Dwellito
Dwellito is an online marketplace for prefabricated and modular homes, ADU plans, and related services that helps homeowners compare factory-built products, explore plan purchases, and connect with manufacturers and vetted partners for California-style projects.
Factory housing buyers often bounce between manufacturer sites, opaque pricing, and disconnected plan libraries. Dwellito aggregates browse paths by price band, bedroom count, and product type such as ADUs, modular homes, and garage conversions, with messaging aimed at self-serve comparison without on-site sales pressure (Dwellito, 2026).
The site states that thousands of homeowners have used Dwellito for discovery and quotes, which signals scale even though individual project outcomes vary by jurisdiction and manufacturer lead times (Dwellito, 2026). Beyond listings, Dwellito advertises add-on services such as a site planner and site analysis, pointing toward light feasibility support around placement and local rules rather than full engineering stamps.
Dwellito is consumer-facing, yet it sits squarely in residential construction supply chains: manufacturers gain reach, and buyers get a structured way to narrow modular SKUs and plan sets before engaging contractors. It is not a BIM authoring environment; at best it complements early decisions before a project moves into CAD, permit, and construction workflows.
Because modular rules differ by city and state, buyers should still verify zoning, utility connections, and financing outside any marketplace UI. Treat Dwellito as a procurement and education starting point, not a permit guarantor.
Specifications
Pricing
Platforms
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Pros and cons
Pros
- Centralizes many modular and plan options behind one search experience
- Transparent positioning about comparing without aggressive sales calls
- Useful for homeowners entering ADU and modular journeys
- Adds light site-oriented services for placement questions
Cons
- Not a BIM coordination or clash detection product
- Does not replace structural engineering, Title 24, or local zoning approvals
- Coverage depends on which manufacturers participate in the marketplace
- Regional focus may not match every country or code system
Key features
Prefab and modular catalog: Browse factory-built homes with filters for budget and layout (Dwellito, 2026).
Plan marketplace: Purchase pre-designed plans for contractor-led builds (Dwellito, 2026).
ADU focus: Dedicated flows for accessory dwelling units and backyard offices in markets such as California (Dwellito, 2026).
Site services: Lists site planner and site analysis offerings for placement-oriented help (Dwellito, 2026).
Manufacturer exposure: Positions the platform as a channel for producers to reach buyers without traditional showroom visits (Dwellito, 2026).
Pricing
Browse and compare
Contact sales
Marketplace browsing; homes and plans priced per listing; verify on dwellito.com (2026).
Frequently asked questions
Is Dwellito a general contractor?
No. It is a marketplace and information layer. Construction execution still depends on licensed contractors and manufacturers you contract with directly.
Can I buy only blueprints on Dwellito?
Yes. The site advertises plan purchases separate from full modular procurement so you can work with a local builder under purchased drawings (Dwellito, 2026).
Does Dwellito work outside California?
Much of the ADU language targets California-style projects. Other states have different ADU rules; confirm feasibility with local authorities even if listings appear in your area.
Is Dwellito free for homeowners?
Browsing is positioned as self-serve comparison; specific listings, plans, and services carry their own prices from manufacturers and Dwellito service tiers. Read each quote for what is included (Dwellito, 2026).
Does Dwellito integrate with Revit or BIM?
The public site does not market BIM integrations. Expect handoff via PDF plans and manufacturer packages rather than native IFC exchange.
How many people have used Dwellito?
Marketing copy cites thousands of homeowners having used the service for discovery and quotes; treat the figure as a directional signal rather than a third-party audit (Dwellito, 2026).