Tru Form Tiny’s Cascade Max brings apartment-like comfort to tiny homes
At 10.5 feet wide and 399 square feet, the Cascade Max trades easy towing for a layout that feels far closer to a small apartment than a trailer.

Tru Form Tiny’s Cascade Max is aimed squarely at buyers who have outgrown the idea that tiny living must mean cramped living. With a 10.5-foot width, 38-foot length and 399 square feet of interior space, the model pushes well beyond the standard trailer-mounted tiny house and into territory that looks built for real full-time use.
That extra width is the catch and the selling point. The Cascade Max requires a permit to tow on a public road, which makes it a better fit for people who plan to move less often and want a home that behaves more like a compact residence than a constantly traveling rig. Tru Form Tiny says the design emerged after repeated inquiries about single-level living, and the result is a Craftsman-inspired, vaulted-ceiling home built around livability rather than minimal footprint.
Inside, the layout reads like a direct answer to family pain points. The home includes a large sofa, electric fireplace, a kitchen with a sink, oven, propane cooktop, fridge-freezer and drawer-style dishwasher, and three bedrooms overall, including two loft bedrooms. One loft even includes a desk area, a detail that gives the model a practical edge for remote work, schoolwork or storage. The bathroom goes further than most tiny homes by separating the shower from a freestanding bathtub, a rare touch even in larger builds.
The company lists the Cascade Max starting at $198,900, while an available 2026 inventory unit is priced at $269,000. Tru Form Tiny describes the home as a single-level, Craftsman-style model with vaulted ceilings and a customized master bedroom, positioning it as one of its more sought-after park-model tiny homes. That demand is part of the story: the Cascade Max was a finalist in the Tiny Home Awards 2023, and its family-friendly layout has kept it in the conversation as the market continues to widen, literally and figuratively.
Tru Form Tiny also draws a line between this model and its smaller RVIA-certified travel trailer builds, which it says top out at 14 feet including trailer and roof. That comparison makes the Cascade Max’s place in the lineup clear. It is not the easy-to-haul tiny house for frequent road trips; it is the wider, roomier option for households that want apartment-like comfort, can accept towing limits, and need a layout that solves more daily problems than a standard tiny house ever could.
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