Start with these Reno checks
- Verify that the parcel is inside Reno and review its current zoning before using the city's permit path.
- Use Reno Development Services and the ONE portal for the current building and planning submission process.
- Coordinate city site requirements with Nevada Housing Division installation permits, licensed setup, and inspections.
- Review Sierra and high-desert route conditions, final neighborhood turns, access slope, soil, drainage, foundation, and utilities.


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
Reno manufactured-home FAQs
Can Skyline deliver a new manufactured home to Reno?
Skyline reviews Reno destinations from Nampa individually. The selected home, mountain route, installer support, city requirements, lot access, soil, utilities, and site work affect feasibility.
How do I confirm a property is in Reno rather than Washoe County?
Use official parcel and jurisdiction information before applying. A Reno mailing address does not by itself prove that the city is the responsible building office.
Does Reno's permit replace the Nevada installation permit?
City site and building review can be separate from state manufactured-housing installation permits and inspections. Ask both offices for the project-specific division of work.
What makes a Reno delivery review different?
Long-distance and mountain routing, weather, grades, neighborhood access, soil, drainage, foundation, local utilities, and installer logistics require early coordination.

