FightMyPark

Mobile home park records request

The records a resident can request from a mobile home park — the lease, rules, fee and utility statements, disclosures, and rent history — and how to ask in writing.

Published June 4, 2026

A quick reference to records a resident commonly requests from a mobile home park, and how to ask. This is general information, not legal advice, and the authors are not lawyers — what a park must provide depends on your state and lease. Consider a licensed attorney or legal-aid program if a park refuses required records.

At a glance

RecordWhy request it
Your leaseThe controlling document for rent, term, and obligations.
Community rulesThe current, dated set that governs day-to-day life.
Fee / utility breakdownTo see how charges and utility bills are calculated.
Statutory disclosureSeveral states require a written disclosure or statement of rights.
Rent-increase historySome states require a multi-year rent history on request.
Owner / manager contactThe legal entity and where to send notices.
Account statementYour balance and payment history, to check claimed amounts.

How to use this

This sheet lists what people commonly request; it does not establish what your park must provide. Make requests in writing, be specific, keep copies, and check your state's park law for any records the park is required to give.

Where to read more

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Frequently asked questions

What records can I request from a mobile home park?
Residents commonly request a copy of their lease and the community rules, a fee and utility-billing breakdown, any statutory disclosure or statement of rights, the owner/manager contact, and — in states that require it — a rent-increase history. What a park must provide depends on your state and lease. This is general, educational information, not legal advice.
How do I ask a mobile home park for documents?
Put the request in writing, be specific about each document and the dates, keep a copy, and note the date you sent it. A written record helps if you later need to raise an issue or file a complaint. This is general information, not legal advice — see your state's FightMyPark guide for what the park must provide.

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