Northern Kentucky & Greater Cincinnati
Lot rent, pet rules, utilities included, and vacancy status — all in one place. Real data for Boone, Kenton, Campbell, and Hamilton County.
Data verified as of early 2025. Call ahead to confirm current lot rent and vacancy.
⚠️ Lot rent figures and policies are approximate and subject to change. Always call the park manager to confirm current rates, availability, and pet/home-age policies before applying.
In a manufactured home park, you typically own (or purchase) the home but rent the land it sits on. This land-lease model means your monthly payment is lot rent — separate from any home purchase price or mortgage. Read your lot lease carefully: look for annual rent increase caps, park rule change procedures, and what happens if the park is sold.
In Kentucky, manufactured homes on rented land are titled as personal property through the county clerk's office. In Ohio, the process runs through the Clerk of Courts. If you move a home across the state line — a rare but real scenario in this metro — you'll need to retitle in the new state. Both states require current title to be produced at sale.
Parks vary significantly. In NKY/Cincinnati, most parks include water and sewer in lot rent. Electric is almost always tenant-paid (Duke Energy covers most of the NKY side; Duke/CG&E on the Ohio side). Trash pickup is included in roughly half of local parks. Always ask specifically: water, sewer, electric, gas, trash, and common area maintenance.
Most NKY parks require homes to be 1990 or newer — some require 1995 or 2000+. This affects what you can bring in if you're moving a home from elsewhere. Older homes may be allowed if already on-site. Always confirm with the park manager before purchasing an older home with plans to move it.
Pet policies vary more than almost any other factor. Some parks allow no dogs at all; others allow large dogs with breed restrictions (pit bull, Rottweiler, and Doberman are the most common restricted breeds in this metro). Always get pet approval in writing before moving in. Verbal permission is unenforceable if management changes.
Based on reported ranges from parks in this directory. Figures are approximate.
| County | State | Low End | High End | Typical Includes | Title Office |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boone County | KY | $350/mo | $460/mo | Water, sewer often included | County Clerk |
| Kenton County | KY | $365/mo | $460/mo | Water often included | County Clerk |
| Campbell County | KY | $390/mo | $455/mo | Water sometimes included | County Clerk |
| Hamilton County | OH | $425/mo | $500/mo | Water/sewer often included | Clerk of Courts |
Legally, homes built before June 15, 1976 are called mobile homes. Homes built after that date under HUD code are manufactured homes. In everyday use (and in this directory) the terms are used interchangeably. The distinction matters for financing and titling — older pre-HUD homes are harder to finance and some parks won't accept them.
Yes, but options are more limited than for site-built homes. Because you don't own the land, most conventional mortgages won't apply. Look into chattel loans (personal property loans specifically for manufactured homes), FHA Title I loans, or Vanderbilt Mortgage/21st Mortgage, which specialize in this product. Credit unions in NKY (including Commonwealth Credit Union and Forcht Bank) sometimes offer portfolio products. Expect higher rates than conventional mortgages.
In Kentucky, a manufactured home on rented land is titled as personal property through the county clerk's office — the same office that handles vehicle titles. You'll need the current title (or a release of lien if there's a loan), a bill of sale, and fees that vary slightly by county. Boone, Kenton, and Campbell county clerks each handle this directly; call ahead to confirm current fees and required documents.
Yes, significantly. In Ohio, manufactured homes on rented land are titled through the Clerk of Courts (not the county clerk — a separate office). In Hamilton County, that's the Hamilton County Clerk of Courts. You'll need the existing title, a notarized bill of sale, and a completed title application. Ohio also charges a manufactured home tax annually — separate from real property taxes.
Both Kentucky and Ohio have laws requiring advance notice before a park closure — generally 180 days in Kentucky and up to 270 days in Ohio for larger communities. However, protections are limited. If you own your home, you're entitled to notice and sometimes relocation assistance, but this varies. When evaluating a park, ask about ownership history and whether there's been any recent sale or rezoning activity nearby.
Water and sewer are included in lot rent at most (but not all) parks in this directory. Electric is almost never included — you'll set up service directly with Duke Energy for both NKY and the Cincinnati Ohio side. Trash pickup is included at roughly half the parks listed. Always get a written breakdown of what's included before signing a lease.
Moving a home requires a licensed manufactured home transporter and typically a move permit from the county. The destination park must approve the home (age, condition, and size restrictions apply). In Kentucky, you'll need to transfer the title to your name at the county clerk before or at the time of the move. Budget $3,000–$8,000+ for transport and setup depending on distance and whether the home needs a new foundation/skirting.