New manufactured homes delivered to Marion County, Oregon

Start with these Marion County checks
- Confirm whether the parcel is inside Salem or another city, or under unincorporated Marion County Building Inspection.
- Use the county manufactured-home application to prepare the required floor plan, site plan, zoning, and installation information.
- Coordinate separate driveway, fire-district, septic, electrical-service, foundation, drainage, and utility requirements when applicable.
- Review the route from Nampa, mountain passes, seasonal conditions, rural road access, grades, trees, wires, and staging space.


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
Marion County manufactured-home FAQs
Does Marion County review manufactured homes inside Salem?
Salem has its own permit office. Confirm whether the parcel is inside city limits or under unincorporated county jurisdiction before using a county application.
What plans does Marion County request for a manufactured home?
The county application identifies floor-plan, site-plan, zoning, and installation information. Ask Building Inspection which current documents apply to the parcel.
Can other Marion County agencies review the project?
Driveway, fire, septic, electrical, flood, water, and other services can follow separate reviews. Build a property-specific checklist before scheduling work.
Can Skyline deliver to rural Marion County?
Skyline reviews rural Oregon projects individually. Route, installer support, access, site conditions, local approvals, foundation, and utilities must be workable together.
