Spacious interior of extra-wide Knoll tiny house showing open living room and kitchen

Extra-Wide Tiny House Sleeps Five With Room to Spare

🤯 Mind Blown

A new 10-foot-wide tiny house proves downsizing doesn't have to mean cramped living. The spacious design fits a family of five with full-size amenities and smart storage throughout.

Living tiny just got a whole lot bigger, thanks to a thoughtfully designed home that makes small-space living feel surprisingly spacious.

The Knoll, built by Backcountry Tiny Homes, stretches the traditional tiny house concept with an extra-wide design that transforms how families can live on the road. At 10 feet wide and 38 feet long, this towable home offers the apartment-like comfort many downsizers dream about.

Inside, an open living room and kitchen create a welcoming space that doesn't feel like a compromise. The living area features an L-shaped sofa bed for guests, entertainment center, and generous storage cabinets. The kitchen comes fully equipped with a full-size fridge, four-burner stove, oven, microwave, and a breakfast bar for two.

The real genius shows up in how the home sleeps up to five people comfortably. The main bedroom sits in the raised gooseneck area with enough headroom to stand fully upright, plus space for a double bed and work desk. A second loft adds room for one more person, while the living room sofa converts for additional guests.

Extra-Wide Tiny House Sleeps Five With Room to Spare

Practical touches make daily life easier too. The bathroom includes a washer and dryer, shower, and an incinerating toilet that burns waste to ash, eliminating the need for traditional plumbing. Storage-integrated stairs lead to the bedroom, maximizing every inch of floor space.

The home arrives staged with furniture and belongings, helping buyers visualize exactly how their life could look inside. Natural wood accents, painted board and batten walls, and pops of color create a warm, lived-in feeling that fights the sterile vibe some tiny homes carry.

The Bright Side

The Knoll shows how innovative design can solve one of tiny living's biggest challenges: making downsizing feel like a choice rather than a sacrifice. Families who want to reduce their environmental footprint, lower housing costs, or embrace nomadic living no longer have to choose between their dreams and their comfort.

At $162,950 fully furnished (or $81,475 for a basic shell), the home costs significantly less than traditional housing in most markets while offering the freedom to take your home anywhere.

This extra-wide approach proves that thinking just slightly outside the box can create solutions that work for real families with real needs.

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Based on reporting by New Atlas

This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.

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