A dirt pad for a mobile home, built for mountain ground.
A level, compacted, drained pad benched into your slope — not a flat-land template. Cut-and-fill to NC manufactured-home setup standards across Transylvania, Henderson, Haywood & Buncombe.
A dirt pad for a mobile home is a level, compacted earth platform, crowned so water sheds off it — and in the WNC mountains it almost always has to be cut-and-fill, because the ground isn’t flat. National guides describe a flat “caliche” pad; that’s wrong here, where Henderson ridge lots on Ashe soil sit at a typical 40.2% grade and valley lots on Dillard bottomland (3.7%) need the pad raised and drained. We cut the high side, build compacted fill in lifts on the low side, key it into firm ground, and pitch it to drain — so the home sits level and stays level. Manufactured-home setups are routine WNC work: Transylvania alone logged 1,046 in the data we pulled.
Why a mountain pad isn’t a flat-land pad
Search “dirt pad for mobile home” and almost every answer describes the same flat job: scrape a level spot, haul in caliche or crusher run, compact it, done. That works in Texas. It does not work on a Western North Carolina lot, because our buildable ground is rarely flat — Henderson County’s dominant ridge soils, Ashe and Evard, sit at a typical 40.2% and 28.1% grade and run far steeper in spots. A pad on that ground is a small cut-and-fill bench, not a scrape.
How we build the pad so the home stays level
The work is the same discipline as any engineered fill, just sized for a home: we strip the topsoil and any organic ground off the footprint, cut into the high side of the slope, and place that material as compacted fill on the low side in lifts, keyed into firm ground. Skip the compaction or build over soft ground and the fill consolidates — the low corner drops, the frame racks, and the doors stick. We compact to spec and crown the pad a few inches so water runs off, never under it.
The wet-lot problem — and the drained pad
Slope isn’t the only enemy. Down in the French Broad and Mud Creek valleys around Etowah and East Flat Rock, soils like Dillard are nearly flat (3.7%) but only moderately well drained — they hold water. A pad on that ground has to sit above grade with the lot sloped away on every side, usually with a curtain or French drain on the uphill side. Water under a manufactured home rots the underbelly and undermines the pad fast.
Setups, demolition, and the driveway to get there
We handle the full dirt side of a manufactured-home site: new pad cut-and-fill, site prep and clearing, the driveway wide and firm enough to back the home onto the lot, and demolition and pad removal when you’re replacing an old home. The state E&SC plan (NC GS 113A-57(4) (Sedimentation Pollution Control Act of 1973)) only kicks in over one acre of disturbance — most single-home pads stay well under it. Full permit detail lives in our NC land grading permits guide.
Henderson ground shows the split: a benched fill on Ashe ridge vs. a raised, drained pad on Dillard bottomland.
Manufactured-home setups, by WNC county.
Manufactured-home setup volume in the counties we serve — the real demand behind every dirt pad. (Buncombe County logs these under general building permits, not a manufactured-home code, so a setup count isn’t broken out there.)
| County | Survey | MH setups | Where they cluster |
|---|---|---|---|
| Transylvania | NC175 | 1,046 | Lake Toxaway, Rosman, Penrose, Brevard |
| Henderson | NC089 | 322 | Etowah, Saluda, East Flat Rock, Hendersonville |
| Haywood | NC606 | 112 | Canton, Clyde, Waynesville |
Transylvania’s 1,046 setups dwarf its neighbors — manufactured homes are a backbone of the Lake Toxaway, Rosman, and Penrose housing stock, almost all of it on sloped ground that needs a real cut-and-fill pad.
What your lot’s soil means for the pad.
Dominant Henderson County (survey NC089) soils from ridge to valley — the slope and drainage class decide whether your pad is a simple level, a benched fill, or a raised-and-drained platform.
| Soil series | Typical slope | Slope range | Drainage class | Pad method |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ashe | 40.2% | 8–95% | Somewhat excessively drained | Benched cut-and-fill pad |
| Evard | 28.1% | 6–70% | Well drained | Benched cut-and-fill pad |
| Hayesville | 13% | 2–30% | Well drained | Level cut & compact |
| Dillard | 3.7% | 0–8% | Moderately well drained | Raised pad + drainage |
Priced off your lot, not a flat pad rate.
A mobile home pad costs what the dirt costs to move — which depends on slope, rock, and drainage. Here’s how the three lot types break down. Exact pricing comes from a free on-site estimate.
Dillard or Tate bottomland under ~8% slope. Strip, level, compact, crown, and drain. Most predictable pad to price — the only catch is keeping water off it.
Evard or Hayesville shoulders. The pad is a benched cut-and-fill built in compacted lifts with erosion control — the most common WNC manufactured-home site.
Ashe ridge at 40.2%+ with saprolite or outcrop. May need retaining, a hammer, and a graded driveway just to deliver the home. We flag rock on the site walk.
Exact pricing always comes from a free on-site estimate — call (828) 510-7217 or use the form above.
From slope to set-ready pad.
Walk the lot
We read the slope, soil, drainage, and how the home will be delivered onto the site.
Stake & estimate
A written scope — pad size, cut-and-fill volume, driveway, and what drives the price.
Cut, fill & compact
Strip, bench the pad, place fill in compacted lifts keyed into firm ground, crown to drain.
Set-ready
Pad level and compacted to NC setup spec, drainage in, driveway firm — ready for the set crew.
Mobile home dirt pads — common questions
How do you build a dirt pad for a mobile home in the WNC mountains?
How much does a mobile home dirt pad cost in Western North Carolina?
Do I need a permit to grade a mobile home pad in NC?
Why does my mobile home pad keep settling or the doors stick?
What about drainage under a mobile home on a wet lot?
Can you do mobile home demolition and pad removal too?
How long does it take to prep a mobile home site?
Which WNC counties do you set mobile home pads in?
Setting a mobile home on WNC ground?
Tell us where the lot is and what's going on it. We'll walk the slope and put a real number on the pad — free, in writing.