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Green Fairytale tiny house hides storage in every inch, costs $77,000

A 22-foot MitchCraft build turns dead space into storage, adds off-grid systems, and still lands at $77,000 with a polished cottagecore look.

Jamie Taylor··2 min read
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Green Fairytale tiny house hides storage in every inch, costs $77,000
Source: homecrux.com
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Hidden storage is doing the heavy lifting in the Green Fairytale tiny house, and that is what makes the $77,000 price point feel less like a splurge and more like a case study in compact planning. The 22-foot home was presented as a move-in-ready woodland retreat, but the real story is how it uses concealed, space-efficient utility planning to make tiny living feel orderly instead of improvised.

The home measures 22 feet long, or 22' x 8.5', with 176 square feet on the main floor before the loft is counted. That footprint could easily feel tight, yet the design turns nearly every inch of dead space into something useful. The result is a layout that looks calm and finished rather than crammed, with hidden storage and built-ins doing the work that bulky furniture usually would in a larger house.

The build is tied to MitchCraft Tiny Homes and was identified as Kailey’s custom 22-foot off-grid tiny house. It was sold for $77,000 as pictured, and it came fully equipped for off-grid living with a 4,400-watt inverter, a system monitor, and a breaker box. The exterior used cedar tongue-and-groove siding painted green with white trim, while the interior paired cork flooring with maple cabinets, a 4-burner gas stove and oven combo, and an off-grid refrigerator.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

That same compact efficiency carried through the sleeping and bath areas. The convertible couch bed added flexibility on the main floor, while the loft bedroom included a privacy wall, a small closet, and two rectangular windows. The bathroom was fitted with a fiberglass shower, a Nature's Head composting toilet, and space for a washer/dryer combo, which gives the home a level of day-to-day function many tiny builds still miss.

The Green Fairytale fits a broader shift in the tiny-house market, where builders are engineering storage into stairs, cabinetry, and wall planes from the start instead of simply shrinking standard rooms. MitchCraft is based in Fort Collins, Colorado, and the company’s work is connected to NOAH certification standards, which cover National Building, Plumbing, Electric, and RV codes and can help with zoning, insurance, and financing. That kind of planning is what lets a 22-foot house feel complete, and in this case, it is what makes the fairytale look work so well.

This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.

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