Clayton Homes was founded in 1956 by
Jim Clayton. The business began by refurbishing and reselling used
mobile homes. Clayton Homes established its own mortgage company in 1974 and added a manufacturing division in 1975. Each year from 1989 through 1992, Clayton Homes was named on the
Forbes list of the best small companies in America. Kevin Clayton, Jim Clayton's son, took over the company in 1999. In 2002, Clayton Homes earned a revenue of $1.2 billion. Cerberus Capital Management also expressed interest in bidding for the company. The certificate of merger was filed in Delaware, and Clayton Homes stock was removed from the New York Stock Exchange. In 2007, Clayton Homes' revenue was $3.66 billion. Clayton Homes sold its land-lease communities business to Denver-based Yes Companies LLC in 2008. The deal involved 65 properties in 11 states. The i-house brand was introduced in May 2008 as a
green,
energy efficient home. By 2009, Clayton Homes had sold over 1.5 million homes. In 2009, Clayton Homes launched the eHome as a more affordable version of the i-house. Clayton Homes was involved in a lawsuit in 2011 with FEMA after providing
portable classrooms as part of
Hurricane Katrina relief which were found to contain
formaldehyde. Afterwards, one of 12 prefabricated shelters provided to Haiti through the
Clinton Foundation after the 2010 earthquake was found to have a formaldehyde level of 250
ppb, "a very high level" according to a scientist specializing in indoor pollutants at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. A news story in 2015 claimed that Clayton Homes unfairly targets and exploits minority home buyers. Clayton Homes was further criticized for its alleged use of corrupt business practices. The company has denied discriminating against its customers or its workers.
Warren Buffett, the CEO of
Berkshire Hathaway, defended Clayton against predatory lending claims in an interview saying: "We have 300,000 loans on the books and in the last 3 years I've not received one letter of complaint from anybody." In 2015, Clayton Homes worked with
Oak Ridge National Laboratory and the architectural firm
Skidmore, Owings & Merrill to produce a
3D printed house and car which share a single energy unit. Clayton Homes expanded into the traditional home building market with the acquisition of Georgia-based homebuilder Chafin Communities in 2015, and Tennessee-based Goodall Homes in 2016. Clayton Homes acquired River Birch Homes, based in Hackleburg, Alabama, in April 2016. The following month, Clayton Homes hosted its first Birmingham-based home show. The show had 492 attendees and featured 27 homes from 27 facilities. That same month, Clayton Homes announced that it would partner with nonprofit Next Step to build a modular duplex in Waco, Texas on a lot owned by NeighborWorks Waco in order to create affordable housing in the Greater Waco area. In 2016, Clayton Homes was recognized as number 292 on Forbes' list of America's Best Employers. Known for its manufactured housing, Clayton Homes is expanding into the site-built, $250,000-and-under housing market, as reported in July 2017. Since October 2015, Clayton Homes has acquired homebuilders in
Atlanta,
Nashville,
Kansas City,
Denver, and
Birmingham. In 2019, Clayton Homes also worked with Colorado-based advertising agency Made to create the "Prefabulous" series to promote its manufactured housing and attempt to fight the view that off-site built homes are "low-end and one-size-fits-all". As of 2021, Clayton Properties Group, a subsidiary of Clayton Homes, is ranked number eight in size on Builder Magazine’s Top 100 list of home builders in the US with a gross revenue of $2.98 billion. == Operations ==