North Carolina mobile home moving laws sit in three layers that have to be satisfied in order: the road, the tax office, and the destination. Get any one wrong and the move is illegal, uninsured, or dead on arrival when the county won't let you set the home. This guide walks each layer the way the state actually enforces it — what permit covers the haul, what clears the home to leave its parcel, who's licensed to set it down, and what local rule decides whether it can be placed where you're sending it. Mobile Home Mover Pro owns this whole chain so the paperwork is filed in the right order, on the right day.
The road: NCDOT Publication MH-2 oversize permit
A manufactured home travels as an oversize load, and the authority to move it comes from a state trip permit issued under the NCDOT Publication MH-2 mobile and modular home permit rules. That permit does more than grant permission — it sets the terms of the haul. Movement is restricted to daylight hours, wider homes are held to a tighter weekday window (commonly around 9:00 AM–2:30 PM to avoid rush-hour traffic), and the move is prohibited when wind gusts exceed roughly 25 mph because a wide, flat-sided home behaves like a sail. The permit also fixes the approved route to keep the load clear of low bridges and tight overhead clearances, and it specifies how many escort vehicles the width demands. Width, not section count, is the dial that drives the travel window and the escort requirement.
The tax office: the NCGS 105 county moving permit
Even with the road permit in hand, the home can't legally leave its lot until the county clears it. Under NCGS Chapter 105, Article 18 — the moving-permit provisions begin at § 105-316.1 — the county tax office issues a moving permit only after confirming there's no unpaid property tax on the home. The tax follows the structure, so a back-tax balance freezes the move until it's settled, and that prerequisite, not the small permit fee, is what people actually feel. North Carolina carves out one narrow exception: a lien-holder repossessing a manufactured home can obtain a limited moving permit (often a 7-day window) even with taxes unpaid, which keeps lender repo relocations from stalling on a defaulting owner. The mechanics of both permits — who files what and in what order — are laid out on our mobile home moving permit guide.
The set-up: licensing and NC OSFM inspection
North Carolina doesn't treat setting a home as casual labor. The installation — building the piers, blocking and leveling the chassis, and anchoring it — is regulated work that requires a state set-up / installation credential, and the finished set is inspected before the home can be occupied. The governing standards come from the NC Office of the State Fire Marshal manufactured-home program, which adopts the state's manufactured-home installation regulations covering pier spacing, leveling tolerance, and tie-down. Anchoring in particular has to match the home's HUD wind zone, so a coastal Zone II home near Wilmington carries a heavier tie-down spec than an inland Zone I home. An unlicensed set that fails inspection can void the home's warranty and its insurance — the reason the cheap install is the expensive one. The set-and-level work itself is covered on our setup and leveling pages.
The title: real property vs. movable home
Many North Carolina manufactured homes have been detitled to the land — converted to real property once they were permanently set — and a home titled to the land can't simply be towed off. To move it, the title status has to be addressed through the county tax office: the home is treated as movable again for the haul, then re-sited and, if it's staying put, often re-detitled to the land at the destination. When the home is crossing into South Carolina, a second titling system enters the picture entirely — that scenario is its own animal, covered on our moving a mobile home across state lines guide.
The destination: zoning and age caps
The last rule is the one people forget until it's too late: a home can be perfectly legal to tow and still be barred from where it's going. Towing is state transport law; siting is local zoning, and North Carolina jurisdictions vary widely. Many counties and towns confine manufactured homes to certain districts and enforce an age cap — refusing to permit installation of a unit older than 10, 15, or 20 years, with pre-1976 homes commonly excluded outright. The UNC School of Government's manufactured housing and zoning summary explains how NC localities are allowed to regulate placement. Confirm the receiving county's and any park's rules before you pay for the move — the age question is unpacked on can you move a pre-1976 mobile home, and the rules across the line are on our South Carolina mobile home moving laws page.