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Mobile Home Repair in Concord, NC

Repair help for mobile and manufactured homes in Concord and across Cabarrus County — leveling, foundation, skirting, roofing, plumbing, and exterior work through our referral network.

Manufactured home repair across Concord and Cabarrus County

Concord and the surrounding Cabarrus County towns have a mix of long-established manufactured home communities and rural setups on family land. Many homes were placed decades ago off Highway 601, Poplar Tent Road, and out toward Midland, Mount Pleasant, and Kannapolis. Newer double-wides are common closer to the growing corridor along I-85 north of Charlotte. Carolina Mobile Home Repair works to connect Concord-area homeowners with independent repair professionals who focus on manufactured construction and understand how these homes actually behave over time.

Clay soil and foundation movement

Cabarrus County soils are typical Piedmont clay — sticky when wet, hard and cracked in a dry summer. Clay swells and contracts with each moisture cycle and puts a manufactured home's pier-and-block foundation under steady pressure. Owners around Concord commonly notice sloped floors, sticking doors, drywall cracks that reopen after patching, and gaps at trim joints. A leveling professional checks each pier against the beams and marriage line and resets what has moved, then looks at drainage and grading so the movement isn't just repeated.

Seasonal storms and roof exposure

Spring and summer thunderstorms roll through Cabarrus County regularly, sometimes with hail and strong straight-line winds. Even without a headline storm, a season of heavy rain adds up on an older roof — sealant fails at vents, fasteners work loose on metal panels, and shingle edges start lifting. Repair pros in the network inspect the roof for soft decking, flashing issues, and fastener wear and explain repair-versus-replacement based on what the roof actually shows rather than a general recommendation.

Drainage around the home

Water is one of the top underlying causes of foundation and underbelly damage on manufactured homes in Concord. Downspouts that empty next to the skirting, low spots in the yard that hold water after a storm, and grading that slopes toward the home all push moisture into the crawl space. That leads to sinking piers on the wet side of the home, wet insulation, and eventually damage to the subfloor. Repair pros can address the immediate leveling and underbelly work and flag the drainage or skirting-vent changes that need to happen alongside it.

Foundation and pier repair

Beyond leveling adjustments, some Concord-area homes need actual repair to the support system — cracked or crumbling blocks, footers that have sunk into softer ground, and missing or loose tie-downs. Repair professionals inspect the full pier arrangement, replace failed components, and check anchors and straps for condition. On homes that have shifted repeatedly, the goal is usually to correct what is failing now and reduce the causes that keep pulling the foundation out of place.

Skirting and exterior wear

Skirting on Concord-area homes gets hit by sun, weed trimmers, wind events, and occasional pest activity. Torn or missing panels let cold air, animals, and moisture into the crawl space and drive the next round of damage. Repair pros can patch individual sections, replace a full run of skirting, or move to insulated or reinforced panels depending on how the home is set. Exterior siding, trim, and doors on manufactured homes have their own wear patterns and are best handled by pros who work on this construction regularly.

Underbelly and insulation

Cabarrus County's warm, humid summers and cold snaps in winter are hard on the underside of a manufactured home. Torn belly wrap lets insulation drop out, exposes plumbing to freezing air, and lets warm humid air condense on cooler ducts and floors. Owners see the result as higher power bills, musty odors, cold floors in winter, and pipes that freeze faster than they should. Repair pros patch or replace the belly board, restore insulation, and check for the moisture, pest, or storm issue that caused the tear.

Plumbing exposure in Concord winters

Cabarrus County typically sees a handful of hard freezes each winter, usually short cold snaps rather than sustained deep freezes. On a manufactured home with open skirting or a torn belly wrap, even a short overnight is enough to split a supply line near an exterior wall. The plumbing calls that come out of Concord tend to cluster around those cold weeks: burst lines behind vanities, failed heat tape on lines that should have been reinsulated years ago, and slow leaks at aging fittings that a freeze finally forced open. Plumbing pros who work on manufactured layouts can handle the emergency repair and walk you through what would prevent the next one.

How the referral process works

  1. Call the number shown on the website.
  2. Describe the repair issue and your property location in the Concord area.
  3. Speak with an available repair professional when coverage is available. Availability varies by location and repair type, and we do not guarantee that every caller will be connected immediately.

Service availability in and around Concord

We accept calls from Concord and surrounding Cabarrus County communities, including Kannapolis, Harrisburg, Midland, Mount Pleasant, and rural areas along Highway 601 and Poplar Tent Road. Homeowners in adjacent parts of Mecklenburg, Rowan, Stanly, and Union counties are welcome to call as well. Coverage is real but not uniform, availability varies by location and repair type, and we do not employ the repair crews directly.

Services available to Concord-area homeowners

Nearby service areas

Concord is northeast of Charlotte along I-85. Nearby city pages that may be relevant: See all service areas.

Frequently asked questions

Do you cover all of Cabarrus County?

We accept calls from Concord, Kannapolis, Harrisburg, Midland, Mount Pleasant, and most surrounding areas. Coverage isn't guaranteed in every town; call to describe what is happening and we will look for coverage in your area.

My home has sloped floors and sticking doors. Is that the soil?

Very often, yes. Cabarrus County's Piedmont clay expands and contracts with moisture and steadily shifts a pier-and-block foundation. A leveling professional inspects each pier and resets or replaces what has moved, and looks at drainage so the pattern isn't just repeated.

A storm damaged part of my roof or skirting. What should I do?

Hail and straight-line wind are the two most common culprits around Concord. Walk the perimeter (safely) and note any dented metal, torn shingles, missing skirting panels, or fresh dents on gutters and vent caps — those signs help a roofing pro tell hail from age-related wear. Call to describe what failed, and a roofing pro can look at what's actually repairable versus what may need a fuller replacement.

Water pools under my home after heavy rain. Is that a repair issue?

Yes — it's one of the more common underlying problems around Concord. Repair pros can address damaged belly wrap and insulation and flag drainage or skirting fixes that need to happen alongside. Larger yard drainage work sometimes requires a separate specialist.

How do I keep my mobile home plumbing from freezing in winter?

The biggest wins in Concord are closing off any open skirting before the first hard freeze and patching torn belly wrap so the crawl space isn't pulling in outside air. Wrap or heat-tape any supply lines close to exterior walls, and if your home has an older PB or gray-poly line, ask a plumbing pro to look at it — those older systems fail more often after a freeze/thaw cycle than modern PEX.

Talk With a Repair Professional

Call to discuss what is happening with your home in the Concord area. Your call may be connected with an available repair professional serving your area. Availability varies by location and repair type.

Call Now — (704) 312-7450