Tiny Home Communities Directory
Curated Florida and national tiny-home villages with official operator links.
Open →Florida-first · Escape tiny homes · ADUs & backyard builds · Communities · Homestead tools
Tiny homes, ADUs & backyard builds
You're in: Discovery hub
Site search
65 results across guides, tools, communities, catalog, and blog.
Curated Florida and national tiny-home villages with official operator links.
Open →Florida tiny-home communities by region—Tiny Town Orlando, Peacewind, Escape Tampa Bay, and more.
Open →Canoe Creek is a landscaped 55+ Garber-managed campus pairing park-model inventory with clubhouse programming near East Lake Tohopekaliga’s recreation economy.
Open →A revitalized 1950s RV park transformed into a legal, thriving lakefront tiny home village on the 405-acre Lake Fairview shoreline. Tiny Town Orlando blends thoughtful design, full utility hook-ups, and a tight-knit community ethos—one of Central Florida's premier locations for THOWs and long-term tiny living. Residents enjoy direct lake access, walking paths, and a peaceful setting minutes from downtown Orlando, ideal for regenerative, low-impact housing within an established municipal framework.
Open →Brevard County's first legally zoned tiny home and small cottage community—a 35-acre Planned Urban Development (PUD) by nonprofit Braveheart Properties of Brevard. Founded by affordable-housing advocate Jinkie Echols, this intentional woodland village offers large wooded parcels, full municipal utilities, and a strong emphasis on regenerative living, permaculture, and community stewardship. Minutes from Cocoa's aerospace corridor, rivers, and beaches, Peacewind delivers permanent, code-compliant tiny living on 5,000+ sq ft lots in a setting that feels rural yet stays connected to Central Florida opportunity.
Open →Escape Tampa Bay Village is Escape’s gated Thonotosassa neighborhood—factory-built tiny homes arranged around ancient live oaks with pooled amenities, private decks, and long-term lease focus (not nightly RV overflow).
Open →Circle Pond is a permaculture-focused micro-village on ~4.5 acres around a private pond in South Hillsborough—12 pads, community garden rows, beehives, and orchard plantings minutes from Tampa Bay corridors.
Open →Gracious Tiny House Park is family-run lakeside hospitality stressing full-time THOW homesteading amid Okeechobee’s prairie-light breezes.
Open →Lakeshore is Simple Life’s Florida flagship showcasing cottage footprints, leased land stewardship, wellness programming, and social infrastructure minutes from The Villages.
Open →Tiny House Siesta nests colorful micro dwellings near Sarasota’s coveted barrier islands offering hospitality-caliber micro stays with resort adjacency messaging.
Open →The Outpost is a large lakefront resort on Lake Mariana with a dedicated “Preserve” enclave marketing oversized tiny-style pads, full hookups, and resort amenities (docks, beach areas, outdoor gathering spaces). It is often cited alongside Central Florida tiny-living roundups—geographically in Polk County rather than St. Cloud, but within the same broad Orlando–Tampa corridor.
Open →Colorful waterfront micro units anchored in Matlacha’s artistic fishing-village vibe, positioned as boutique hospitality with dock space and kayak-friendly access to Charlotte Harbor passes. National roundups cite it alongside experiential tiny-home travel even when long-term homesteading pathways need extra verification.
Open →Five themed tiny dwellings on Encore RV’s Sunshine Key island campus, marketed for Keys getaways seconds from offshore recreation and Bahia Honda adjacency. The cluster helped legitimize turnkey tiny footprints inside a federally sensitive coastal permitting environment—even if homesteading differs from nightly hospitality.
Open →Cross Creek Village markets compact waterfront living along Haines Creek with bass-fishing culture, boat-launch access, and community-scale outdoor lifestyle. Directory sources often group it with affordable tiny-rental ecosystems even when marketing materials skew mixed-use.
Open →Story Box is a Hernando County affordable-housing oriented micro-campus combining cooperative ownership storytelling with capped square-foot footprints. Press coverage outlines rezoning milestones, PDP conditions, and a blend of homestead units versus hospitality inventory—ideal for renters researching co-op stewardship models.
Open →Simple Life’s corporate roadmap includes a sizeable Charlotte County phased community marketed near the Punta Gorda / Burnt Store workforce corridor—with resort-style clubhouse programming similar to Lakeshore Oxford. Until a dedicated subdivision micro-site stabilizes, use the developer’s community locator plus recorded plat filings for fidelity.
Open →Nestled in the Blue Ridge Mountains, Acony Bell offers long-term lot leases for THOWs and park models with creekside views, community gardens, walking trails, a clubhouse, and fire pits—framed around protecting natural creek runoff and a light footprint.
Open →A high-amenity pocket neighborhood of site-built tiny and cottage homes—shared pool, fitness center, clubhouse, dog park, and fully managed landscaping—with infrastructure aimed at dense, walkable common space and disciplined land impact.
Open →Roughly 30 acres of preserved Piedmont habitat with THOW spaces, a community guest house, commercial kitchen, hot tub, trail loops, and direct Haw River access—run with strict canopy protection and low-impact operating norms.
Open →A long-standing intentional community emphasizing off-grid and low-impact living—micro-hydro, solar, permaculture farms, natural building, and shared teaching space—with member governance and a globally recognized ecovillage model.
Open →High-elevation pine forest community supporting short- and long-term stays—trails, an on-site tavern, co-working, and education around greywater and low-waste operations adjacent to national forest context.
Open →Delta waterfront resort with marina access, clubhouse, gardens, tennis, and THOW-oriented pads—long cited as an early legally permitted THOW-friendly campus on the San Joaquin River delta.
Open →Foothill pad community with pool, dog park, Wi‑Fi, laundry hub, and fruit orchards—positioned with solar-shaded pad alignments to blunt Central Valley heat peaks.
Open →Urban infill orientation—back-unit / ADU-style pad leasing adjacent to primary residences—emphasizing native landscaping and shared storage to add density without oversized foundations.
Open →Riverfront THOW-focused infill with trail access to the Animas, garden boxes, storage lockers, and snow service—designed to reduce parking sprawl while protecting river corridors.
Open →Pikes Peak views with park model and cabin layouts—perimeter walking paths and off-leash zones engineered for wind and snow loads at altitude.
Open →Deeded-lot mountain neighborhood with HOA services—clubhouse, game room, snowplow loops, and trout water access—with utilities buried for deep frost protection.
Open →Micro-hospitality campus along St. Vrain Creek—rentable THOW stays, event lawns, and pavilions sited with flood-aware movable housing instead of permanent floodplain masonry.
Open →MicroLife Institute–driven pocket neighborhood of fee-simple micro homes—central green, permaculture paths, shared rainwater cisterns, and solar-oriented layouts with pedestrian-first design.
Open →Transit-accessible affordable pocket infill—shared pocket park, bike amenities, and centralized laundry—with high-performance envelopes to keep operating costs low.
Open →Biophilic master plan with tiny/micro estates—organic farm programming, horse trails, culinary anchors, and stormwater bioswales protecting open space.
Open →Ridge-line long-term lease community with river docks, pool, trails, and view decks—strict canopy and phosphorus-aware wastewater expectations along Lookout Mountain.
Open →Coastal long-term THOW community with ocean access paths, a large shared greenhouse, vintage arcade lodge, and woodshop/art studios—shared infrastructure to shrink per-household tool and grow footprints.
Open →Mountain RVIA-oriented pad resort with indoor pool, bike wash, fire pavilions, and fitness—strict recycling and low-voltage lighting under evergreen canopy.
Open →Salmon-spawning-minded campus banning synthetic lawn chemicals—community compost, firewood depots, and native riparian replanting along sensitive stream frontage.
Open →City-sanctioned accessory cluster infill near light rail—shared tool lockers, bike repair, and collective graywater garden pilots supporting car-lite lifestyles.
Open →An agrihood-style campus built around a certified organic farm—community kitchen, pool, dog park, tiny-specific utility hookups, and farm-to-table programming with composting loops.
Open →A rural town nationally cited for tiny-friendly zoning—deed-backed municipal lots, municipal utilities, fiber, and a revitalization story oriented toward small-footprint infill.
Open →Lake-oriented long-term pad community with kayak launches, gated perimeter, dog run, and shared fire ring infrastructure—marketed with shoreline buffer and stormwater-minded landscaping.
Open →A gated luxury-oriented pad community for park models and THOWs—dog park, workout barn, private ponds, and underground utilities with drought-tolerant groundcover strategies.
Open →City-zoned tiny-home park with long-term pads, community gathering spaces, and edible landscaping—the municipal project helped normalize IRC Appendix Q–style tiny zoning in a Dallas–Fort Worth lake town context.
Open →Gated 55+ oriented tiny community off I-20 with roughly 21 long-term pads, fishing pond, pavilion, dog amenities, and turnkey cottage options marketed for low-maintenance retiree living.
Open →Inclusive tiny / THOW / small-RV enclave with full hookups, storm shelters, composting and garden space, and intentional-community norms framed for longer stays.
Open →Large gated long-stay campus west of Fort Worth pairing RV infrastructure with a dedicated tiny-home phase—clubhouse, laundry, trails, and cowork-style amenity bundles.
Open →Emerging East Austin–ward tiny village marketing turnkey and bring-your-own options near the Colorado River corridor with a newer build-out story.
Open →West-of-Fort Worth tiny neighborhood marketed alongside the Incredible Tiny Homes build ecosystem—emphasizes community lots, regional builder ties, and small-footprint living.
Open →Women-focused tiny-home enclave on a compact campus emphasizing affordable pads, shared pavilion life, and peer support—national media has covered its resident-led culture and waitlist demand.
Open →Micro-estate neighborhood concept south of central Austin—gated small-footprint homes, pooled amenities, and design-forward units that attracted regional development press.
Open →High-desert luxury tiny resort near Show Low–Pinetop recreation—custom dwellings, test-drive stays, trails, and mountain-lake adjacency marketed to seasonal and longer-stay buyers.
Open →In-town tiny and small-home cluster developed by a green builder—clubhouse programming, dog run, and mountain-town access with higher-elevation climate considerations.
Open →Large 55+ oriented RV and park-model campus with resort amenities—long-term sites, activity programming, and desert utility realities typical of Tucson’s snowbird economy.
Open →Permanent supportive tiny-home campus network for chronically homeless neighbors—faith-based operations, on-site services, and eligibility pathways distinct from market-rate pad leases.
Open →Coachella Valley desert campus marketing tiny- and small-home living—pool, clubhouse, and mountain views with high heat and wind exposure typical of the Morongo Basin.
Open →Lakeside tiny neighborhood in the I-85 Greenville corridor—nature amenity story, curated architecture, and proximity to major employers and airport logistics.
Open →Wooded Swamp Rabbit Trail–adjacent campus emphasizing sub-400 sq ft homes, trails, ponds, and curated village fees covering core utilities and maintenance.
Open →Lake Murray–area tiny and park-model campus around a two-acre pond—dog park, docks, and phased clubhouse build-out with published lot rent bands.
Open →Large river-country campus marketing long-term THOW living near the Caney Fork gorge—hiking culture and regional waterfall tourism backdrop.
Open →Eastern Tennessee hub for the Incredible Tiny Homes build ecosystem—multiple community phases (e.g. rural village concepts) pair factory builds with regional mountain living.
Open →Ohio’s early dedicated tiny village marketing lake adjacency, RVIA-friendly builds, and long-term pad culture aimed at THOW households leaving legacy site-built assumptions.
Open →Blue Ridge plateau community marketing mountain views and small-footprint pads—stewardship-forward positioning with regional music and agrarian culture nearby.
Open →Richmond–north trail-country micro community emphasizing permaculture plantings, shared harvest, and slower-paced village life on a compact rural lane.
Open →Madison County micro-home campus marketing turnkey cottages, amenity bundles, and long-term affordability narratives aimed at Rocket City workforce households.
Open →Rural South Alabama campus pairing RV hospitality with tiny placements—pond access, trails, and lower cost of living marketed to remote workers and retirees.
Open →Adult-oriented micro campus emphasizing sustainable operations and a small pad count—Bluegrass countryside context with Lexington commute feasibility.
Open →Nonprofit-led tiny home initiative addressing housing insecurity in Detroit—rent bands and services bundles differ materially from market-rate cottage developers.
Open →