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Decathlon Tiny Homes Unveils Betty, a 28-Foot Towable for Two

Betty's kitchen-centered layout packs quartz counters, an RO filter, and a farmhouse sink into 28 feet, with no official price yet but expect north of $80K.

Sam Ortega2 min read
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Decathlon Tiny Homes Unveils Betty, a 28-Foot Towable for Two
Source: www.yankodesign.com

Decathlon Tiny Homes dropped its second model of 2026 with the Betty, a 28-foot towable built for two that the Texas-based builder positions squarely in the mid-size sweet spot: substantial enough for a proper interior program, compact enough to stay towable without a semi.

The Betty rides on a triple-axle trailer and measures 28 feet (8.5 m) in length. Exterior cladding is engineered wood, and the roof is finished in composite shingles, though Homecrux describes the roofing as "F-wave" and the siding as "smart siding exterior," aligning it with the Destiny model already in Decathlon's catalog. Multiple windows and a pair of skylights handle daylighting, and an outswing exterior door rounds out the exterior details.

Inside, the kitchen earns its place at the center of the floor plan, both literally and practically. Quartz countertops, a deep farmhouse-style sink, a sizable pantry, and a breakfast bar set the tone. Appliances include a microwave, a two-burner induction cooktop, and a fridge/freezer. Yanko Design notes that a reverse-osmosis water filtration system and a garbage disposal are also part of the package, which is genuinely uncommon at this footprint and price tier. Interior walls are painted white, with black accents on the marble and kitchen walls.

The ground-floor bedroom is accessed through a sliding barn-style door, though Homecrux notes it is not clearly visible in the promotional photos. The full bathroom includes a glass-enclosed shower, toilet, vanity, and a washer/dryer combo. Above the bathroom sits a storage loft reached by a removable ladder. New Atlas is explicit about one limitation worth flagging for anyone eyeing that loft as a sleeping space: it has no windows, and most jurisdictions require egress windows for a room to legally qualify as a sleeping area. The loft is realistically a storage room or hobby space.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The Betty traces its lineage directly to Decathlon's Athena series, the same foundation that underpins the Beach Haus and Blackstone models. Betty comes in four feet shorter than those two, but Homecrux argues it doesn't give up meaningful interior comfort in the process.

Pricing has not been confirmed. The Athena series, which Betty is derived from, starts at $79,500. Homecrux expects the Betty to land "well above $80,000" once pricing is announced. Decathlon has published a video walkthrough for anyone who wants a closer look at the layout before those numbers drop.

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