
Most 30-foot tiny homes feel like they’re apologizing for their size. The Smidge, a new build from Alberta-based Teacup Tiny Homes, doesn’t bother — every wall, staircase, and fold-down surface has been quietly doing double duty the whole time.
Sitting on a triple-axle trailer, the Smidge stretches 30 feet long and wraps 368 square feet of living space inside a clean exterior of horizontal lap siding and a black standing-seam metal roof. It’s a familiar silhouette in the tiny home world, but the interior is where Teacup’s thinking gets interesting.
Designer: Teacup Tiny Homes


The entry opens directly into the living room, which features a full-size storage unit, space for a sofa, and a wood-burning stove tucked against the wall. Underfloor heating and a propane-powered forced-air furnace handle the cold — a deliberate choice for a builder that operates in Alberta and knows Canadian winters aren’t gentle. Windows run generously along the walls, pulling in natural light and keeping the interior from feeling like a cabin.
Just off the living room sits what Teacup calls an office, though calling it that undersells it. The space houses a Murphy-style bed with a folding desk mounted to its underside. During the day it functions as a proper work area; at night, the whole unit folds down to reveal a queen-sized bed. It’s one of those solutions that feels obvious in retrospect and rarely gets executed this cleanly.


The kitchen manages to fit a double-basin sink, induction cooktop, oven, fridge/freezer, and washer/dryer without feeling like a galley. The storage-integrated staircase beside it — fitted with drawers, cupboards, and a pull-out pantry — is the kind of detail that makes you look twice. Every riser is pulling weight.
The bathroom holds a walk-in shower, vanity sink, and an incinerating toilet, which burns waste down to ash. Teacup compares the system to an air fryer, which is either reassuring or unsettling depending on how you look at it, but off-grid functionality is rarely poetic.


Upstairs, a loft bedroom with a double bed sits under a low ceiling, accessed by that same storage staircase. It’s cozy rather than cramped — the difference being entirely in how you frame it. The Smidge is based on Teacup’s Margo range, which starts at approximately US $116,000, with pricing varying by configuration. Custom commissions are available directly through the builder.


