An Army veteran bought a FedEx van for $3,000 and turned it into a tiny home on wheels

Scientific Playa

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This Army Vet is very proactive with his life instead of giving up in/with this challenging economy and high cost of living expenses these days.

An Army veteran bought a FedEx van for $3,000 and turned it into a tiny home on wheels​

Jyoti Mann
Aug 19, 2023


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Jonathan Norris bought the van in early 2020. Jonathan Norris
  • Former soldier Jonathan Norris paid $3,000 for a FedEx van that he could turn into a mobile home.
  • He spent his weekends for two years converting the van so he could live rent-free.
  • It has a queen-sized bed, a TV, a kitchen with a microwave, and a storage area for his bikes.
Jonathan Norris was in the US Army for more than three years.
During his last year, which he spent in South Korea, Norris said he began saving up for a truck that he could live in when he returned to America.
After he got back to Washington State at the beginning of 2020, he found a 1998 FedEx truck he liked in California.
He said he managed to get it for a relatively "cheap" $3,000.
"It was a steal because a truck like this typically goes for at least $9,000," Norris told Insider.
The 37-year-old said he then spent his weekends over the next two years converting it into a mobile tiny home.

He spent more than two years researching van life and the right vehicle.​

The FedEx van with the back doors open showing it mid-construction at night

Jonathan Norris


Norris said he watched dozens of YouTube videos on van conversions and taught himself how to do the work himself.
"I thought about getting a regular box truck with a conventional cab but it would've meant getting into it from the back doors. The nice thing about the FedEx truck is I can get into the back through the driver's door," he added.

Norris paid a relatively low $3,000 for the van.​

The van when he first bought it. It's on a lorry

Jonathan Norris

He had about $25,000 for fixtures and furnishings.​

The TV in the FedEx van next to the kitchen

Jonathan Norris
Norris said he got most of his supplies and furnishings from Home Depot, including a refrigerator and a freezer, but went $5,000 over budget.

Norris converted the van while living in army barracks.​

Jonathan Norris pictured with a beard in his Fedex van home with a view of the bed

Jonathan Norris
"I'd work around 10 hours on Saturdays and up to five hours on a Sunday on the van," he said, adding that it was essentially an "empty aluminum box" when he first bought it.
He started by building a wooden frame for the walls and floor and insulating it.
In the first two months, he also installed an off-grid electrical system and a TV.


During the week he'd research what he planned to build that weekend.​




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"It was super, super overwhelming at first," he said. "I did that every weekend for two years until I had built an entire home."
He added that "every single thing" he did was a "learning experience," and that it "took a lot of research to make sure I didn't set my home on fire and blow myself up."

 

Scientific Playa

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Con't

He built the kitchen around the microwave oven.​

The kitchen which has a microwave and restaurant-style sink and wooden cabinets


Norris said he added a kitchen countertop and a restaurant-style sink from Home Depot.

He also added a table and seating area for up to four people that can be converted into a guest bed.
"It was like buying an entire house but buying it one screw at a time," he said. "I'd research how to build a wall and then go and buy the supplies from Home Depot to build it that weekend."


The van has a kitchen, shower, queen-size bed, and a storage area for his bikes.​

The storage area for his bikes and other.equipment underneath the bed frame

Jonathan Norris
The van has a microwave and a hot water heater. He also added 14 power outlets so that a socket was always within reach.
He said he also had two 800-watt solar panels on the roof as well as lithium batteries and an inverter meaning he can watch TV, listen to music, or play video games whenever he likes.



He stores his bicycles in the back of the truck.​

The Fedex truck with its back doors open and bikes in the back

Jonathan Norris

He now lives rent-free and is training to become a helicopter pilot.​

Jonathan Norris wearing a helmet whilst sat in a helicopter

Jonathan Norris
As Norris is attending college to earn a commercial helicopter license to become a pilot in the southwest of the US, he said he parked his van on an industrial estate close to the airport.
"Nobody has every said anything or bothered me, I blend right in," he said. "There's often truck drivers who park up and sleep in them on the same road."

Norris said he's much happier now.​

Jonathan Norris in his army uniform

Jonathan Norris
He said he felt free from the worry of a mortgage and that he enjoyed not being tied down to one place while spending most of his money on rent.
 

Bonk

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In Da 15th
That’s a pikey/gypo. :russ:

On a serious note: how do you sacrifice your life to fight illegal wars that enriched a few elites but end up living in a fake caravan like a bummy homeless gypsy?

Life ain’t fair but most people are willing tools in their misery.
 

Scientific Playa

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That’s a pikey/gypo. :russ:

On a serious note: how do you sacrifice your life to fight illegal wars that enriched a few elites but end up living in a fake caravan like a bummy homeless gypsy?

Life ain’t fair but most people are willing tools in their misery.
99% of us pay/serve the beast (military industrial complex) one way or another.

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