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No. Mobile homes are not real property.
A mobile home may be a personal property but this is not obligatory.
My mobile home is a 1981. Homes built after 1975 were subject to HUD rules and construction regulations, so are better in many ways. -Parks will allow older homes to exist if they are well kept, but will not allow pre-1975 homes to be moved into their property. Many insurance companies will not insure pre-1975 homes. Many movers will not move pre-1975 mobile homes.
Real estate is land; - the mobile home park in which mobile homes are parked would be real estate, but the mobile homes themselves are not real estate, they are the equivalent of large cars that you can live in. A car is personal property rather than real property, and so is a mobile home.
Certainly there are several insurance companies that provide coverage for mobile homes in a park or on private property. The key is who owns the mobile home. The owner is the person who would be able to get a policy on the home.
Most likely you can, but you would have to consult the local municipality or township about how many residential homes you can have on your size of property.
VA loans allow for the purchase of mobile homes in the state of California.
Yes
Yes. Most mobile homes and manufactured homes carry a title just like the title to a vehicle. If the mobile home is on your property and you want to sell it, contact your state government and request a title for the mobile home. After acquiring the title in your name you are free to do with it what you want.
2 or 3 not for sure that much
You can fit about 300 mobile homes on 5 acres. Whether local by-laws allow it is a different matter, according to where you are.
Most parks in Canada and in many US states, will refuse to allow mobile homes built before 1975 to be moved onto their park, as these may not have been constructed to HUD regulations. Movers are reluctant to move pre-'75 mobiles for that same reason. As far as I know there is nothing to stop you moving an older home to private property, such as a farm or land where you plan to build a new house. Local building codes would cover this aspect.