Imagine Tiny Homes' 24-Foot Seeker Offers Customizable Space for Small Families
Imagine Tiny Homes' Seeker packs two 43-sq-ft sleeping lofts, a full dishwasher, and a propane cooktop into a NOAH-certified 24-foot frame on three axles.

Imagine Tiny Homes built the Seeker around a straightforward premise: a 24-foot footprint should not mean choosing between sleeping space and a functional kitchen. The result is a NOAH-certified tiny house on wheels measuring 24 feet long, 8 feet 6 inches wide, and 13 feet 6 inches tall, with approximately 280 square feet of main-floor living area and two separate sleeping lofts, each roughly 43 square feet.
That double-loft configuration is the Seeker's central pitch to small families and couples. Both lofts are finished with premium LVT waterproof plank flooring, the same material used on the main floor and in the bathroom, giving the interior a consistent palette anchored by white shiplap walls. The exterior ships in black with wooden accents over SmartPanel siding, though the customization menu runs considerably deeper than the default spec.
The kitchen leans hard into full-size convenience for its size. Shaker-style cabinets with soft-close drawers pair with both a butcher block and a dark marble countertop, and the appliance list includes a propane cooktop, oven, stainless steel refrigerator/freezer, dishwasher, and a hood vent with over-the-range microwave. A butcher block bar with a window opening adds a detail that reads more beach house than budget build.
Bathroom provisions follow the same logic. The Seeker includes a full-size shower, residential porcelain flush toilet, vanity sink, and ventilation fan, along with dedicated electric and plumbing hookups for a washer and dryer. A propane on-demand water heater handles hot water duty, backed by city water and sewer connections. Heating and cooling run through an electrical mini-split system with remote control, and the electrical circuit is a 50-amp RV-type plug-in, keeping campground and RV park hookups straightforward.
The trailer underneath is a three-axle unit with a 2-5/16-inch bumper-pull hitch, built for mobility. Construction uses 2x4 wood framing in the walls and heavier 2x6 framing for ceilings and floors, with RockWool water- and moisture-resistant insulation throughout.
Where the Seeker distinguishes itself most on paper is in its customization depth. Buyers can choose among five roof profiles (gable, hip, Dutch, mono-slope, or dormer) and three roofing materials (metal, asphalt, or wood shake). Siding options extend to vinyl, synthetic stucco, wood, or aluminum. Window styles run from double-hung and casement to bay and bow and circle top. Interior walls can be finished in shiplap, panel, or other textures, and flooring choices span carpet, wood, tile, and vinyl beyond the standard LVT default. "After all, a tiny house should be a reflection of you and your lifestyle, not the other way around," as Pragati Shandil wrote in her overview of the model for HomeCrux.
Pricing, production lead times, towing weight ratings, and insulation R-values are not currently listed on the Imagine Tiny Homes website, and those details will matter to anyone seriously running the numbers on a purchase.
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