![]() I actually own a lot in south Florida that I spend most winters at.Taylor Russell and Timothée Chalamet play young lovers mutually bonded by … cannibalism?īones and All is getting more fleshed out by the day. Those types of properties do not fall under a campground but under a condo type association where you own your lot but everything around you is common land for all the owners to use (pool, clubhouse etc) and you must abide by the rules set in place by the board of directors etc.just like living in a stick and brick condo.these types of properties also require a monthly maintance which is often pretty costly.they are very popular and you will find many "owner" rv resorts in rv destinations like Florida and Arizona. Now don't confuse buying raw land and wanting to put an rv on it with developed land zoned as an rv resort/park where you can buy a lot and live on it permanently. No rv is built contruction wise (insulation, power consumption etc) that comes anywhere close to a the construction of a house or even a double wide trailer.so I would just build/buy/rent a home be it prefab or stick and brick and be done with it because I do not think you will find a piece of land where the zoning laws will allow you to park any rv style unit long term on raw land anyway.even places out in the middle of nowhere like west Texas or New Mexico where it was once common the local governments has now pretty much put a stop to it. Karla honestly I have no clue why anyone would want to buy an RV and put it on land somewhere and never move it again, because that's not the purpose the rv was designed for to begin with. Granted it is an alternative but I refuse to be propert poor ever again and don't wish to be a property owner or landlord any more. So I wonder if using the park address with lot number even if you don't get mail there would work? It would be the same thing as an apartment building! That is what is so discriminating about this.Apartment renters are doing the exact some thing us full time rvers are doing.renting a place to live year round.Īs far as buying and renting out property.been there and done that and don't want it any more. I will ask the parks I plan on staying in to see if they have such a service. The office gets my mail and they have boxes for all those who want them to collect our mail (not individual boxes.a box for every letter in the alphabet and they hand me my mail so that I don't get someone else's). I use the campground address with my Lot number. Thank you all for your responses and I will certainly check out all the links you sent. I hope others will chime in with information or ideas. But the thing is, I really don't want to rent or own property! Or, maybe even buy a small home with a big driveway. I think another solution would be to rent a small furnished apartment, or purchase a small condo in an affordable and desirable location with nearby facilities for RV storage. StealthRabbit's suggestion is certainly a possibility. I don't think a campground works unless you can have your mail delivered there, and you pay rent there year-round. My own conclusion is it is necessary to either rent or own property in WA state in order to claim and/or maintain WA state residency. But, there can be other drawbacks to domiciling in those states, it depends a great deal on individual circumstances. These issues are not a problem in states that have designed their laws to be friendly to full-timers (South Dakota, Texas, and Florida). Posters in both these threads say they have been told by state agencies that the use of a mail service or a relative's address as a physical address is considered fraudulent and a felony.Īnother difficulty is that banks are required to record a physical address for all account holders, under provisions in the US Patriot Act. Here is an excellent discussion about this: This because the WA state DMV will not issue driver's licenses or vehicle registrations to a non-physical address (a PMB, for instance). The real difficulty for anyone wanting to maintain WA state residency while full-timing is the need for a permanent physical address. My research indicates the 180 day rule is not a major obstacle. I'm very interested in this question myself. ![]()
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