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Mobile Home Ceilings Guide: Gypsum Ceiling Panels

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Mobile home ceilings are a popular topic amongst homeowners. They play a major impact in every room so it’s important that they look great. We’ve already covered how to paint mobile home ceilings so in this article we cover the different designs of gypsum ceiling panels and how to buy replacement panels.

Most mobile homes and older manufactured homes (or lower end, more affordable models) have ceilings made of gypsum instead of drywall.

Gypsum is a natural mineral used for blackboard chalk, drywall, and wallboards in mobile homes. It’s affordable, lightweight, and doesn’t require finishing which makes it a perfect material for ceilings. Manufactured home builders use gypsum wall panels and ceiling panels.

Gypsum ceiling panels are a close cousin to drywall. The major difference being drywall is usually thicker and has a paper wrapping on all sides making drywall smooth. Mobile home gypsum panels are not smooth, they have a slight texture that most homeowners dislike.

The gypsum panels will usually run the entire width of a single wide or half the double wide. They are typically 16″, 24″, or 48″ wide and 5/16″ or 1/2″ thick.

There are four major disadvantages of older gypsum ceiling panels. First, they are delicate and easy to damage. Secondly, the older mobile home ceilings tend to sag or become unattached from the trusses. Finally, they also tend to turn yellow.

Popular Mobile Home Ceiling Designs

The image below shows a typical 4-foot wide gypsum ceiling panel system with a slight texture. Notice the roses?

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A 4′ wide ceiling panel is attached to every truss that is 16″ apart.

Ceiling Panels with Rosettes

One of the most common mobile home ceiling designs uses 4-foot wide ceiling panels screwed into the roof trusses every 24″ or 16″ (the typical space between the roof trusses). A flat plastic trim covers where two seams meet and rosettes are used on the trusses in between the seams.

Rosettes are decorative washers used on the screws to attach the ceiling panels to the roof truss. They are screwed into every roof truss except where two panels meet. In the image above, the rosettes are used at 16″ intervals on a 48″ wide panel (meaning the trusses are 16″ apart). A batten, also called a spline or strip, covers the seams where two panels meet.

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Rosette Washer for Screws

You can buy 25 rosettes with screws for $4.50 at Mobile Home Parts Store here.

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SeaSpray Gypsum Panel
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Mobile home ceiling panels are 4 foot wide and has screws with rosette washers and a channeled batten that covers the seams.

Ceiling Panels with Beaded Profile

Another mobile home ceiling design uses 16″- 24″ wide ceiling panels with a spline covering the seams where two panels meet.

Dodi Dolendi painted her mobile home ceiling recently. You can see how the battens yellowed more than the panels because they are made of plastic.

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Ceiling Panel with Channel System

A channeled ceiling divider is another way to install ceiling panels. The lip is stapled into the top of the truss and the next panel sits in the C-channel.

Another popular method of installing gypsum ceiling panels on a mobile home are these integrated strips. They are glued over the seams of the panels. You will need to loosen one of the ends and then use a serrated blade to slide behind it to loosen the adhesive and pull the strip down.

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Many ceilings in older mobile homes have flat battens (also called splines or strips) that cover the seams where each panel meets. However, some builders were a bit more creative and gave their ceilings a mini-coffered design with dimensional beams, aka false beams.

Some builders even installed lights into these boxes for a little added flair like the home below.

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April Lea West recently purchased this cool mobile home with lighted ceiling beams. I hope she keeps them!

This mobile home has a more rustic wood beam design that both conceals some of the seams and helps give the home that peaked gable roof at the front door:

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Rustic wood beams used on a mobile home ceiling.

In order to use shorter ceiling panel lengths and give the home a custom coffered ceiling design, some manufactured home builders installed false beams that span straight down the middle of the ceiling and down each side to cover the ceiling panel seams.

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This home has a large beams running down the center of the ceiling and down the sides every 4′ to cover the seams.

Mobile Home Ceiling Panels are Not Easy to Find

The chances of finding the original ceiling panels that match your home are slim to none. Sorry!

It would make life too easy for us lowly mobile and manufactured homeowners if we could actually find and afford replacement materials for our homes. Bathtubs, doors, vinyl patterned wallboards, and gypsum ceiling panels are difficult to find and if you can find them they are expensive.

Your best (and probably only) chance of finding the gypsum ceiling panels you need is at your local mobile home supply store.

SeaSpray, the Brand Name of Gypsum Ceiling Panels

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You’ll want to ask your local mobile home supply store for gypsum ceiling panels. The most common brand is SeaSpray Brand Hi-Strength MVR Ceiling Panels by National Gypsum but many mobile home suppliers sell them as C-Spray instead of SeaSpray. I’m not sure if that’s a licensing thing or if it’s a whole different product to be completely honest.

It’s nearly impossible to get these panels for a few reasons:

  • They are 14′ long and very thin and delicate. You have to fully support the panels while in transit so they don’t break.
  • Gypsum ceiling panels are easily damaged
  • The chances of finding an exact match replacement panel for your ceiling is slim to none

If you can find a local mobile home supply store that carries them (or will order them for you) consider yourself lucky. But that still won’t help because you need a panel that has the same texture as yours.

mobile home ceilings - Gypsum Ceiling PanelsPin
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Ordering Ceiling Panels

Supply houses will not deliver or ship these panels and they offer no guarantee or exchanges after you order them because they are so easy to damage and hard to handle.

The SeaSpray panels are available in 5/16″ and 1/2″ thicknesses and are 4-foot wide and between 84-192″ in length. You’ll probably want the 5/16″ panels that are 4 foot wide and as long as the width of your single wide mobile home (or half the side of a double-wide).

The 4-foot x 13.9 foot and 5/16″ thick panels cost around $58 each last I looked. If you are just repairing or patching a ceiling panel you’ll want to order the size of the original panel.

Tip: If you are able to find these panels buy at least 15% more than you need to compensate for damage and install errors.

To be honest, your best option for replacing mobile home ceilings is probably drywall or one of our favorite mobile home ceiling replacement materials we listed in this article.

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Notes on Mobile Home Ceilings

Have you replaced your mobile home ceiling with a unique or creative material? Have you done a ceiling replacement with sheetrock? We’d love to see and hear from you in our new Facebook group, Mobile Home Living: Remodels and Repair. We’ve managed to get over 2,000 members in just a few months and everyone is so friendly, supportive, and helpful.

As always, thank you so much for reading Mobile Home Living®!

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  1. Just bought a 1969 skyline Hillcrest with intentions to remodel. The original plan was to drywall ceiling and walls.

    After removing the 4’x12′ ceiling panels my husband was very disappointed that the roof trusses are not strong enough to carry a drywall ceiling.

    So disappointed that we are in 2023 and they have not made a lightweight modern looking non mobile home looking inexpensive alternative for drywall that looks like drywall.

  2. Sounds like they gave you some good advice. Just make sure to get any dust, etc. off the ceiling before starting and the primer will do the trick.

  3. how do i prep the ceiling tiles before painting? i have a 1968 Park model with gypsum ceiling panels…they are a semigloss…and need to be painted…
    the paint store said i can’t wash them, just brush them and then use the shellac-primer by zinsser, said that’s the onl y one that will really provide the coverage….then paint with ceiling paint….said not to use the water based zinsser primer….
    so advice on getting the panels ready to prime….and also on the suggested primer.
    thanks much,
    sharon

  4. I would definitely use a primer, it will help the ceiling to coat evenly. You could possibly just use a brand like kilz that has the primer and paint in one.

  5. I just need to paint the ceiling in 1979 mobile home; what kind of paint should I use so I don’t damage any of the ceiling panels? Do I need a primer?

  6. I have a 1965 mobile home that needs a few ceiling panels replaced. Some are in good shape however some have holes that I’m assuming are hard to patch. Since these panels are hard to get and very expensive I’m probably going to just replace all of them with 1/4 sheetrock, and just trim them out with batten, and rosette’s. Cheaper option.

  7. Linda Rohrman

    Omggg…..I can’t believe it’s this hard just to get replacement panels for a 1980 mobile home! Not only can I not find the ceiling panels to match, but can’t find a place which has a selection of new design panels to choose from!! Why is it so hard to get these when there are thousands of mobile homes here who need help after Ian??

  8. Thelma Rena Coyle

    Do ya’ll have the ceiling panels in the little bitty flower and screws things

  9. Can the ceilings of a newer mobile home model withstand the installment and usage of a dance pole?

  10. Crystal Adkins

    Hi Julio,

    Lowes and Home Depot will have most of the ceiling supplies you need. The long mobile home ceiling panels are hard to get because shipping is so difficult (they damage easily) but you may be able to talk your local mobile home supply center into ordering the length you need (the width of your home or half the home if a double wide). Best of luck!

  11. Crystal Adkins

    Hi Greg,

    It sounds like they went the cheap route and didn’t use insulation or didn’t use very good insulation. You should be able to add insulation between the roof trusses and between the wall studs. It shouldn’t be too difficult if regular paneling was used to enclose it. Best of luck!

  12. Crystal Adkins

    Hi Laurie,

    As long as you screw your hook into a failing beam it should be fine to hang a plant (assuming it’s not too heavy). You can usually tell where a beam is by the seams on your ceiling. If you have little flower shaped things on your ceiling that can indicate a beam as well.

    Good luck!

  13. I have a older single wide that they used one of the awnings and enclosed it to make a den.
    But in the summer it is extremely hot and cold in the winter because the ceiling is the tin awnning . How can i insulate it to cut down the heat? Any ideas

  14. Crystal Adkins

    Hi Dennis,

    It’s probably going to be easier to give the whole ceiling a new texture. A quick run with a texture spray should cover it all nicely without much work. Best of luck!

  15. Previous owners repaired where cooler had leaked on ceiling but never finished it. I’ve finished it out but now trying to figure out how to match seaspray texture. Any info on how to go about this would be greatly appreciated

  16. You are so right Crystal, I couldn’t find anyone that sold these replacement panels. So I went with 3/8″ sheets to keep the weight at a minimum harder to finish but it does look so much better. Thanks for your insight on this subject.
    Paul

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Crystal Adkins

Crystal Adkins

Crystal Adkins created Mobile Home Living in 2011 after buying a 1978 single wide and searching online for mobile home remodeling ideas but finding very little. Today, it's the most popular resource in America for mobile home information and inspiration and has been visited over 40 million times.

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