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| Dragon Tiny Homes |
Step inside and you’ll see why. The ground floor alone measures 269 square feet, designed with high ceilings and big windows that make the space feel open and light. A living room with a sofa and wall-mounted TV flows into a full kitchen equipped with an oven, induction cooktop, sink, and room for extra appliances. It’s the kind of setup that makes daily life feel less like camping and more like an actual home.
Sleeping arrangements are where the Webster really stands out. It packs in three bedrooms, something rare in the tiny house world. There’s a downstairs double with built-in storage and a closet, plus two lofts that each fit a queen bed. Altogether, it can comfortably sleep six people—a setup that makes downsizing possible for families, not just solo adventurers or couples.
The bathroom keeps things simple but complete: a shower, sink, and flushing toilet. And because the house is built on a triple-axle trailer finished in engineered wood, it’s road-ready, though its size makes it better suited to semi-permanent parking in a community. In fact, the model on show is installed in a Georgia tiny house village, though Dragon Tiny Homes plans to offer it independently for US$85,000.
That price is significant. While $85k might sound steep compared to smaller tiny homes, it’s a fraction of what a traditional house costs in most of the U.S. right now. For families priced out of the conventional housing market, the Webster offers a way to live debt-light, with the flexibility to relocate and the chance to join growing tiny-living communities popping up nationwide.
Dragon Tiny Homes has leaned into the growing demand for bigger, more functional downsized housing. With the Webster, it isn’t just selling a house—it’s pitching a lifestyle where mobility meets affordability without forcing people to give up privacy or comfort. And as housing costs keep climbing, models like this could move from quirky niche to mainstream solution.
The real question now is how many families are ready to trade square footage for freedom. If the Webster catches on, tiny homes may no longer be seen as a stopgap, but as a sustainable answer to modern housing pressures.
Source: Dragon Homes (New Atlas)







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