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Move-in ready tiny home in Oregon lists for $125,000 at Tiny Tranquility

A $125,000, move-in-ready tiny home at Tiny Tranquility comes with two lofts, a composite deck and a coastal site option in Waldport.

Sam Ortega··2 min read
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Move-in ready tiny home in Oregon lists for $125,000 at Tiny Tranquility
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Tiny Tranquility has put a finished 2025 tiny home on the market for $125,000, and the pitch is as much about timing as it is about the build. The 30-foot-by-9.5-foot unit on site 7 is move-in ready, fully equipped and available either as a home that stays in the Waldport park or as a unit the buyer can relocate.

That choice is the real hook. Keep it in place and the buyer gets an established coastal landing spot with site rent listed at $800 a month plus electricity. Move it out and the buyer skips the wait for a custom build, while still getting a home that already has the hard parts finished: two lofts, a full kitchen, a full bath and the exterior setup already done.

The listing leans hard into practical livability. Inside, the kitchen includes substantial cabinetry, a Samsung gas stove with air-fry convection oven, a Whirlpool microwave, a farmhouse sink and a full-size refrigerator. The bathroom has washer and dryer hookups, a full shower and a cedar-lined finish. The main loft is sized for a king-size bed or two twins, while the secondary loft fits a full-size bed. The home also comes with 13 windows, French doors, a composite deck and a mini-split for heating and cooling.

Location is part of the value here. Tiny Tranquility sits at 4399 SW Eriksen Ave in Waldport, about 2 miles south of downtown Waldport, 5 miles north of downtown Yachats and 17 miles south of Newport. The park says it first opened in late June 2018 and markets itself as a beach vacation destination on the Oregon Coast, with both nightly rentals and long-term site rentals for tiny-home and vintage-trailer owners. Its stated vision is a safe, comfortable, communal environment, and the FAQ says it supports longer-term site rentals as well as nightly vacation rentals of park-managed units.

That setting matters because Oregon’s rules can make tiny-home placement tricky. The Oregon Building Codes Division says tiny homes on wheels used as temporary dwellings fall under local city or county authority, while manufactured dwellings are governed by the Oregon Manufactured Dwelling Installation Specialty Code. In that context, a ready-made home already sitting in an established park looks less like a project and more like a shortcut to coastal living. Tiny Tranquility’s own inventory backs up the market, with other homes listed at $98,000, $89,000 and $137,500, putting this $125,000 unit squarely in the middle of a real resale band rather than as an outlier.

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