Park count and lot count in Massachusetts
Massachusetts is home to approximately 280 mobile home parks containing roughly 17,500 lots — making it a smaller but established MHP markets in the United States. The average park size is around 63 lots, consistent with mid-size operator portfolios.
These figures are estimates compiled from US Census manufactured-housing data, MHI shipment reports, and state-level MHP industry surveys. The actual count fluctuates as new parks come online (slowly) and existing parks redevelop into other land uses (also slowly).
Lot rent levels in Massachusetts
Average lot rent in Massachusetts parks runs approximately $650 per month as of 2026. Massachusetts's lot rents are in line with the broader Northeast average — neither premium nor discount.
Operators benchmarking against the state average should keep in mind that lot rents vary widely by submarket within Massachusetts. Metro-area parks routinely run 30–60% above the state average; rural parks often sit 20–30% below. The state average is a starting point, not a price-setting input.
Cap rates and valuation in Massachusetts
Stabilized MHP cap rates in Massachusetts cluster between 6% and 7% as of 2026, placing the state in the tier1 tier of MHP markets nationally. Lower cap rates apply to larger, fully-stabilized, TOH-heavy assets in the strongest submarkets; higher cap rates apply to smaller, value-add, or POH-heavy parks.
Recent transactions in Massachusetts reflect the macro cap-rate stabilization that played out across MHP nationally in 2024-2025. Cap rate compression of the 2018-2021 era is over; the new normal is range-bound pricing with mild upward movement in higher-rate environments.
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Tier-1 stabilized6% – 6.5% — large, fully-stabilized, agency-financeable parks
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Tier-2 typical6.5% – 6.75% — mid-size or mixed POH/TOH portfolios
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Tier-3 value-add6.75% – 8% — smaller or under-occupied parks with infill upside
Regulatory environment in Massachusetts
Massachusetts doesn't impose statewide rent control on MHP, but several cities and counties have local caps. Operators with Massachusetts parks in regulated submarkets should price acquisitions accordingly — the underwriting math differs meaningfully between rent-controlled and rent-uncontrolled jurisdictions even within the same state.
Beyond rent control, Massachusetts's Manufactured Housing Act (Chapter 140 §32A) governs the broader MHP landlord-tenant relationship — notice periods, eviction procedures, lease requirements. Compliance is uniform across the state, so multi-park Massachusetts operators can run a single playbook rather than per-jurisdiction variance.
What to watch in 2026
Massachusetts's stable market means operational excellence drives returns more than market-timing. Watch for: vendor cost trends (insurance, taxes), labor costs for on-site managers, and submarket-level rent dynamics. Outperformance in stable markets comes from running a tighter operation than the average operator, not from market beta.