01What this calculator estimates
Building a tiny house means pricing out the same systems a full-size home needs — framing, exterior cladding and roofing, insulation, windows and doors, interior finish, and plumbing/electrical rough-in — just at a much smaller scale. This calculator turns your square footage, finish tier, base type, and regional cost level into a category-by-category materials estimate, so you can see where the money actually goes instead of relying on a single lump-sum range.
The output is a planning number, not a contractor bid. It is built from aggregated per-square-foot and per-line-item cost data reported across current tiny house builds and general construction cost guides, including the U.S. Census Bureau’s New Residential Construction data, which tracks national homebuilding cost and timing trends.
02Finish tier, base type, and region — what changes the price
Three inputs do most of the work in this estimate. The finish tier sets your material rate per square foot; the base type determines whether you are pricing a trailer or a slab; and the regional cost level nudges the whole estimate up or down for local labor and material pricing, similar in spirit to the location adjustments the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau flags as a major driver of self-build financing costs.
03Base type: wheeled trailer vs. permanent foundation
A tiny house built on a trailer is treated as a vehicle in most jurisdictions and typically costs $3,200-$5,500 for the trailer itself, banded by length class in this calculator. A tiny house on a permanent foundation is instead built to residential code — many jurisdictions now reference Appendix Q of the International Residential Code, which sets minimum ceiling heights, egress, and loft requirements specifically for homes under 400 sq ft — and the calculator prices that base at roughly $7 per square foot of foundation.
Choosing a base type is also a good moment to plan mechanical rough-in and insulation targets. The ENERGY STAR seal-and-insulate methodology is a useful reference for the insulation line item, and if your tiny house will run on a standard 120/240V electrical service, our conduit fill calculator can help size the wiring runs once your electrical rough-in budget is set.
- Enter your total finished square footage, including any loft you will insulate and finish.
- Pick a finish tier: Basic, Mid-range, or High-end.
- Choose a base type: Wheeled trailer or Permanent foundation.
- Set your regional cost level if your local market runs noticeably above or below the national average.
- Press Calculate to see the total estimate and the six-category breakdown.
Planning ongoing utility costs alongside the build? Our solar panel sizing calculator can help if you are weighing solar-ready wiring or an EV charging circuit into a high-end finish budget.
This estimate covers materials only. It does not include:
- Labor — professional installation commonly adds 50-100%+ on top of the material cost.
- Land purchase or lease, site prep, and grading.
- Permits, inspections, and impact fees, which vary widely by jurisdiction.
- Utility hookups (water, sewer/septic, electrical service drop) and any HVAC equipment beyond rough-in wiring and piping.
- Appliances and furnishings.
Finish-tier rates and category proportions are a planning baseline synthesized from current tiny house cost data, not a fixed universal price. Material and labor costs shift with lumber and commodity markets, so confirm current pricing with local suppliers before finalizing a budget. If you upgrade to high-efficiency windows, insulation, or HVAC equipment as part of a high-end finish, the IRS Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit may offset part of that cost.
04Related calculators
Working through a related project? Try our Tiny House Off-Grid Solar Calculator, Container Home Cost Calculator, and Container Home Construction Calculator.
01The formula
The estimate is built from a material rate per square foot (set by finish tier), a base/foundation add-on, and a regional cost-level multiplier. The materials subtotal is then split across six categories by typical proportion.
Where:
- sqft= total finished floor area in square feet, including any finished loft.
- tier rate= the material cost per square foot for the chosen finish tier.
- region multiplier= a regional cost-level adjustment: 0.85 (lower-cost area), 1.00 (average), or 1.25 (higher-cost area).
- base add-on= the trailer or permanent-foundation cost, added on top of the materials subtotal.
02Worked example
Take a 250 sq ft tiny house, mid-range finish, on a wheeled trailer, at an average regional cost level:
Splitting the $27,500 materials subtotal by category gives framing $3,300, exterior siding/roofing $4,950, insulation $2,200, windows/doors $4,950, interior finish $6,600, and plumbing/electrical rough-in $5,500 — which together add back up to the $27,500 materials subtotal before the trailer add-on.