Home Depot is selling a tiny home for $3,834 and customers will love its pre-assembled and ‘hassle-free installation’

SHOPPERS are in luck if they’re looking to find a tiny home for cheap because The Home Depot has one for sale for just $3,834 a month.

Tiny homes have surged in popularity as Americans look to lower their monthly spending rates.

The minimalist lifestyle is often preferred as tiny home enthusiasts can live their lives on the go while paying nothing in terms of a mortgage.

While traditional homes often cost upwards of $300,000, a tiny home will likely only set you back somewhere between $10,000 and $100,000.

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At The Home Depot, a fully preassembled tiny home costs $23,000, and it comes with space for a full-sized bed, couch, bathroom and mini-kitchen.

While forking over $23,000 at one time might seem like a hefty downpayment, The Home Depot also lets shoppers split their payments over the course of six months.

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That means each month, you’ll only be responsible for as little as $3,834 and then you’ll be done paying for your home entirely.

The unit also comes both pre-assembled with steel panels so you can easily install it to wherever you’re looking to live.

The model is said to be designed to be constructed on a concrete slab.

And since it’s made of high-quality steel, you’ll be guaranteed “durable use,” according to the product description.

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“They are also fire resistant,” the product description reads. “Steel is recyclable, making it the pioneer of environment-friendly projects.”

The Home Depot also offers you the option to change the unit’s look, change the door opening to a different side or even add a wall inside the shed’s interior.

The house is 281.68 square in total.

It also comes with assembly instructions, architectural prelim construction plans, and a stamped certificate showing it meets your location's building codes.

While the unit doesn’t come with plumbing or equipment, these are additional features you can add to transform the space into a true home.

THINGS TO KEEP IN MIND

While tiny homes often offer more financial freedom than traditional housing, there are some disadvantages to living in a mini unit.

Those living in RVs, for example, have many drawbacks.

While the homes on wheels present the flexibility of traveling wherever you’d like, many town ordinances require them to only be parked in certain spaces for a short period of time.

And even if you live in a shed-turned-tiny-home, there’s a strong possibility you’ll encounter pushback.

Sheds also require you to know your state and county’s zoning laws, as you typically won’t be able to fully live in a shed on someone else’s home property.

You will also be responsible for adding all the required plumbing and electrical services.

Finding a space for your tiny home may not prove as simple as imagined either.

Spaces are routinely put up for auction on sites like Facebook Marketplace, but you also might have to look for one in an established tiny home village.

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One tiny home resident paid $600 in rent for years until zoning laws threatened her with an eviction.

Two brothers also documented how they turned a $100 trailer into a luxury mini-camper.