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Mobile Home Leveling in Conway, SC

Conway carries the deepest mobile home inventory in Horry County — dozens of parks and thousands of owned-land homes spread along US-501, Highway 90, Highway 544, and the rural roads out toward Aynor and Bucksport. We relevel, repair piers, and service tie-downs across all of it, 20–30 minutes from the Myrtle Beach hub: singlewides $450–$800, doublewides $750–$1,400, free level checks, firm written quotes.

If the Grand Strand has a capital of manufactured housing, it’s Conway.

Conway’s housing stock, honestly described

Two kinds of manufactured-home living dominate here, and they settle differently.

The park corridors. The 501 corridor between Conway and Myrtle Beach, plus Highway 90 and 544, hold the county’s densest run of parks and land-lease communities — directory listings count more than fifty parks in and around Conway alone, from small family-run parks to large communities like the 55+ land-lease neighborhoods off 501. A lot of this inventory dates to the 80s and 90s, which matters twice: older homes have had more settling cycles on the same pads, and units built before HUD’s 1994 wind-standard update are the ones most often short on anchoring for a Wind Zone II county.

Owned land. Outside town, singlewides and doublewides on family land are a Horry County tradition — out Highway 905, toward Aynor, down toward Bucksport. These homes often have the best pads (owners could pick their ground) and the longest-deferred maintenance (no park manager asking questions). It’s common for us to be the first crew under an owned-land home in fifteen years.

The river changes the math here

Conway is a Waccamaw River town, and the river writes the ground rules. Florence in 2018 put the Waccamaw at a record 21.16 feet at Conway — nearly three and a half feet over the old record — after 23 inches of rain fell on the county, and around 2,000 Horry County homes flooded, many outside mapped flood zones. Bucksport and the low ground south of town have flooded repeatedly since.

For a manufactured home, saturation is the part that matters even when floodwater never touches the floor. Piers stand on pads pressed into sand; sand that spends weeks saturated compacts and migrates under load. Homes on Conway’s low ground routinely need releveling on the short end of the 3–5 year cycle, and any home whose lot went underwater should have its piers and straps checked afterward as a matter of course — pad damage from a flood shows up as sticking doors six months later, not the day the water recedes.

The higher sandy ground — much of town proper and the ridges along 501 — behaves better. Same sand, less water, slower cycle. The free level check tells you which kind of lot you actually have.

What Conway homes call us for

  • Releveling — the core call: sticking doors, sloping floors, marriage-line gaps, most homes done in a day.
  • Pier & pad repair — heavy in the lowlands, where pads sink and lean; quoted per pier.
  • Tie-downs & anchors — especially the pre-1994 park stock; all of Horry County is 100-mph Wind Zone II.
  • Vapor barrier work — Conway’s damp ground makes a torn belly expensive fast.
  • Pre-sale inspections — park sales along the corridors and estate sales on family land both trigger them, and Conway’s parks are trading briskly as retirees keep arriving.

Pricing is identical everywhere we work — the full tables are on the pricing page — and all work is performed by licensed, insured local mobile home installers, as South Carolina’s Manufactured Housing Board requires.

Response from the Myrtle Beach hub

Conway sits 20–30 minutes up 501 from Myrtle Beach, and the corridor parks are closer still. That keeps level checks same-week in normal seasons. Fair warning from experience: the weeks after a major rain event book out fast here — post-Florence, the wait stretched — so if your doors started sticking after a wet spell, get on the schedule early rather than waiting for the floor to develop a lean.

Free level check, pier-by-pier readings, firm written price. That’s the whole pitch — request one, or read the FAQ first if you want the details.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does mobile home leveling cost in Conway?

Same published ranges as everywhere we work: singlewides $450–$800, doublewides $750–$1,400, with pier resets $75–$150 each and rebuilds $150–$400 each. Conway is about 20–30 minutes from the Myrtle Beach hub, and the level check is free.

Do Conway homes settle faster than homes near the beach?

The low-lying ones do. Conway sits on the Waccamaw River, and homes on low ground that saturates — or that flooded during Florence in 2018 — settle noticeably faster than homes on the sandy ridges. Ground that has been underwater is ground where pads move; post-flood homes should have piers and straps checked even if the living space stayed dry.

Do I need a permit for leveling work in Conway?

A routine relevel generally doesn't need one, but setup, moving, and some structural work runs through the county or city permit office depending on where the home sits — much of the Conway area is unincorporated Horry County under County Code Enforcement. When a permit applies, the licensed installer pulls it and passes the fee through at cost.

📞 Call (854) 212-5941