | |
| December | 14.7 | 75.8 | 232 | |
| Total: | 277.4 | |||
| 1978 | ||||
| January | 18.8 | 77.3 | 293 | |
| February | 18.7 | 81.7 | 275 | |
| March | 24.6 | 106.6 | 277 | |
| April | 23.2 | 104.2 | 267 | |
| May | 26.6 | 115.7 | 276 | |
| June | 26.4 | 115.4 | 275 | |
| July | 20.2 | 92.3 | 263 | |
| August | 28.0 | 125.4 | 268 | |
| September | 24.2 | 105.0 | 276 | |
| October | 25.8 | 112.5 | 275 | |
| November | 22.2 | 95.9 | 278 | |
| December | 17.0 | 69.0 | 296 | |
| Total: | 275.7 | |||
| 1977 | ||||
| January | 14.3 | 68.3 | 251 | |
| February | 16.8 | 78.6 | 256 | |
| March | 23.0 | 102.4 | 270 | |
| April | 22.2 | 115.2 | 231 | |
| May | 23.7 | 119.1 | 239 | |
| June | 25.8 | 122.0 | 254 | |
| July | 20.0 | 106.6 | 225 | |
| August | 28.0 | 121.2 | 277 | |
| September | 25.5 | 107.0 | 286 | |
| October | 25.0 | 103.1 | 291 | |
| November | 22.5 | 92.4 | 292 | |
| December | 18.3 | 72.9 | 301 | |
| Total: | 265.6 | |||
| 1976 | ||||
| January | 15.1 | 69.5 | 260 | |
| February | 18.6 | 79.4 | 281 | |
| March | 21.2 | 104.4 | 244 | |
| April | 23.3 | 117.2 | 238 | |
| May | 24.1 | 117.3 | 246 | |
| June | 23.4 | 121.4 | 231 | |
| July | 20.0 | 108.9 | 221 | |
| August | 23.4 | 116.1 | 242 | |
| September | 22.4 | 108.1 | 248 | |
| October | 21.9 | 99.8 | 263 | |
| November | 17.8 | 86.5 | 247 | |
| December | 15.0 | 72.7 | 248 | |
| Total: | 246.1 | |||
| 1975 | ||||
| January | 11.5 | 72.3 | 191 | |
| February | 14.4 | 78.7 | 220 | |
| March | 16.0 | 98.8 | 195 | |
| April | 18.9 | 117.7 | 192 | |
| May | 20.0 | 117.8 | 203 | |
| June | 20.0 | 119.4 | 201 | |
| July | 19.7 | 110.9 | 213 | |
| August | 20.8 | 113.7 | 220 | |
| September | 20.1 | 108.3 | 223 | |
| October | 20.8 | 106.4 | 235 | |
| November | 16.5 | 81.9 | 242 | |
| December | 13.8 | 73.1 | 227 | |
| Total: | 212.7 | |||
| 1974 | ||||
| January | 27.0 | 71.3 | 454 | |
| February | 27.2 | 78.9 | 414 | |
| March | 33.3 | 97.5 | 410 | |
| April | 37.9 | 117.8 | 386 | |
| May | 38.1 | 119.7 | 382 | |
| June | 36.6 | 114.4 | 384 | |
| July | 32.0 | 113.0 | 340 | |
| August | 30.1 | 115.4 | 313 | |
| September | 25.1 | 107.7 | 280 | |
| October | 21.7 | 105.8 | 246 | |
| November | 16.3 | 85.3 | 229 | |
| December | 12.7 | 70.3 | 217 | |
| Total: | 338.3 | |||
| 1973 | ||||
| January | 40.7 | 73.1 | 668 | |
| February | 42.9 | 79.1 | 651 | |
| March | 57.0 | 99.7 | 686 | |
| April | 61.5 | 115.8 | 637 | |
| May | 57.2 | 113.7 | 604 | |
| June | 57.3 | 118.0 | 583 | |
| July | 50.3 | 107.5 | 561 | |
| August | 53.6 | 118.4 | 543 | |
| September | 44.7 | 102.0 | 526 | |
| October | 46.0 | 110.5 | 500 | |
| November | 39.8 | 90.8 | 526 | |
| December | 28.5 | 70.6 | 484 | |
| Total: | 579.9 | |||
| 1972 | ||||
| January | 33.5 | 71.1 | 565 | |
| February | 40.0 | 83.4 | 576 | |
| March | 49.1 | 102.0 | 578 | |
| April | 53.7 | 109.2 | 590 | |
| May | 51.8 | 110.5 | 563 | |
| June | 55.0 | 115.7 | 570 | |
| July | 48.5 | 102.7 | 567 | |
| August | 52.1 | 114.4 | 547 | |
| September | 49.1 | 114.6 | 514 | |
| October | 54.4 | 109.9 | 594 | |
| November | 50.7 | 92.0 | 661 | |
| December | 38.0 | 71.8 | 635 | |
| Total: | 575.9 | |||
| 1971 | ||||
| January | 24.4 | 71.2 | 416 | |
| February | 28.4 | 81.6 | 422 | |
| March | 35.6 | 100.0 | 432 | |
| April | 42.8 | 112.8 | 460 | |
| May | 40.9 | 102.0 | 486 | |
| June | 47.3 | 113.3 | 506 | |
| July | 45.2 | 104.2 | 526 | |
| August | 49.5 | 112.4 | 534 | |
| September | 53.4 | 117.8 | 550 | |
| October | 50.3 | 112.3 | 543 | |
| November | 39.5 | 95.0 | 504 | |
| December | 34.0 | 78.5 | 526 | |
| Total: | 491.7 | |||
| 1970 | ||||
| January | 23.9 | 72.8 | 394 | |
| February | 24.1 | 81.7 | 354 | |
| March | 29.5 | 95.2 | 372 | |
| April | 39.9 | 109.4 | 438 | |
| May | 32.9 | 100.6 | 392 | |
| June | 35.6 | 113.5 | 377 | |
| July | 37.1 | 107.6 | 414 | |
| August | 38.4 | 112.9 | 408 | |
| September | 41.4 | 119.6 | 415 | |
| October | 40.8 | 118.1 | 415 | |
| November | 30.5 | 90.1 | 406 | |
| December | 27.0 | 78.4 | 414 | |
| Total: | 401.2 | |||
| 1969 | ||||
| January | 27.1 | 77.2 | 422 | |
| February | 29.4 | 92.0 | 383 | |
| March | 32.5 | 94.6 | 412 | |
| April | 36.0 | 109.4 | 395 | |
| May | 34.6 | 103.5 | 401 | |
| June | 36.4 | 108.4 | 403 | |
| July | 35.2 | 103.8 | 407 | |
| August | 38.1 | 112.5 | 406 | |
| September | 40.1 | 117.3 | 410 | |
| October | 43.4 | 123.2 | 423 | |
| November | 32.7 | 87.0 | 451 | |
| December | 27.2 | 81.7 | 399 | |
| Total: | 412.7 | |||
| 1968 | ||||
| January | 19.0 | 78.0 | 293 | |
| February | 21.2 | 86.1 | 295 | |
| March | 24.0 | 96.2 | 299 | |
| April | 27.1 | 108.7 | 299 | |
| May | 27.6 | 109.9 | 301 | |
| June | 26.5 | 104.8 | 303 | |
| July | 27.2 | 105.8 | 308 | |
| August | 30.5 | 114.9 | 319 | |
| September | 29.9 | 113.3 | 317 | |
| October | 33.5 | 118.9 | 338 | |
| November | 27.6 | 91.1 | 364 | |
| December | 24.0 | 77.3 | 372 | |
| Total: | 318.0 | |||
| 1967 | ||||
| January | 12.2 | 74.1 | 198 | |
| February | 14.4 | 84.4 | 205 | |
| March | 18.4 | 104.6 | 211 | |
| April | 19.4 | 100.8 | 231 | |
| May | 21.9 | 112.8 | 233 | |
| June | 22.6 | 113.2 | 240 | |
| July | 19.4 | 97.7 | 239 | |
| August | 24.7 | 118.0 | 251 | |
| September | 24.2 | 112.6 | 258 | |
| October | 24.3 | 114.8 | 254 | |
| November | 20.9 | 92.2 | 272 | |
| December | 17.8 | 74.6 | 287 | |
| Total: | 240.4 | |||
| 1966 | ||||
| January | 11.6 | 72.6 | 192 | |
| February | 14.2 | 84.7 | 202 | |
| March | 20.0 | 103.7 | 232 | |
| April | 19.6 | 105.8 | 222 | |
| May | 20.2 | 109.4 | 221 | |
| June | 21.7 | 115.4 | 226 | |
| July | 18.0 | 96.9 | 223 | |
| August | 22.4 | 120.6 | 223 | |
| September | 20.0 | 113.6 | 211 | |
| October | 19.2 | 111.1 | 208 | |
| November | 17.4 | 92.0 | 227 | |
| December | 12.9 | 74.6 | 207 | |
| Total: | 217.3 | |||
| 1965 | ||||
| January | 12.9 | 72.5 | 213 | |
| February | 14.2 | 85.0 | 201 | |
| March | 18.8 | 108.4 | 208 | |
| April | 18.0 | 107.7 | 200 | |
| May | 18.9 | 109.3 | 208 | |
| June | 21.1 | 117.5 | 215 | |
| July | 17.7 | 97.9 | 217 | |
| August | 21.1 | 113.1 | 224 | |
| September | 21.4 | 114.3 | 225 | |
| October | 20.6 | 110.3 | 224 | |
| November | 17.9 | 90.4 | 238 | |
| December | 13.9 | 76.8 | 217 | |
| Total: | 216.5 | |||
| 1964 | ||||
| January | 11.0 | 77.6 | 170 | |
| February | 12.8 | 86.8 | 177 | |
| March | 16.1 | 103.4 | 187 | |
| April | 16.7 | 109.0 | 184 | |
| May | 17.8 | 110.8 | 193 | |
| June | 18.9 | 117.6 | 193 | |
| July | 16.9 | 102.4 | 198 | |
| August | 17.9 | 108.6 | 198 | |
| September | 19.0 | 114.8 | 199 | |
| October | 18.2 | 112.1 | 195 | |
| November | 14.2 | 87.2 | 196 | |
| December | 11.6 | 73.9 | 189 | |
| Total: | 191.3 | |||
| 1963 | ||||
| January | 8.5 | 75.8 | 135 | |
| February | 10.2 | 87.1 | 141 | |
| March | 11.7 | 101.7 | 138 | |
| April | 13.6 | 109.6 | 149 | |
| May | 14.7 | 120.5 | 146 | |
| June | 13.7 | 109.8 | 150 | |
| July | 13.0 | 101.7 | 154 | |
| August | 13.7 | 108.7 | 151 | |
| September | 14.2 | 111.5 | 153 | |
| October | 15.6 | 115.7 | 162 | |
| November | 11.8 | 86.4 | 164 | |
| December | 10.0 | 71.9 | 167 | |
| Total: | 150.8 | |||
| 1962 | ||||
| January | 6.8 | 77.5 | 106 | |
| February | 8.1 | 87.9 | 111 | |
| March | 9.7 | 103.4 | 113 | |
| April | 10.5 | 107.2 | 118 | |
| May | 11.7 | 120.0 | 117 | |
| June | 11.4 | 114.9 | 119 | |
| July | 9.3 | 95.6 | 117 | |
| August | 10.7 | 112.5 | 114 | |
| September | 10.9 | 106.3 | 123 | |
| October | 12.3 | 119.0 | 124 | |
| November | 9.1 | 86.3 | 126 | |
| December | 7.4 | 70.3 | 126 | |
| Total: | 118.0 | |||
| 1961 | ||||
| January | 5.6 | 73.3 | 92 | |
| February | 6.4 | 88.7 | 87 | |
| March | 8.0 | 109.2 | 88 | |
| April | 7.7 | 101.9 | 91 | |
| May | 9.1 | 125.4 | 87 | |
| June | 8.3 | 116.4 | 86 | |
| July | 6.7 | 92.3 | 87 | |
| August | 8.0 | 109.5 | 88 | |
| September | 8.2 | 111.5 | 88 | |
| October | 9.0 | 112.4 | 96 | |
| November | 7.1 | 86.8 | 98 | |
| December | 6.0 | 70.6 | 102 | |
| Total: | 90.2 | |||
| 1960 | ||||
| January | 6.8 | 71.1 | 114 | |
| February | 9.1 | 93.7 | 116 | |
| March | 9.3 | 107.0 | 104 | |
| April | 8.5 | 106.5 | 96 | |
| May | 11.2 | 120.8 | 111 | |
| June | 10.4 | 117.2 | 106 | |
| July | 7.7 | 91.0 | 101 | |
| August | 10.2 | 112.2 | 109 | |
| September | 10.0 | 113.8 | 105 | |
| October | 8.7 | 110.3 | 95 | |
| November | 6.4 | 86.7 | 88 | |
| December | 5.7 | 71.7 | 95 | |
| Total: | 103.7 | |||
| 1959 | ||||
| January | 6.8 | 72.1 | 113 | |
| February | 8.4 | 88.2 | 115 | |
| March | 11.0 | 104.7 | 126 | |
| April | 10.2 | 108.3 | 113 | |
| May | 11.8 | 117.7 | 120 | |
| June | 12.1 | 118.2 | 123 | |
| July | 10.5 | 97.0 | 130 | |
| August | 9.6 | 105.3 | 110 | |
| September | 11.8 | 115.7 | 122 | |
| October | 11.5 | 112.3 | 123 | |
| November | 8.6 | 84.2 | 123 | |
| December | 8.1 | 73.8 | 132 | |
| Total: | 120.5 | |||
| * Beginning 2005, shipment seasonal indexes are developed concurrently. | ||||
| Note: Components may not add to totals because of rounding. | ||||
| Source: Not seasonally adjusted statistics for 1978 – present are compiled from | ||||
| manufacturers’ reports to the Institute for Building Technology and Safety (IBTS). | ||||
| Data Prior to 1978 were obtained from the Manufactured Housing Institute. | ||||
Part II. Per the U.S. Census Bureau website on this date is the following.
Population change is the rate of change in population between decennial census years. While every census region grew considerably during the twentieth century, the South and West experienced the largest increases in population.
| State or Region | 2020 Census | 2010 Census | 2000 Census | 1990 Census | 1980 Census | 1970 Census | 1960 Census | 1950 Census | 1940 Census | 1930 Census | 1920 Census | 1910 Census |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| United States | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
331,449,281 | 308,745,538 | 281,421,906 | 248,709,873 | 226,545,805 | 203,211,926 | 179,323,175 | 151,325,798 | 132,165,129 | 123,202,660 | 106,021,568 | 92,228,531 |
| Percent Change |
7.4% | 9.7% | 13.2% | 9.8% | 11.5% | 13.3% | 18.5% | 14.5% | 7.3% | 16.2% | 15.0% | 21.0% |
| Northeast | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
57,609,148 | 55,317,240 | 53,594,378 | 50,809,229 | 49,135,283 | 49,040,703 | 44,677,819 | 39,477,986 | 35,976,777 | 34,427,091 | 29,662,053 | 25,868,573 |
| Percent Change |
4.1% | 3.2% | 5.5% | 3.4% | 0.2% | 9.8% | 13.2% | 9.7% | 4.5% | 16.1% | 14.7% | 22.9% |
| Midwest | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
68,985,454 | 66,927,001 | 64,392,776 | 59,668,632 | 58,865,670 | 56,571,663 | 51,619,139 | 44,460,762 | 40,143,332 | 38,594,100 | 34,019,792 | 29,888,542 |
| Percent Change |
3.1% | 3.9% | 7.9% | 1.4% | 4.1% | 9.6% | 16.1% | 10.8% | 4.0% | 13.4% | 13.8% | 13.5% |
| South | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
126,266,107 | 114,555,744 | 100,236,820 | 85,445,930 | 75,372,362 | 62,795,367 | 54,973,113 | 47,197,088 | 41,665,901 | 37,857,633 | 33,125,803 | 29,389,330 |
| Percent Change |
10.2% | 14.3% | 17.3% | 13.4% | 20.0% | 14.2% | 16.5% | 13.3% | 10.1% | 14.3% | 12.7% | 19.8% |
| West | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
78,588,572 | 71,945,553 | 63,197,932 | 52,786,082 | 43,172,490 | 34,804,193 | 28,053,104 | 20,189,962 | 14,379,119 | 12,323,836 | 9,213,920 | 7,082,086 |
| Percent Change |
9.2% | 13.8% | 19.7% | 22.3% | 24.0% | 24.1% | 38.9% | 40.4% | 16.7% | 33.8% | 30.1% | 64.4% |
| Alabama | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
5,024,279 | 4,779,736 | 4,447,100 | 4,040,587 | 3,893,888 | 3,444,165 | 3,266,740 | 3,061,743 | 2,832,961 | 2,646,248 | 2,348,174 | 2,138,093 |
| Percent Change |
5.1% | 7.5% | 10.1% | 3.8% | 13.1% | 5.4% | 6.7% | 8.1% | 7.1% | 12.7% | 9.8% | 16.9% |
| Alaska | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
733,391 | 710,231 | 626,932 | 550,043 | 401,851 | 300,382 | 226,167 | 128,643 | 72,524 | 59,278 | 55,036 | 64,356 |
| Percent Change |
3.3% | 13.3% | 14.0% | 36.9% | 33.8% | 32.8% | 75.8% | 77.4% | 22.3% | 7.7% | -14.5% | 1.2% |
| Arizona | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
7,151,502 | 6,392,017 | 5,130,632 | 3,665,228 | 2,718,215 | 1,770,900 | 1,302,161 | 749,587 | 499,261 | 435,573 | 334,162 | 204,354 |
| Percent Change |
11.9% | 24.6% | 40.0% | 34.8% | 53.5% | 36.0% | 73.7% | 50.1% | 14.6% | 30.3% | 63.5% | 66.2% |
| Arkansas | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
3,011,524 | 2,915,918 | 2,673,400 | 2,350,725 | 2,286,435 | 1,923,295 | 1,786,272 | 1,909,511 | 1,949,387 | 1,854,482 | 1,752,204 | 1,574,449 |
| Percent Change |
3.3% | 9.1% | 13.7% | 2.8% | 18.9% | 7.7% | -6.5% | -2.0% | 5.1% | 5.8% | 11.3% | 20.0% |
| California | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
39,538,223 | 37,253,956 | 33,871,648 | 29,760,021 | 23,667,902 | 19,953,134 | 15,717,204 | 10,586,223 | 6,907,387 | 5,677,251 | 3,426,861 | 2,377,549 |
| Percent Change |
6.1% | 10.0% | 13.8% | 25.7% | 18.6% | 27.0% | 48.5% | 53.3% | 21.7% | 65.7% | 44.1% | 60.1% |
| Colorado | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
5,773,714 | 5,029,196 | 4,301,261 | 3,294,394 | 2,889,964 | 2,207,259 | 1,753,947 | 1,325,089 | 1,123,296 | 1,035,791 | 939,629 | 799,024 |
| Percent Change |
14.8% | 16.9% | 30.6% | 14.0% | 30.9% | 25.8% | 32.4% | 18.0% | 8.4% | 10.2% | 17.6% | 48.0% |
| Connecticut | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
3,605,944 | 3,574,097 | 3,405,565 | 3,287,116 | 3,107,576 | 3,031,709 | 2,535,234 | 2,007,280 | 1,709,242 | 1,606,903 | 1,380,631 | 1,114,756 |
| Percent Change |
0.9% | 4.9% | 3.6% | 5.8% | 2.5% | 19.6% | 26.3% | 17.4% | 6.4% | 16.4% | 23.9% | 22.7% |
| Delaware | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
989,948 | 897,934 | 783,600 | 666,168 | 594,338 | 548,104 | 446,292 | 318,085 | 266,505 | 238,380 | 223,003 | 202,322 |
| Percent Change |
10.2% | 14.6% | 17.6% | 12.1% | 8.4% | 22.8% | 40.3% | 19.4% | 11.8% | 6.9% | 10.2% | 9.5% |
| District of Columbia | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
689,545 | 601,723 | 572,059 | 606,900 | 638,333 | 756,510 | 763,956 | 802,178 | 663,091 | 486,869 | 437,571 | 331,069 |
| Percent Change |
14.6% | 5.2% | -5.7% | -4.9% | -15.6% | -1.0% | -4.8% | 21.0% | 36.2% | 11.3% | 32.2% | 18.8% |
| Florida | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
21,538,187 | 18,801,310 | 15,982,378 | 12,937,926 | 9,746,324 | 6,789,443 | 4,951,560 | 2,771,305 | 1,897,414 | 1,468,211 | 968,470 | 752,619 |
| Percent Change |
14.6% | 17.6% | 23.5% | 32.7% | 43.6% | 37.1% | 78.7% | 46.1% | 29.2% | 51.6% | 28.7% | 42.4% |
| Georgia | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
10,711,908 | 9,687,653 | 8,186,453 | 6,478,216 | 5,463,105 | 4,589,575 | 3,943,116 | 3,444,578 | 3,123,723 | 2,908,506 | 2,895,832 | 2,609,121 |
| Percent Change |
10.6% | 18.3% | 26.4% | 18.6% | 19.0% | 16.4% | 14.5% | 10.3% | 7.4% | 0.4% | 11.0% | 17.7% |
| Hawaii | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
1,455,271 | 1,360,301 | 1,211,537 | 1,108,229 | 964,691 | 768,561 | 632,772 | 499,794 | 423,330 | 368,336 | 255,912 | 191,909 |
| Percent Change |
7.0% | 12.3% | 9.3% | 14.9% | 25.5% | 21.5% | 26.6% | 18.1% | 14.9% | 43.9% | 33.4% | 24.6% |
| Idaho | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
1,839,106 | 1,567,582 | 1,293,953 | 1,006,749 | 943,935 | 712,567 | 667,191 | 588,637 | 524,873 | 445,032 | 431,866 | 325,594 |
| Percent Change |
17.3% | 21.1% | 28.5% | 6.7% | 32.5% | 6.8% | 13.3% | 12.1% | 17.9% | 3.0% | 32.6% | 101.3% |
| Illinois | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
12,812,508 | 12,830,632 | 12,419,293 | 11,430,602 | 11,426,518 | 11,113,976 | 10,081,158 | 8,712,176 | 7,897,241 | 7,630,654 | 6,485,280 | 5,638,591 |
| Percent Change |
-0.1% | 3.3% | 8.6% | 0.0% | 2.8% | 10.2% | 15.7% | 10.3% | 3.5% | 17.7% | 15.0% | 16.9% |
| Indiana | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
6,785,528 | 6,483,802 | 6,080,485 | 5,544,159 | 5,490,224 | 5,193,669 | 4,662,498 | 3,934,224 | 3,427,796 | 3,238,503 | 2,930,390 | 2,700,876 |
| Percent Change |
4.7% | 6.6% | 9.7% | 1.0% | 5.7% | 11.4% | 18.5% | 14.8% | 5.8% | 10.5% | 8.5% | 7.3% |
| Iowa | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
3,190,369 | 3,046,355 | 2,926,324 | 2,776,755 | 2,913,808 | 2,824,376 | 2,757,537 | 2,621,073 | 2,538,268 | 2,470,939 | 2,404,021 | 2,224,771 |
| Percent Change |
4.7% | 4.1% | 5.4% | -4.7% | 3.2% | 2.4% | 5.2% | 3.3% | 2.7% | 2.8% | 8.1% | -0.3% |
| Kansas | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
2,937,880 | 2,853,118 | 2,688,418 | 2,477,574 | 2,363,679 | 2,246,578 | 2,178,611 | 1,905,299 | 1,801,028 | 1,880,999 | 1,769,257 | 1,690,949 |
| Percent Change |
3.0% | 6.1% | 8.5% | 4.8% | 5.2% | 3.1% | 14.3% | 5.8% | -4.3% | 6.3% | 4.6% | 15.0% |
| Kentucky | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
4,505,836 | 4,339,367 | 4,041,769 | 3,685,296 | 3,660,777 | 3,218,706 | 3,038,156 | 2,944,806 | 2,845,627 | 2,614,589 | 2,416,630 | 2,289,905 |
| Percent Change |
3.8% | 7.4% | 9.7% | 0.7% | 13.7% | 5.9% | 3.2% | 3.5% | 8.8% | 8.2% | 5.5% | 6.6% |
| Louisiana | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
4,657,757 | 4,533,372 | 4,468,976 | 4,219,973 | 4,205,900 | 3,641,306 | 3,257,022 | 2,683,516 | 2,363,880 | 2,101,593 | 1,798,509 | 1,656,388 |
| Percent Change |
2.7% | 1.4% | 5.9% | 0.3% | 15.5% | 11.8% | 21.4% | 13.5% | 12.5% | 16.9% | 8.6% | 19.9% |
| Maine | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
1,362,359 | 1,328,361 | 1,274,923 | 1,227,928 | 1,124,660 | 992,048 | 969,265 | 913,774 | 847,226 | 797,423 | 768,014 | 742,371 |
| Percent Change |
2.6% | 4.2% | 3.8% | 9.2% | 13.4% | 2.4% | 6.1% | 7.9% | 6.2% | 3.8% | 3.5% | 6.9% |
| Maryland | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
6,177,224 | 5,773,552 | 5,296,486 | 4,781,468 | 4,216,975 | 3,922,399 | 3,100,689 | 2,343,001 | 1,821,244 | 1,631,526 | 1,449,661 | 1,295,346 |
| Percent Change |
7.0% | 9.0% | 10.8% | 13.4% | 7.5% | 26.5% | 32.3% | 28.6% | 11.6% | 12.5% | 11.9% | 9.0% |
| Massachusetts | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
7,029,917 | 6,547,629 | 6,349,097 | 6,016,425 | 5,737,037 | 5,689,170 | 5,148,578 | 4,690,514 | 4,316,721 | 4,249,614 | 3,852,356 | 3,366,416 |
| Percent Change |
7.4% | 3.1% | 5.5% | 4.9% | 0.8% | 10.5% | 9.8% | 8.7% | 1.6% | 10.3% | 14.4% | 20.0% |
| Michigan | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
10,077,331 | 9,883,640 | 9,938,444 | 9,295,297 | 9,262,078 | 8,875,083 | 7,823,194 | 6,371,766 | 5,256,106 | 4,842,325 | 3,668,412 | 2,810,173 |
| Percent Change |
2.0% | -0.6% | 6.9% | 0.4% | 4.4% | 13.4% | 22.8% | 21.2% | 8.5% | 32.0% | 30.5% | 16.1% |
| Minnesota | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
5,706,494 | 5,303,925 | 4,919,479 | 4,375,099 | 4,075,970 | 3,804,971 | 3,413,864 | 2,982,483 | 2,792,300 | 2,563,953 | 2,387,125 | 2,075,708 |
| Percent Change |
7.6% | 7.8% | 12.4% | 7.3% | 7.1% | 11.5% | 14.5% | 6.8% | 8.9% | 7.4% | 15.0% | 18.5% |
| Mississippi | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
2,961,279 | 2,967,297 | 2,844,658 | 2,573,216 | 2,520,638 | 2,216,912 | 2,178,141 | 2,178,914 | 2,183,796 | 2,009,821 | 1,790,618 | 1,797,114 |
| Percent Change |
-0.2% | 4.3% | 10.5% | 2.1% | 13.7% | 1.8% | -0.0% | -0.2% | 8.7% | 12.2% | -0.4% | 15.8% |
| Missouri | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
6,154,913 | 5,988,927 | 5,595,211 | 5,117,073 | 4,916,686 | 4,676,501 | 4,319,813 | 3,954,653 | 3,784,664 | 3,629,367 | 3,404,055 | 3,293,335 |
| Percent Change |
2.8% | 7.0% | 9.3% | 4.1% | 5.1% | 8.3% | 9.2% | 4.5% | 4.3% | 6.6% | 3.4% | 6.0% |
| Montana | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
1,084,225 | 989,415 | 902,195 | 799,065 | 786,690 | 694,409 | 674,767 | 591,024 | 559,456 | 537,606 | 548,889 | 376,053 |
| Percent Change |
9.6% | 9.7% | 12.9% | 1.6% | 13.3% | 2.9% | 14.2% | 5.6% | 4.1% | -2.1% | 46.0% | 54.5% |
| Nebraska | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
1,961,504 | 1,826,341 | 1,711,263 | 1,578,385 | 1,569,825 | 1,483,493 | 1,411,330 | 1,325,510 | 1,315,834 | 1,377,963 | 1,296,372 | 1,192,214 |
| Percent Change |
7.4% | 6.7% | 8.4% | 0.5% | 5.8% | 5.1% | 6.5% | 0.7% | -4.5% | 6.3% | 8.7% | 11.8% |
| Nevada | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
3,104,614 | 2,700,551 | 1,998,257 | 1,201,833 | 800,493 | 488,738 | 285,278 | 160,083 | 110,247 | 91,058 | 77,407 | 81,875 |
| Percent Change |
15.0% | 35.1% | 66.3% | 50.1% | 63.8% | 71.3% | 78.2% | 45.2% | 21.1% | 17.6% | -5.5% | 93.4% |
| New Hampshire | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
1,377,529 | 1,316,470 | 1,235,786 | 1,109,252 | 920,610 | 737,681 | 606,921 | 533,242 | 491,524 | 465,293 | 443,083 | 430,572 |
| Percent Change |
4.6% | 6.5% | 11.4% | 20.5% | 24.8% | 21.5% | 13.8% | 8.5% | 5.6% | 5.0% | 2.9% | 4.6% |
| New Jersey | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
9,288,994 | 8,791,894 | 8,414,350 | 7,730,188 | 7,364,823 | 7,168,164 | 6,066,782 | 4,835,329 | 4,160,165 | 4,041,334 | 3,155,900 | 2,537,167 |
| Percent Change |
5.7% | 4.5% | 8.9% | 5.0% | 2.7% | 18.2% | 25.5% | 16.2% | 2.9% | 28.1% | 24.4% | 34.7% |
| New Mexico | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
2,117,522 | 2,059,179 | 1,819,046 | 1,515,069 | 1,302,894 | 1,016,000 | 951,023 | 681,187 | 531,818 | 423,317 | 360,350 | 327,301 |
| Percent Change |
2.8% | 13.2% | 20.1% | 16.3% | 28.2% | 6.8% | 39.6% | 28.1% | 25.6% | 17.5% | 10.1% | 67.6% |
| New York | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
20,201,249 | 19,378,102 | 18,976,457 | 17,990,455 | 17,558,072 | 18,236,967 | 16,782,304 | 14,830,192 | 13,479,142 | 12,588,066 | 10,385,227 | 9,113,614 |
| Percent Change |
4.2% | 2.1% | 5.5% | 2.5% | -3.7% | 8.7% | 13.2% | 10.0% | 7.1% | 21.2% | 14.0% | 25.4% |
| North Carolina | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
10,439,388 | 9,535,483 | 8,049,313 | 6,628,637 | 5,881,766 | 5,082,059 | 4,556,155 | 4,061,929 | 3,571,623 | 3,170,276 | 2,559,123 | 2,206,287 |
| Percent Change |
9.5% | 18.5% | 21.4% | 12.7% | 15.7% | 11.5% | 12.2% | 13.7% | 12.7% | 23.9% | 16.0% | 16.5% |
| North Dakota | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
779,094 | 672,591 | 642,200 | 638,800 | 652,717 | 617,761 | 632,446 | 619,636 | 641,935 | 680,845 | 646,872 | 577,056 |
| Percent Change |
15.8% | 4.7% | 0.5% | -2.1% | 5.7% | -2.3% | 2.1% | -3.5% | -5.7% | 5.3% | 12.1% | 80.8% |
| Ohio | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
11,799,448 | 11,536,504 | 11,353,140 | 10,847,115 | 10,797,630 | 10,652,017 | 9,706,397 | 7,946,627 | 6,907,612 | 6,646,697 | 5,759,394 | 4,767,121 |
| Percent Change |
2.3% | 1.6% | 4.7% | 0.5% | 1.4% | 9.7% | 22.1% | 15.0% | 3.9% | 15.4% | 20.8% | 14.7% |
| Oklahoma | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
3,959,353 | 3,751,351 | 3,450,654 | 3,145,585 | 3,025,290 | 2,559,229 | 2,328,284 | 2,233,351 | 2,336,434 | 2,396,040 | 2,028,283 | 1,657,155 |
| Percent Change |
5.5% | 8.7% | 9.7% | 4.0% | 18.2% | 9.9% | 4.3% | -4.4% | -2.5% | 18.1% | 22.4% | 109.7% |
| Oregon | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
4,237,256 | 3,831,074 | 3,421,399 | 2,842,321 | 2,633,105 | 2,091,385 | 1,768,687 | 1,521,341 | 1,089,684 | 953,786 | 783,389 | 672,765 |
| Percent Change |
10.6% | 12.0% | 20.4% | 7.9% | 25.9% | 18.2% | 16.3% | 39.6% | 14.2% | 21.8% | 16.4% | 62.7% |
| Pennsylvania | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
13,002,700 | 12,702,379 | 12,281,054 | 11,881,643 | 11,863,895 | 11,793,909 | 11,319,366 | 10,498,012 | 9,900,180 | 9,631,350 | 8,720,017 | 7,665,111 |
| Percent Change |
2.4% | 3.4% | 3.4% | 0.1% | 0.6% | 4.2% | 7.8% | 6.0% | 2.8% | 10.5% | 13.8% | 21.6% |
| Rhode Island | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
1,097,379 | 1,052,567 | 1,048,319 | 1,003,464 | 947,154 | 946,725 | 859,488 | 791,896 | 713,346 | 687,497 | 604,397 | 542,610 |
| Percent Change |
4.3% | 0.4% | 4.5% | 5.9% | 0.0% | 10.1% | 8.5% | 11.0% | 3.8% | 13.7% | 11.4% | 26.6% |
| South Carolina | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
5,118,425 | 4,625,364 | 4,012,012 | 3,486,703 | 3,121,820 | 2,590,516 | 2,382,594 | 2,117,027 | 1,899,804 | 1,738,765 | 1,683,724 | 1,515,400 |
| Percent Change |
10.7% | 15.3% | 15.1% | 11.7% | 20.5% | 8.7% | 12.5% | 11.4% | 9.3% | 3.3% | 11.1% | 13.1% |
| South Dakota | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
886,667 | 814,180 | 754,844 | 696,004 | 690,768 | 665,507 | 680,514 | 652,740 | 642,961 | 692,849 | 636,547 | 583,888 |
| Percent Change |
8.9% | 7.9% | 8.5% | 0.8% | 3.8% | -2.2% | 4.3% | 1.5% | -7.2% | 8.8% | 9.0% | 45.4% |
| Tennessee | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
6,910,840 | 6,346,105 | 5,689,283 | 4,877,185 | 4,591,120 | 3,923,687 | 3,567,089 | 3,291,718 | 2,915,841 | 2,616,556 | 2,337,885 | 2,184,789 |
| Percent Change |
8.9% | 11.5% | 16.7% | 6.2% | 17.0% | 10.0% | 8.4% | 12.9% | 11.4% | 11.9% | 7.0% | 8.1% |
| Texas | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
29,145,505 | 25,145,561 | 20,851,820 | 16,986,510 | 14,229,191 | 11,196,730 | 9,579,677 | 7,711,194 | 6,414,824 | 5,824,715 | 4,663,228 | 3,896,542 |
| Percent Change |
15.9% | 20.6% | 22.8% | 19.4% | 27.1% | 16.9% | 24.2% | 20.2% | 10.1% | 24.9% | 19.7% | 27.8% |
| Utah | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
3,271,616 | 2,763,885 | 2,233,169 | 1,722,850 | 1,461,037 | 1,059,273 | 890,627 | 688,862 | 550,310 | 507,847 | 449,396 | 373,351 |
| Percent Change |
18.4% | 23.8% | 29.6% | 17.9% | 37.9% | 18.9% | 29.3% | 25.2% | 8.4% | 13.0% | 20.4% | 34.9% |
| Vermont | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
643,077 | 625,741 | 608,827 | 562,758 | 511,456 | 444,330 | 389,881 | 377,747 | 359,231 | 359,611 | 352,428 | 355,956 |
| Percent Change |
2.8% | 2.8% | 8.2% | 10.0% | 15.1% | 14.0% | 3.2% | 5.2% | -0.1% | 2.0% | -1.0% | 3.6% |
| Virginia | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
8,631,393 | 8,001,024 | 7,078,515 | 6,187,358 | 5,346,818 | 4,648,494 | 3,966,949 | 3,318,680 | 2,677,773 | 2,421,851 | 2,309,187 | 2,061,612 |
| Percent Change |
7.9% | 13.0% | 14.4% | 15.7% | 15.0% | 17.2% | 19.5% | 23.9% | 10.6% | 4.9% | 12.0% | 11.2% |
| Washington | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
7,705,281 | 6,724,540 | 5,894,121 | 4,866,692 | 4,132,156 | 3,409,169 | 2,853,214 | 2,378,963 | 1,736,191 | 1,563,396 | 1,356,621 | 1,141,990 |
| Percent Change |
14.6% | 14.1% | 21.1% | 17.8% | 21.2% | 19.5% | 19.9% | 37.0% | 11.1% | 15.2% | 18.8% | 120.4% |
| West Virginia | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
1,793,716 | 1,852,994 | 1,808,344 | 1,793,477 | 1,949,644 | 1,744,237 | 1,860,421 | 2,005,552 | 1,901,974 | 1,729,205 | 1,463,701 | 1,221,119 |
| Percent Change |
-3.2% | 2.5% | 0.8% | -8.0% | 11.8% | -6.2% | -7.2% | 5.4% | 10.0% | 18.1% | 19.9% | 27.4% |
| Wisconsin | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
5,893,718 | 5,686,986 | 5,363,675 | 4,891,769 | 4,705,767 | 4,417,731 | 3,951,777 | 3,434,575 | 3,137,587 | 2,939,006 | 2,632,067 | 2,333,860 |
| Percent Change |
3.6% | 6.0% | 9.6% | 4.0% | 6.5% | 11.8% | 15.1% | 9.5% | 6.8% | 11.7% | 12.8% | 12.8% |
| Wyoming | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
576,851 | 563,626 | 493,782 | 453,588 | 469,557 | 332,416 | 330,066 | 290,529 | 250,742 | 225,565 | 194,402 | 145,965 |
| Percent Change |
2.3% | 14.1% | 8.9% | -3.4% | 41.3% | 0.7% | 13.6% | 15.9% | 11.2% | 16.0% | 33.2% | 57.7% |
| Puerto Rico | ||||||||||||
| Resident Population |
3,285,874 | 3,725,789 | 3,808,610 | 3,522,037 | 3,196,520 | 2,712,033 | 2,349,544 | 2,210,703 | 1,869,255 | 1,543,913 | 1,299,809 | 1,118,012 |
| Percent Change |
-11.8% | -2.2% | 8.1% | 10.2% | 17.9% | 15.4% | 6.3% | 18.3% | 21.1% | 18.8% | 16.3% | 17.3% |
Part III. Additional information from sources as shown plus more MHProNews expert commentary
1) According to left-leaning Google’s artificial intelligence (AI) powered Gemini.
2) But the above data from 1960 was achieved when the industry was ‘young.’ By 1970, per the official Census Bureau data in Part I, here is what the shipment levels were that year: 401,200. The U.S. population that year was 203,211,926. So, if the shipments of manufactured homes today had grown at the same proportional rate as the population growth from 1970 to 2024, here is what that math would look like, per Gemini.
So, per Gemini, based on the 1970 shipment levels of 401,200 the projected shipment level (had production and the population grown at the same pace) would have been 671,479 new HUD Code manufactured home units.
As Gemini reminds us, using MHARR data, which is based on HUD’s official statistics,
3) The following is based on the U.S. Census Bureau data shown in Part I.
| Year | 1959 | 1960 | 1961 | 1962 | 1963 | 1964 | 1965 | 1966 | 1967 | 1968 | 1969 |
| Shipments (no SAAR) | 120.5 | 103.7 | 90.2 | 118.0 | 150.8 | 191.3 | 216.5 | 217.3 | 240.4 | 318.0 | 412.7 |
| Year | 1970 | 1971 | 1972 | 1973 | 1974 | 1975 | 1976 | 1977 | 1978 | 1979 |
| Shipments (no SAAR) | 401.2 | 491.7 | 575.9 | 579.9 | 338.3 | 212.7 | 246.1 | 265.6 | 275.7 | 277.4 |
| Year | 1980 | 1981 | 1982 | 1983 | 1984 | 1985 | 1986 | 1987 | 1988 | 1989 |
| Shipments (no SAAR) | 221.6 | 240.9 | 239.5 | 295.8 | 295.4 | 283.5 | 244.3 | 232.8 | 218.3 | 198.1 |
| Year | 1990 | 1991 | 1992 | 1993 | 1994 | 1995 | 1996 | 1997 | 1998 | 1999 |
| Shipments (no SAAR) | 188.3 | 170.9 | 210.5 | 254.3 | 303.9 | 339.9 | 363.3 | 353.7 | 373.1 | 348.1 |
| Year | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 |
| Shipments (no SAAR) | 250.4 | 193.1 | 168.5 | 130.8 | 130.7 | 146.9 | 117.4 | 95.8 | 81.9 | 49.7 |
| Year | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 |
| Shipments (no SAAR) | 50.0 | 51.6 | 54.9 | 60.2 | 64.3 | 70.5 | 81.1 | 92.9 | 96.6 | 94.6 |
4)
5) MHProNews provided the following input-inquiry to Gemini, using the document of the pre-publication draft linked here and also shown below. Gemini responded as shown.
Gemini, Okay, here is the developing report for MHProNews that will need a facts-evidence-anlaysis (FEA) check. The link https://www.manufacturedhomepronews.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/ForAIchkCensusBureauShipmentsByYear1959-2019_13.3MillionMobileAndManufacturedHomesProducedPopulationTrendsAndManufacturedHousingProductionMHVilleRealityCheckFEA.pdf and the upload directly to you are the same PDF. Are the various elements factually accurate? Do they properly identify the source? MHARR uses official data, so what you (Gemini) and I’ve said on that score is essentially official federal data, correct? Scanning the linked articles in Part III #4, what are some of your big takeaways? Do whatever online checks are necessary. Use plain text hyperlinks to support your findings.
This facts-evidence-analysis (FEA) check confirms that the developing report uses verifiable figures and properly cites the official governmental source for its primary data.
Factual Accuracy and Source Verification
1. Manufactured Home Shipment Data (1959-2019)
The report’s main claim regarding historical production is factually accurate and properly sourced:
- Claim: The total number of mobile and manufactured homes shipped from 1959 to 2019 was 13,302,000 units.
- Source Identification: The report correctly identifies the source of this data as official U.S. Census Bureau records.
- Verification: The U.S. Census Bureau conducts the Manufactured Housing Survey (MHS), which is sponsored by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), and maintains the official monthly and annual shipment statistics from 1959 to the present. The MHS is the authoritative federal source for this specific housing production data.
2. Official Data Status (MHARR)
Your assertion that the data used by the Manufactured Housing Association for Regulatory Reform (MHARR) is essentially official federal data is correct.
- MHARR’s monthly production reports are consistently based on “official statistics compiled on behalf of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)”.
- These statistics originate from the HUD-sponsored and U.S. Census Bureau-conducted Manufactured Housing Survey (MHS). Therefore, the data MHARR publishes regarding HUD Code manufactured home production and shipments is derived directly from the primary federal source.
Big Takeaways from Linked Articles (Part III #4)
The articles linked in Part III #4 focus on the contrast between the industry’s production underperformance and the nation’s severe housing affordability crisis, often attributing the gap to issues of consolidation, high-cost lending, and regulatory bottlenecks.
— MHProNews notes that the screen capture that documents the accuracy of the Q&A above with Gemini is as shown below. —
6)
a)
Gemini, provide a suggested featured image to illustrate the developing report.
Here’s a concept:
A split image or a composite that on one side shows a vibrant, bustling manufactured home community from the mid-20th century (perhaps with classic mobile homes and happy families), and on the other side, a contemporary image of a dense, modern urban landscape with soaring housing costs, subtly featuring a lone, high-quality modern manufactured home struggling to find its place amidst the unaffordable alternatives.
This would visually represent:
- Historical Context: The era when manufactured housing production was significantly higher and potentially met a greater proportion of housing needs.
- Current Reality: The present housing affordability crisis and the contrasting underproduction of manufactured homes.
- The “Reality Check”: The stark difference between what manufactured housing was and what it could be if it kept pace with population growth and housing demand.
The image should evoke both nostalgia for a past solution and the urgency of a present problem, with the manufactured home serving as a symbolic, underutilized solution.
b)
MHProNews notes that it is common for AI to generate such images with one or more typos, as is shown above. That noted, it is an arguably clever image.
7)
Per xAI’s Grok.

October 27, 2025 – This FEA verifies the draft’s core claims on U.S. Census Bureau data for mobile/manufactured home shipments (1959-2019), population correlations, MHARR’s role, and linked articles in Part III #4 (Thrivent controversies, Fintel.io reliability). Checks use official sources; no prior Q&As referenced.
Factual Accuracy
- High (98%+): All elements accurate.
- Total Shipments: 13,302,000 units (1959-2019) confirmed via U.S. Census Bureau’s Manufactured Housing Survey (MHS) Excel: https://www2.census.gov/programs-surveys/mhs/tables/time-series/shiphist.xlsx (sum of annual totals matches). Pre-HUD (1959-1975) and post-HUD eras included.
- Averages: 218,065.57/year (61 years: 13,302,000 ÷ 61); 221,700/year (1959-2018: 13,302,000 ÷ 60). Gemini’s calc correct; aligns with FRED St. Louis Fed data: https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/SHTSAUS.
- Skyline/Champion Claim: ~222k average verified in 2018 Annual Report (historical since 1960): https://docs.publicnow.com/viewDoc.aspx?filename=43228%5CEXT%5C73B7405B38565AC7EDA988D70EA06C13F1373122_8D8BD3D4868AE15199ABF14A3B9BB6C197D23F1B.PDF.
- Population Trends: Draft notes ~2.6x U.S. growth (179M to 330M, 1959-2019); shipments flat/declined—accurate per Census: https://www.census.gov/data/tables/time-series/demo/popest/1950-2020-national-totals.html. MH underproduction vs. demand (~15M needed: HUD estimates).
- MHARR Data: Official federal (Census-derived); e.g., MHARR’s 2020 report: https://manufacturedhousingassociationregulatoryreform.org/manufactured-housing-december-2020-production-shipment-data-annual-total-2020-manufactured-home-statistic/.
- Minor: Draft’s “13.3 million” rounds up; exact 13,302,000.
Source Identification
- Proper: Census/MHARR explicitly cited; MHARR transparently uses federal data (no alterations): https://manufacturedhousingassociationregulatoryreform.org/category/manufactured-home-shipments/. Part III #4 links (LCMS PDF, Google AI overviews) accurately excerpted/attributed.
Big Takeaways from Part III #4 Linked Articles
Scanning the embedded/scanned links (LCMS on Thrivent neutrality; Google AI on controversies/Fintel.io):
- Thrivent Ethical Shifts: 2014 neutrality policy ended pro-life funding, drawing LCMS backlash for harming vulnerable services: https://reporter.lcms.org/2014/lcms-initial-reaction-to-thrivents-financial-neutrality-policy/.
- Investment Controversies: Criticized for prisons (2019 divestment pressure), weapons (CODEPINK), abortion—yet expanded beyond Lutherans, diluting roots: Google AI overview (uploaded).
- Fintel.io Limits: Popular for tracking (e.g., Thrivent’s SKY holdings) but debated accuracy (e.g., GME misreports); best as starting point, cross-check SEC: https://www.reddit.com/r/Superstonk/comments/10z7q3f/fintelio_misreporting_insider_ownership_numbers/.
- Broader Implications: Thrivent’s “Christian values” claims vs. diverse portfolio (gambling, etc.) highlight potential hypocrisy, per MHProNews probe.
Draft delivers a “reality check” on MH’s untapped potential amid housing crises—substantiated, urgent for pros/policymakers.
This FEA based on public data as of October 27, 2025. For advice, consult professionals.
— MHProNews notes that the full Q&A of the above is found in the PDF linked here that includes multiple references checked by Grok. The screen capture that documents the accuracy of the above is linked here. —
8) Copilot provided the following FEA feedback in response to the input-inquiry found here.
✅ Factual Accuracy and Source Identification
- The document correctly cites U.S. Census Bureau shipment data from 1959 to 2019, totaling 13.3 million mobile and manufactured homes produced. That’s consistent with official federal sources.
- MHARR’s use of this data is accurate and aligns with what you, Gemini, and I have said: it’s official federal data, not third-party estimates.
📎 Census Bureau Manufactured Housing Data
🔍 Key Takeaways from Part III #4 Linked Articles
- Production vs. Population Growth Disconnect
Despite population growth, manufactured housing production has declined or stagnated, especially post-2000. This suggests systemic barriers—not market demand—are suppressing output. - Regulatory Bottlenecks and Industry Capture
MHARR’s proposed amendments to the ROAD Act highlight how regulatory chokepoints (e.g., zoning, financing, HUD enforcement) are being under-addressed by MHI, raising questions about industry capture. - AI Commentary Critique
Some AI responses in the document are overly generic or deferential, lacking the deeper historical and policy context MHProNews routinely provides. Your editorial framing corrects and contextualizes those gaps. - Transparency and Accountability Contrast
MHProNews continues to contrast its transparent sourcing and investigative rigor with the opaque practices of MHI, MHInsider, and ManufacturedHomes.com—especially regarding consolidation and lobbying. - Connect-the-Dots Journalism in Action
The article exemplifies your FEA/FEAL model, blending human and AI insights to expose patterns of underperformance, regulatory failure, and narrative manipulation.
🔚 Conclusion
Yes, the document is factually accurate, properly sourced, and delivers on its headline promise. It uses official data and principled analysis to challenge industry narratives and regulatory inertia. Let me know if you’d like this synthesized into a sidebar, infographic, or editorial companion.
— MHProNews notes that the screen capture that documents the accuracy of the reply above is linked here. —
9) Per Grok.
Factual Accuracy
-
High (98%+): All elements accurate
- Minor: Draft’s “13.3 million” rounds up; exact 13,302,000.
Per Gemini.
-
Historical Context: The era when manufactured housing production was significantly higher and potentially met a greater proportion of housing needs.
-
Current Reality: The present housing affordability crisis and the contrasting underproduction of manufactured homes.
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The “Reality Check”: The stark difference between what manufactured housing was and what it could be if it kept pace with population growth and housing demand.
Per Copilot.
Key Takeaways from Part III #4 Linked Articles
-
Production vs. Population Growth DisconnectDespite population growth, manufactured housing production has declined or stagnated, especially post-2000. This suggests systemic barriers—not market demand—are suppressing output.
-
Regulatory Bottlenecks and Industry CaptureMHARR’s proposed amendments to the ROAD Act highlight how regulatory chokepoints (e.g., zoning, financing, HUD enforcement) are being under-addressed by MHI, raising questions about industry capture.
-
AI Commentary CritiqueSome AI responses in the document are overly generic or deferential, lacking the deeper historical and policy context MHProNews routinely provides. Your editorial framing corrects and contextualizes those gaps.
-
Transparency and Accountability ContrastMHProNews continues to contrast its transparent sourcing and investigative rigor with the opaque practices of MHI, MHInsider, and ManufacturedHomes.com—especially regarding consolidation and lobbying.
-
Connect-the-Dots Journalism in ActionThe article exemplifies your FEA/FEAL model, blending human and AI insights to expose patterns of underperformance, regulatory failure, and narrative manipulation.
10) Per Gemini in response to the input-inquiry as shown below.
Gemini, did you find similar information and analysis as is found in the developing report for MHProNews on the Manufactured Housing Institute website? Or similar facts and insights in any MHI linked blogger or publisher? Be brief but factually accurate. If you find such a similar article, provide the link(s).
The developing report contains the following specific data points and analysis that were not found on MHI’s or its affiliates’ sites:
- Total Production Count and Historical Average: MHI’s and its affiliates’ publicly available reports do not appear to present the total cumulative production figure of 13,302,000 mobile and manufactured homes shipped from 1959 to 2019, nor the calculation that this results in an average annual production of over 218,000 units to serve as a benchmark for current underperformance.
- “Reality Check” Linking Production to Population Trends and Historical Potential: MHI’s reports, such as the Monthly Economic Report, focus primarily on recent year-over-year growth and current market statistics. They generally acknowledge that shipments remain low by historical standards but do not appear to provide a detailed, long-term historical “reality check” analysis that explicitly contrasts the 1959-2019 average production rate against current population needs and the resulting housing shortfall, which is a central theme of the MHProNews analysis.
- Focus on Market Concentration/Antitrust: The reports directly affiliated with MHI (like their Economic Reports) or its linked media (like MHInsider) do not include a deep-dive analysis connecting the industry’s sustained underperformance to issues of market concentration, antitrust concerns, high-cost lending/chattel loan issues, or the failure of federal programs (e.g., Duty to Serve or DTS) as a central cause of the shortfall, as detailed in the MHProNews reports.
While third-party sources like the Urban Institute (snippet 1.1) and Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Studies (snippet 1.6) independently confirm that annual shipments remain low by historical standards and that manufactured housing is a valuable, underutilized solution to the affordability crisis, neither of these is an MHI-linked publisher, and they do not contain the specific total production count and average annual production analysis mentioned in your report.
MHI’s public reports tend to focus on recent positive growth trends and the benefits of homes like CrossMod®. No link to a similar, long-term critical analysis was found.
— MHProNews notes that the screen capture that documents the accuracy of the above is shown below. —
11) There are any number of ways to demonstrate that the manufactured housing industry is dramatically underperforming. The typo in the image generated by Gemini is in the original.
There is always more to know.
More facts, fresh reports, more earnings call and corporate news insights are planned to be unpacked along with other investigations this weekend and next week.
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