Start with these Yellowstone County checks
- Confirm whether the parcel is inside Billings or another municipality, or under Yellowstone County's unincorporated zoning jurisdiction.
- Review the county zoning code and ask City/County Planning whether the proposed use fits the parcel, including any R-RMH requirements.
- Coordinate county zoning compliance with Montana's HUD 309 installation-inspection process and the selected installer.
- Check long-haul route conditions, rural road access, grades, snow, wind, foundation, water, septic or sewer, and power.


Prepare the property before delivery
- 1
Confirm the jurisdiction
Find out which city or county makes the zoning and permit decisions for the property.
- 2
Check the parcel
Verify allowed use, setbacks, easements, utilities, and any property-specific limits.
- 3
Review access and site work
Look at the delivery route, driveway, grades, clearance, soil, foundation, anchoring, and utility connections.
- 4
Match the home to the site
Compare floorplans after the site's basic dimensions and requirements are understood.
Check the current local rules
Sources reviewed July 10, 2026. Requirements can change, so confirm them for the exact property.
Related delivery areas
Yellowstone County manufactured-home FAQs
Does Skyline deliver to Yellowstone County?
Skyline reviews Yellowstone County destinations individually from Nampa. Distance, route, local zoning, installer availability, access, site conditions, and approvals determine whether service is practical.
Do Billings and Yellowstone County use the same zoning rules?
City/County Planning serves both areas, but city parcels and unincorporated county parcels can follow different zoning codes and permit paths. Confirm the exact jurisdiction.
What is Yellowstone County's R-RMH district?
The county zoning code includes residential manufactured-home provisions. A district name alone does not approve a parcel; ask Planning how the current code applies.
How does Montana installation inspection fit the county process?
Local zoning and site requirements remain separate from Montana's HUD 309 installation-inspection application. Coordinate both before work begins.

