Manufactured Housing Production-Shipments by State – Official 50 State Data for Jan 2026. Table-How Many Affordable Housing Units Needed by State? Plus Sunday Weekly MHVille Headlines Recap-FEA

ManufacturedHousingProductionShipmentsByStateOfficial50StateDataForJan2026TableHowManyAffordableHousingUnitsNeededByStatePlusSundayWeeklyMHVilleHeadlinesRecapFEA

According to the latest data collected by the Institute for Building Technology and Safety (IBTS) on behalf of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), Alaska, the District of Columbia (D.C.), Hawaii, Canada and Puerto Rico all reported zero shipments of new HUD Code manufactured homes for the month of January 2026. Rhode Island only reported one new manufactured home shipped to that state. The far larger state of Nebraska only reported 3 new shipments. The number one state of Texas reported over 2000 new HUD Code manufactured home housing units of all sizes shipped for January 2026. According to the Manufactured Housing Association for Regulatory Reform (MHARR) report on 3.5.2026 linked here: “Just-released statistics indicate that HUD Code manufacturers produced 7,417 new homes in January 2026, a 16.4% decrease from the 8,878 new HUD Code homes produced in January 2025.” What MHARR makes publicly available monthly for free via this link here, is essentially ‘sold’ as part of the membership in the Manufactured Housing Institute (MHI), quoting: “January 2026 Economic Report” and “This page is available to MHI members only.” MHProNews reminds longtime readers, and informs new ones, that MHI used to provide a monthly statistical statement years ago (see example linked here) free to the public, which is commonplace for MHARR, the National Association of Realtors, the Recreational Vehicle Industry Association (RVIA) and numerous other trade groups interested in fostering interest and organic growth in their profession’s products or services. On occasion, MHI may provide a monthly recap, but curiously ‘hide’ it from their home page or so-called news landing page, as various third-party artificial intelligence (AI) platforms will attest to that behavioral pattern by MHI further below. Put differently, there is an evidence-based case to be made that the Manufactured Housing Institute (MHI) is not a typical trade group. To illustrate, Equity LifeStyle Properties (ELS) late chairman Sam Zell said the following during an earnings call: “We like the oligopoly nature of our business.” That is a significant interpretative key for grasping why things happen in manufactured housing, especially when considered in conjunction with public statements about a consolidation focus of many key Manufactured Housing Institute (MHI) members.

 

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1) But whatever narrative or notions are held by manufactured housing professionals, or those peering into the curious and arguably often misunderstood world of MHVille, key performance indicators (KPI) are necessary and useful to discern reality from mere rhetoric.

CostBurdenRentersHomeownersByStatePew10.25.2024MHProNews

 

2) From today’s postscript.

A trade group’s primary KPI is industry growth; by this measure, MHI’s “5/10” [i.e.: assessment made by Bob Crawford] may be seen as an accurate or even charitable assessment of its effectiveness in capturing this massive market need. …

The disparity between the need per state (NLIHC data) and the pitiful shipment levels (HUD data) is a direct reflection of a failure to execute on federal mandates…

From #2 in today’s postscript.

Faithfulness post-publication to pre-publication AI checks: Yes. …

This setup allows any reader/researcher to audit the exact prompts, AI responses, and cross-checks against primary sources (HUD/IBTS data, NLIHC Gap Report, etc.). …

Value for truth seekers, researchers, and others: High transparency value. It provides a verifiable, multi-AI cross-check methodology that reduces single-source bias, documents the reasoning process, and enables independent replication or critique — a rare level of openness in industry media that strengthens credibility and invites scrutiny.

3) This facts-evidence-analysis (FEA) plus the Sunday MHVille Headlines in Review is underway.

 

 

Part I. From the Institute for Building Technology & Safety‎ (IBTS).

Institute for Building Technology & Safety‎
Shipments and Production Summary Report 1/01/2026 – 1/31/2026
Shipments
State SW MW Total Floors
Dest. Pending 4 5 9 14
Alabama 136 188 324 515
Alaska 0 0 0 0
Arizona 67 84 151 235
Arkansas 51 82 133 215
California 43 193 236 436
Colorado 11 13 24 39
Connecticut 3 4 7 11
Delaware 12 33 45 78
District of Columbia 0 0 0 0
Florida 177 389 566 962
Georgia 134 268 402 673
Hawaii 0 0 0 0
Idaho 7 31 38 71
Illinois 27 27 54 81
Indiana 58 40 98 140
Iowa 13 6 19 25
Kansas 35 13 48 61
Kentucky 127 169 296 466
Louisiana 194 131 325 457
Maine 10 28 38 66
Maryland 2 4 6 10
Massachusetts 3 9 12 20
Michigan 138 87 225 316
Minnesota 13 19 32 51
Mississippi 174 164 338 507
Missouri 44 83 127 209
Montana 17 20 37 58
Nebraska 3 0 3 3
Nevada 9 43 52 99
New Hampshire 12 10 22 32
New Jersey 21 30 51 81
New Mexico 25 78 103 183
New York 26 45 71 116
North Carolina 184 268 452 720
North Dakota 11 4 15 20
Ohio 105 47 152 197
Oklahoma 95 108 203 311
Oregon 25 68 93 163
Pennsylvania 63 86 149 235
Rhode Island 1 0 1 1
South Carolina 144 267 411 678
South Dakota 6 13 19 32
Tennessee 90 214 304 517
Texas 491 763 1,254 2,019
Utah 11 28 39 67
Vermont 1 9 10 19
Virginia 29 74 103 177
Washington 29 108 137 251
West Virginia 32 68 100 168
Wisconsin 47 26 73 99
Wyoming 6 4 10 14
Canada 0 0 0 0
Puerto Rico 0 0 0 0
Total 2,966 4,451 7,417 11,918
THE ABOVE STATISTICS ARE PROVIDED AS A MONTHLY
SUBSCRIPTION SERVICE. REPRODUCTION IN PART OR
IN TOTAL MUST CARRY AN ATTRIBUTION TO IBTS, INC.
Production
State SW MW Total Floors
States Shown(*) 262 247 509 760
 Alabama 525 759 1,284 2,054
*Alaska 0 0 0 0
 Arizona 67 112 179 292
*Arkansas 0 0 0 0
 California 41 168 209 382
*Colorado 0 0 0 0
*Connecticut 0 0 0 0
*Delaware 0 0 0 0
*District of Columbia 0 0 0 0
 Florida 76 225 301 533
 Georgia 126 373 499 872
*Hawaii 0 0 0 0
 Idaho 25 79 104 191
*Illinois 0 0 0 0
 Indiana 377 182 559 744
*Iowa 0 0 0 0
*Kansas 0 0 0 0
*Kentucky 0 0 0 0
*Louisiana 0 0 0 0
*Maine 0 0 0 0
*Maryland 0 0 0 0
*Massachusetts 0 0 0 0
*Michigan 0 0 0 0
 Minnesota 33 37 70 108
*Mississippi 0 0 0 0
*Missouri 0 0 0 0
*Montana 0 0 0 0
*Nebraska 0 0 0 0
*Nevada 0 0 0 0
*New Hampshire 0 0 0 0
*New Jersey 0 0 0 0
*New Mexico 0 0 0 0
*New York 0 0 0 0
 North Carolina 170 272 442 714
*North Dakota 0 0 0 0
*Ohio 0 0 0 0
*Oklahoma 0 0 0 0
 Oregon 50 199 249 456
 Pennsylvania 136 251 387 638
*Rhode Island 0 0 0 0
*South Carolina 0 0 0 0
*South Dakota 0 0 0 0
 Tennessee 412 629 1,041 1,670
 Texas 616 881 1,497 2,380
*Utah 0 0 0 0
*Vermont 0 0 0 0
*Virginia 0 0 0 0
*Washington 0 0 0 0
*West Virginia 0 0 0 0
 Wisconsin 50 37 87 124
*Wyoming 0 0 0 0
*Canada 0 0 0 0
*Puerto Rico 0 0 0 0
Total 2,966 4,451 7,417 11,918
(*) THESE STATES HAVE FEWER THAN THREE PLANTS.
FIGURES ARE AGGREGATED ON FIRST LINE ABOVE
TOTALS TO PROTECT PROPRIETARY INFORMATION.
Ashok K Goswami, PE, COO, 45207 Research Place, Ashburn, VA

 

Part II. From the 2026 GAP Report by the National Low Income Housing Coalition (NLIHC).

1) Per the 2026 NLIHC Gap Report:

The U.S. has a shortage of 7.2 million rental homes affordable and available to renters with extremely low incomes – that is, incomes at or below either the federal poverty guideline or 30% of their area median income, whichever is greater.

2) According to that same NLIHC GAP report for 2026 is this table. Compare the relatively tiny number of HUD Code manufactured homes being shipped to the various states or D.C. to the sizable need in that same state. That difference ought to be revealing.

State Sort descending Extremely Low-Income Renter Households Number of Affordable and Available Rental Homes Per 100 Extremely Low-Income Renter Households Extremely Low-Income Renter Households with Severe Cost Burden
Alabama 171,527 58 70%
Alaska 17,194 35 68%
Arizona 176,206 26 82%
Arkansas 107,041 48 64%
California 1,303,650 25 79%
Colorado 187,042 27 76%
Connecticut 146,363 40 69%
Delaware 24,639 41 71%
District of Columbia 59,600 37 74%
Florida 576,381 26 82%
Georgia 324,452 37 76%
Hawaii 38,133 34 70%
Idaho 44,363 33 72%
Illinois 439,933 34 74%
Indiana 210,668 34 74%
Iowa 101,609 39 71%
Kansas 78,822 39 70%
Kentucky 162,587 47 68%
Louisiana 181,680 43 70%
Maine 40,537 52 57%
Maryland 201,218 34 74%
Massachusetts 298,909 46 64%
Michigan 309,822 37 75%
Minnesota 166,494 41 70%
Mississippi 99,513 62 71%
Missouri 202,625 37 72%
Montana 30,831 46 61%
Nebraska 61,498 38 70%
Nevada 92,484 16 88%
New Hampshire 39,099 39 69%
New Jersey 298,318 34 72%
New Mexico 67,295 41 69%
New York 986,369 35 73%
North Carolina 348,518 38 76%
North Dakota 32,592 53 65%
Ohio 422,098 37 73%
Oklahoma 140,306 40 71%
Oregon 146,026 24 81%
Pennsylvania 434,197 39 72%
Rhode Island 50,063 54 55%
South Carolina 163,016 43 73%
South Dakota 26,258 73 56%
Tennessee 225,760 39 69%
Texas 957,151 26 79%
Utah 61,345 28 79%
Vermont 18,079 36 68%
Virginia 247,466 35 77%
Washington 253,846 28 77%
West Virginia 54,816 55 65%
Wisconsin 180,809 35 72%
Wyoming 17,828 33 63%

Part III. The Sunday Weekly MHVille Headlines in Review (Recap)

 

Don’t miss today’s postscript.

With no further adieu, here are the headlines for the week in review from 3.15 to 3.22.2026.

 

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