6 Tree Houses for Rent
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Written by Dawn Hammonon Jun 19, 2019To ensure our content is always up-to-date with current information, best practices, and professional advice, articles are routinely reviewed by industry experts with years of hands-on experience.
Life in the Trees
Life in the Trees

Tree houses aren't just for kids anymore. If you're longing for the days when you explored life up in the branches, check out these six incredible tree house spaces you can rent for your next vacation. Watch the leaves, listen to the birds, and reconnect with nature, far away from the rest of the busy world.
Photo: Airbnb
1. A Glass House

Part of the Tree Hotel Project, a group of treehouses in northern Sweden, the Mirrorcube is only one of the seven elevated structures for rent on the property. Nearly invisible against the landscape, the interior offers the traditional comforts of home with a modern, birch-lined design. The cozy space sleeps two in a double bed and features a rooftop terrace.
Photo: Treehotel
2. Luxury in the Leaves

The Majestic Treehouse lives up to its name with one bedroom and one bathroom draped in opulent decor. Along with the award-winning design, hanging porch swing, fire pit, and connecting tree house decks, there are 40 acres of surrounding farm property and forest to explore.
3. Miami Farm

The Treehouse Canopy Room perches just outside Miami. Not only does this house offer spectacular design elements, it's situated on a working permaculture farm. That means you might wake up to the sounds of farm animals, and mingle with like-minded people who enjoy plucking breakfast from the garden on the grounds. The interior of the tree house is the trunk itself—the structure curves up and around a Pithecellobium tree.
Photo: Airbnb
4. Rustic and Remote

This rustic, off-grid treehouse located in an eco-village in Gasquet, California makes it easy to unplug. Share your values of sustainability while sleeping 18 feet above the ground, over a deep canopy of surrounding trees. What this one skips in modern amenities (it doesn't have power or heat), it makes up for in solitude.
Photo: Airbnb
5. Family Friendly

This cozy luxury tree dwelling outside Austin, Texas can sleep four adults in two bedrooms (one with a queen bed and one with two twins). It features a kitchenette and spaces to relax, and it overlooks a small creek with a waterfall.
Photo: Glamping Hub
6. Treetop Sanctuary

This gorgeous treetop room in New Hampshire is 30 feet off the ground, so it limits visiting children to those older than 10. The rental comes with access to a five acre property (plus 200 acres of nearby conservation land), and a nearby house for kitchen and bathroom needs. Inside the tree house, there's electricity and Wi-Fi, as well as a fully functional wood stove for cooking and warmth.
Photo: Airbnb
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Dawn Hammon has thrived in freelance writing and editor roles for nearly a decade. She has lived, worked, and attended school in Oregon for many years. Dawn currently spends her days convincing her children she is still smarter than them while creating new experiences with her husband of 24 years.  Her multiple interests have led her to frequently undergo home improvement projects. She enjoys sharing the hard-earned knowledge that comes with it with the audience of DoItYourself.com. Dawn and her sister make up a power-tool loving duo that teaches classes to local women with the goal of empowering them to tackle their fears and become comfortable with power tools. Tapping into her enthusiasm for saving money and devotion to sustainable practices, Dawn has recently launched a passion project aimed at connecting eco-friendly products and socially-responsible companies with consumers interested in making conscientious purchases, better informing themselves about products on the market, and taking a stand in favor of helping to save the planet. When she is not providing stellar online content for local, national, and international businesses or trolling the internet for organic cotton clothing, you might find her backpacking nearby hills and valleys, traveling to remote parts of the globe, or expanding her vocabulary in a competitive game of Scrabble. Dawn holds a bachelor's degree in psychology, which these days she mostly uses to provide therapy for her kids and spouse. Most recently, I worked for a small local professional organizing and estate sale company for four years where I learned a ton about organizing and/or disposing of just about anything. She was raised in a tool-oriented, hands-on, DIY family. Her dad worked in the floor covering business and owned local floor covering businesses, so of course selling floor covering was one of her first jobs. Her brother was a contractor for about 30 years and site supervisor for Habitat for Humanity. I worked with him often, building decks, painting houses, framing in buildings, etc. With her sister, she holds power tool classes to empower women who are scared or have never used them. Not quite homesteaders, she did grow up with a farm, tractors, motorcycles, expansive gardens, hay fields, barns, and lots of repairs to do. Plus she and her family preserved foods, raised cattle and pigs, chopped and hauled firewood, and performed regular maintenance on two households, outbuildings, fencing, etc. As an adult, she has owned two houses. The first one she personally ripped out a galley kitchen and opened it up to the living area, plus updated every door, floor covering, and piece of trim in the place. In her current home, she's tackled everything from installing real hardwood flooring to revamping the landscape.H.R. Helm is an accomplished DIY craftsman. He has been DIY since childhood and is now a septuagenarian. He is experienced in wood and metal construction, having designed and built several houses and metal buildings. He built every permanent building on his current homestead and did all the plumbing and electrical work. He has several years experience as a professional cabinet builder, and he is an accomplished auto repairman, having operated an auto repair business for many years. He currently has a home shop where he sharpens and rebuilds saws, repairs lawn mowers, mobility scooters, hydraulic jacks, and anything else that comes along. He also builds custom tools for metal working. Invention prototypes are another of his many accomplishments. He owned and operated a manufacturing business building Compact Utility Vehicles for homeowner use. H.R. enjoys making jams and jellies during fruit season along with cooking meals. He is committed to outdoor cooking in a Bar-B-Q pit he welded together several years ago. He maintains fruit and nut trees along with helping his wife with a vegetable garden. He farmed commercial garden produce for several years. It helps to have over 50 years of farming and ranching experience. Employment/Education Highlights ASE Certified Master Auto Technician Certified Welder Cross country truck driver -- over dimensional freight Design Engineer/Project Manager for injection molded plastic company Bus Driver/Substitute Teacher Inventor with two patents (weight training – anti-rollback for manual wheelchair) BS in Industrial Technology