

Start with these Oregon checks
- Use Oregon's building-department directory to identify the city or county office responsible for the property.
- Ask whether a manufactured dwelling is allowed on the parcel and which installation permits and inspections the local department handles.
- Plan for an Oregon-licensed manufactured-dwelling installer and the required installation certification tag.
- Coordinate ownership documents, county assessment records, road capacity, access, foundation details, and utility connections before delivery.
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
Oregon manufactured-home FAQs
Can Skyline deliver a new manufactured home to Oregon?
Skyline reviews Oregon requests from Nampa case by case. The home, route, installer availability, property access, site readiness, and local approvals determine feasibility.
Who issues manufactured-dwelling installation permits in Oregon?
Oregon directs buyers to the local building department that serves the property. The responsible office depends on the city or county jurisdiction.
How does Oregon document manufactured-home ownership?
Oregon generally records ownership, security interests, and location through its manufactured-home ownership-document system. County processes can apply when a home is recorded as real property.
What should I prepare for an Oregon delivery review?
Start with the parcel or address, jurisdiction, route and access photos, site and utility plans, preferred floorplan, and information from the local building department.

