This study compared demographic characteristics and housing satisfactions of sixty-four homeowners living in a suburban neighborhood containing single-family detached dwellings of similar cost, size, age, and appearance. Equal numbers of respondents were owners of factory-built homes made by one company and owners of conventional units built by various builders. The sample was composed primarily of white, young, educated, middle-income couples with one to three children. Data were collected during personal interviews and analyzed using frequency counts, percentages, t-test, and the chi-square test. The findings indicated that there were no major differences in satisfactions between the two groups. Mean satisfaction scores showed owners of manufactured houses were most satisfied with the floor plan and least satisfied with the support system. Homeowners of the conventional houses were most satisfied with the support system and least satisfied with support spaces. The mean index scores for the two groups were almost identical: 1.97 for the owners of manufactured units to 1.98 for the owners of conventional units. When the chi-square test was used to test for differences between the two groups of homeowners, lighting (within the support system) proved to be significant at the .02 level. Owners of conventionally built units were better satisfied with their home lighting. The study documented that the homeowners were satisfied with their new houses regardless of whether the houses were built in a factory or on location.