Big Bear Cabins Under $400K: A Dutch Gambrel Tour

Can you still buy a Big Bear cabin under $400,000?

Yes — and this Dutch Gambrel in the Erwin Lake area of Big Bear City is proof. It's a three-bedroom, two-bath cabin at roughly 1,272 square feet, fully updated, listed at $399,900. Move that same home into a more central neighborhood and you're looking at $450,000 or more. The savings here come from location, not condition.

If you've been priced out of the idea of owning in Big Bear, this is the kind of listing worth understanding — what you get, where the value comes from, and who it actually fits.

By Rachael Smith | June 14, 2026

What a Dutch Gambrel actually is

If you've watched a few of my tours, you've heard me say "Dutch Gambrel" before. Here's the quick version.

The name comes from the roof. Look at the side of the house and you'll see a barn shape — that wide, two-angle slope is the gambrel. On this model, that barn profile runs along the side with two dormers set into the upper level. Watch me point out the roofline at 0:23.

What makes these homes easy to shop for is that the floor plan repeats. Downstairs you get the kitchen, dining, and living area with one full bathroom. Upstairs you get three bedrooms and a second bathroom. Once you've walked one, you can walk the next and already know the bones. If you've looked at the Dutch Gambrel over on Catalina or the one on Barrett, this layout will feel familiar — same plan, different finishes and price points.

Why the price works

The home sits on a 5,000-square-foot lot, fully fenced with chain link, on a dirt road in Erwin Lake. That rural setting is exactly why it lands under $400K. You're trading a paved central street for quiet, open mountain views, and a short drive to the lake and slopes. I break down the specs and pricing at 1:17.

A few things I'd flag as a buyer:

  • Room to add a garage. There's space on the lot for one. Just know that building in certain spots could cut some of the natural light into the living room, so placement matters.
  • A roof built for the mountain. White exterior, black composition roof. Because this area doesn't hold heavy snow and ice the way higher elevations do, snow tends to slide off rather than sit — which is easier on the roof over time.
  • Already updated. The deck was freshly painted, and the interior has been touched throughout. This isn't a fixer you're buying to renovate. It's turnkey.

That last point matters for the math. A lot of sub-$400K mountain cabins come with a renovation budget hiding behind the list price. This one doesn't. If you want to see how the same price band plays out across other homes, I walked through it in what $365K buys you in Big Bear City.


Want more Big Bear cabin tours and pricing breakdowns like this one? I post new walkthroughs and market insights every week on YouTube. Subscribe here so you catch the next listing before it's gone.


Inside the cabin

You walk in under a stained-glass window, into the open downstairs.

The flooring is laminate hardwood with a barnwood look — multicolor planks laid clean, no visible gaps. A bay window pulls good light into the dining area, and the kitchen flows right off it. Take the kitchen walkthrough at 5:11.

The kitchen punches above the price:

  • Oak cabinets with solid storage
  • White subway tile backsplash
  • A two-basin farmhouse sink
  • Handmade butcher block counters with a chocolate stain
  • Updated stove, fridge, and a coffee bar nook
  • A freestanding island you can keep, move, or swap

The living room is genuinely large — flexible enough for a furniture-plus-office setup. Look up and you'll see the detail that sells these cabins: a tongue-and-groove cedar pine ceiling with big headers. Because that ceiling doubles as the floor above, it can be tricky to light, so track lighting and lamps do the work. The windows are dual pane, and the red brick fireplace anchors the room. It doesn't have a gas starter, but one is easy to add if you'd rather skip hauling wood.

Downstairs also holds the laundry, a wall heater, and a smart little detail — a trap door under a storage closet that gives you access beneath the house for plumbing or insulation checks.

The bathrooms are the quiet win

This is where the updates really show. Both bathrooms carry the same handmade, thick countertops as the kitchen and the same flooring throughout. The showers are timeless white square tile, and each has a cast iron tub. See the downstairs bathroom at 9:52.

That cast iron detail is worth pausing on. A lot of cabins in this price range come with the cheap plastic tub-and-door insert. Swapping those out is a real project. Here, that work is already done — open white tile, cast iron, updated fixtures, clean.

Three bedrooms up top

Upstairs follows the Dutch Gambrel script: three bedrooms and the second, larger bathroom. The stairs and bedrooms are carpeted in a plush brownish-gray that wears well in a mountain home.

The smallest bedroom fits a double bed with room for nightstands and a headboard, and frames a real mountain view out the window. The middle bedroom is set up to sleep more — a day bed with a trundle — with a knotty pine accent wall. The third is the de facto primary: a king-size bed, two windows, an accent wall, a closet, and a view of a tall spruce. Each closet does double duty for storage, and one keeps an emergency escape ladder by the window, which is exactly the kind of mountain-living detail you want a seller to think about.

The backyard, the deck, and yes — the donkeys

The deck wraps around three sides of the house, so you're chasing sun and views no matter the time of day. The back gets strong light and a clean look at the roofline and the hills. I walk the wraparound deck at 14:47.

And one bit of Erwin Lake character you don't get in a spec sheet: wild donkeys roam this part of the mountain. Live here long enough and you'll see them wandering the dirt roads. It's the kind of thing that makes a neighborhood feel like the mountains people picture when they dream about owning up here.

Who this cabin is for

In my experience, the buyer on a home like this is one of two people: someone wanting a turnkey full-time or second home, or an investor eyeing a vacation rental. The updated kitchen and bathrooms, the three-bedroom layout, and the sub-$400K price make it work for both.

If you're buying your first Big Bear cabin, the bigger question isn't this house — it's the process. Knowing how the mountain market prices outlying neighborhoods, what to check before you write an offer, and what actually happens once you're in escrow is what keeps a good deal from turning into a stressful one.

A clean, updated Dutch Gambrel under $400,000 doesn't sit long in this market. If a turnkey three-bedroom in the Erwin Lake area is what you've been waiting for, this is the kind of listing to move on — and the kind I tour every week. Subscribe to my channel so the next one lands in your feed first, and reach out anytime you want to walk one in person.

About Rachael Smith
Rachael Smith is a top-producing real estate agent with RE/MAX Big Bear, specializing in mountain homes, short-term rental investments, and luxury properties in Big Bear Lake and surrounding areas. With over a decade of experience and hundreds of homes sold, she helps buyers, sellers, and investors make smart, strategic real estate decisions. Through her strong online presence and data-driven approach, Rachael connects clients with opportunities both on and off the market.

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