“Should I build an ADU or just buy a tiny home?” We hear this question from Bellingham homeowners regularly. It makes sense on the surface — both are small dwellings, both can go in your backyard, and both cost less than a full-size house. But the similarities end there.
An ADU (Accessory Dwelling Unit) and a tiny home on wheels are fundamentally different in the eyes of the law, lenders, insurers, and appraisers. Understanding these differences before you invest will save you from costly mistakes — particularly around legality, financing, and long-term return on investment.
This guide compares the two options across every dimension that matters for Washington State homeowners, with specific detail for Bellingham and Whatcom County regulations.
What Is an ADU?
An Accessory Dwelling Unit is a permitted, code-compliant secondary dwelling built on the same lot as a primary residence. In Bellingham, ADUs are regulated under the Bellingham Municipal Code (BMC 20.10.036) and must meet the International Residential Code (IRC) for safety, energy efficiency, and habitability.
ADUs can be detached structures (backyard cottages), attached additions to the primary home, or conversions of existing space (basements, garages). They are built on a permanent foundation, connected to permanent utilities, and recorded on the property title.
Under Washington's HB 1337, most residential properties in Bellingham now qualify for at least one ADU, and many qualify for two ADUs per lot. There is no owner-occupancy requirement — you can rent out both the main house and the ADU.
What Is a Tiny Home?
A “tiny home” most commonly refers to a small dwelling built on a wheeled trailer chassis — a Tiny Home on Wheels (THOW). These structures typically range from 100 to 400 square feet and are designed to be movable.
Here is the critical legal distinction: in Washington State, a tiny home on wheels is classified as a recreational vehicle (RV), not a dwelling. This classification has enormous implications for where you can place it, how you can use it, whether you can rent it, and how it affects your property value.
Some tiny homes are built on permanent foundations — these are not THOWs but rather small houses or, if on the same lot as a primary dwelling and properly permitted, they are ADUs. The term “tiny home” in common usage almost always means the on-wheels variety.
Important note: Washington State adopted Appendix Q of the IRC in 2020, which provides building standards for tiny homes on foundations (under 400 sq ft). If you build a tiny home on a foundation with proper permits, it is legally an ADU or dwelling — not a “tiny home” in the regulatory sense.
ADU vs Tiny Home: Side-by-Side Comparison
| Category | ADU | Tiny Home (on wheels) |
|---|---|---|
| Legal Status | Fully permitted dwelling; building-code compliant | Classified as RV in most jurisdictions; not a legal permanent dwelling |
| Permitting Required | Yes — land use and building permits from city/county | No building permit (not a structure); may need RV parking permits |
| Foundation | Permanent foundation (concrete slab, crawlspace, or basement) | On wheels/trailer; no permanent foundation |
| Financing Options | Home loans, HELOCs, construction loans, cash-out refi | Personal loans, RV loans, or cash only |
| Insurance | Covered under homeowner's policy or separate dwelling policy | RV insurance; limited coverage; may be difficult to insure |
| Property Value Impact | Adds $150K-$300K+ to property value | No impact on property value; depreciates like a vehicle |
| Size (Typical) | 400-1,000 sq ft (Bellingham allows up to 1,000 sq ft) | 100-400 sq ft |
| Utility Connections | Permanent water, sewer, electrical connections | Hookups or off-grid systems; often temporary connections |
| Rental Legality | Legal long-term and short-term rental (with STR permit) | Cannot be legally rented as housing in most jurisdictions |
| Resale Value | Appreciates with property; transfers with sale | Sold separately like a vehicle; depreciates over time |
| Building Code | Meets International Residential Code (IRC) | May meet ANSI/RVIA standards but not IRC |
| Mortgage Deductibility | Interest may be tax-deductible as part of home mortgage | Not deductible (personal property loan) |
Why ADUs Win for Investment
If your goal is financial return — rental income, property appreciation, or both — an ADU is the clear winner. Here is why:
Property Value Appreciation
ADUs become part of your real property and are included in appraisals. In Bellingham, a well-built ADU typically adds $150,000 to $300,000 in property value. A tiny home on wheels, by contrast, is personal property that depreciates — it adds nothing to your home's appraised value and loses value over time like a car.
Favorable Financing
Because an ADU is real property, you can finance it with a home equity line of credit (HELOC), construction loan, cash-out refinance, or conventional mortgage. These carry interest rates of 5-8% as of 2025. Tiny homes on wheels are personal property, limited to personal loans (10-15% rates) or RV loans (6-10% rates with larger down payments). See our ADU financing guide for details.
Legal Rental Income
ADUs can be legally rented as long-term housing or, with a short-term rental permit, as vacation rentals. In Bellingham, ADU rental rates range from $1,500 to $2,500 per month for a one-bedroom unit. A tiny home on wheels cannot legally be rented as a dwelling in Bellingham or most of Whatcom County.
Insurance Coverage
ADUs are covered under your homeowner's insurance as an additional structure, or with a standalone dwelling policy. Coverage is comprehensive and straightforward. Tiny homes on wheels require separate RV or specialty insurance, which is harder to obtain, more limited in coverage, and may not cover the structure when parked long-term on a residential lot.
When a Tiny Home Might Make Sense
Despite the legal and financial advantages of ADUs, there are a few scenarios where a tiny home on wheels can serve a purpose:
Temporary Housing During Construction
If you're building an ADU or renovating your main house, a tiny home can serve as temporary on-site housing. Bellingham allows RV use for temporary purposes in some situations, though you should verify duration limits with the city.
Rural Properties with Flexible Zoning
Some rural areas of Whatcom County have more relaxed enforcement around accessory structures. However, “relaxed enforcement” is not the same as “legal,” and you take on risk if the county later enforces RV regulations on your property.
Personal Use with No Rental Intent
If you only want a small space for occasional personal use — a writing studio, guest quarters for a few nights a year, a meditation retreat — and you are not looking for rental income or property value growth, a tiny home may satisfy that need at lower upfront cost.
Even in these scenarios, it is worth running the numbers on a permitted ADU. The long-term financial benefits of an ADU — appreciation, rental income, financing — often outweigh the lower upfront cost of a tiny home within just a few years.
Legal Status in Washington State
Washington State has taken a clear position on both ADUs and tiny homes:
ADUs: Fully Supported
- HB 1337 requires cities to allow at least one ADU on all residential lots
- Cities over 25,000 must allow two ADUs per lot
- No owner-occupancy requirement
- HOAs cannot prohibit ADUs
- Full building-code protection for occupants
Tiny Homes on Wheels: Legal Gray Area
- Classified as RVs — cannot be permanent dwellings
- Cannot be legally rented as housing in most cities
- No conventional mortgage or HELOC financing
- No protection under HB 1337
- May not meet IRC safety standards
The bottom line: if you want a legal, financeable, insurable dwelling that adds value to your property and can generate rental income, you need an ADU. Tiny homes on wheels occupy a legal gray area that carries real risk for homeowners who treat them as permanent housing.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Can I legally live in a tiny home on wheels in Bellingham?
Not as a permanent dwelling. In Bellingham and most of Whatcom County, tiny homes on wheels are classified as recreational vehicles (RVs). RVs cannot legally be used as permanent residences on residential lots. You can park an RV on your property but you cannot use it as your primary dwelling or rent it out as housing. An ADU, by contrast, is a fully legal, permitted dwelling that can be lived in and rented year-round.
Can I finance a tiny home the same way as an ADU?
No. ADUs qualify for conventional home loans, home equity lines of credit (HELOCs), construction loans, and cash-out refinancing because they are real property attached to the land. Tiny homes on wheels are classified as personal property — like a vehicle — so you are limited to personal loans, RV loans, or paying cash. Interest rates for personal property loans are significantly higher than mortgage rates.
Does a tiny home add to my property value like an ADU does?
No. An ADU is a permanent structure that becomes part of your property and is recorded on the title. Appraisers include ADUs in property valuations, and Bellingham ADUs typically add $150,000 to $300,000 in property value. A tiny home on wheels is personal property that can be moved and is not included in real estate appraisals. It adds no lasting value to your land.
Is a tiny home cheaper than an ADU?
The purchase price of a tiny home on wheels ($50,000 to $120,000) is lower than a permitted ADU ($200,000 to $400,000+). However, the total cost of ownership is different. Tiny homes depreciate like vehicles and have no financing advantages. ADUs appreciate with the property, generate legal rental income ($1,500-$2,500/month in Bellingham), and can be financed at low mortgage rates. Over 10 years, an ADU is typically a significantly better financial investment.
Invest in a Real Asset, Not a Depreciating Vehicle
A permitted ADU adds lasting value to your property, generates legal rental income, and qualifies for favorable financing. Let us show you what's possible on your lot.
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