Types of Intentional Communities: Your Guide to 15 Different Community Models

Published October 6, 2022
Written by Cynthia Tina

Confusing terminology and types of intentional communities explained!

Permaculture Community Gathering in New Hampshire

If you have explored intentional communities you’ve probably noticed that there are a wide range of terms these places use to describe themselves — ecovillage, cohousing, co-op, senior community, commune — just to name a few. 

It can be confusing to know what exactly is meant by some of these terms. For example, many people new to the movement assume that “cohousing” means that residents share a single home together, while this is actually the opposite of what cohousing typically means.

There are numerous ways someone could categorize the diversity of intentional communities out there. I have chosen to focus on the terms that most often show up in the Communities Directory and those that have a sizable network who identify with them. 

Since I most often work with individuals who are looking to join an existing intentional community through my work as a community matchmaker, that’s the perspective from which I have created the following list. 

But if you are setting about to start a new community, you may want to think about describing your community based on the driving motivation for your project. Yana Ludwig, FIC board member and instructor of the Starting a Community online course, has created another system for categorizing communities that’s based on motivation. Here’s a shortened list what her categories include.

Yana’s categorization of communities:

  • Cultural Preservation (such as Amish and Hutterite)
  • Economic Security (such as cooperatives and communes)
  • Service-based (such as Camphill and Catholic Worker)
  • Identity-based Refuges (such as queer and war resistor)
  • Quality of Life Enhancing (such as cohousing)

It’s worth keeping in mind that it is up to each community to decide what it wants to call itself and not everyone uses these terms in the same way. Sometimes a group may use more than one label, such as being both an ecovillage and cohousing, or a senior cohousing, or a tiny house ecovillage. Some communities dispense with labels all together. 

Don’t hold onto these labels too tightly and dig deeper to find out why a community calls itself what it does… or doesn’t.

15 Types of Intentional Communities

Below is a list of the common types of intentional communities and what they tend to mean, as well as examples and resources for further learning. 

Note: The examples given for each community type below are mostly based in the USA, since that is the majority of readership of this blog, but trust that intentional communities of all kinds can be found in nearly all parts of the world. 


Cohousing

The fastest growing type of intentional community, this model is originally from Denmark, where residents have their own housing units with many shared services and facilities.

Ecovillage

Ecovillage refers to an intentional, traditional or urban community that is consciously designed through locally owned, participatory processes to regenerate their social and natural environments.

Housing Cooperative (co-op)

Co-op community members live in housing they own and govern themselves, includes youth and student groups (see NASCO.coop).

Shared Housing

This is unrelated people sharing housing for their mutual benefit, usually private bedrooms with shared kitchen and/or bath. Sometimes called cohouseholding, homesharing, or commoning.

Coliving

A recently developed type of community born out of the coworking movement, coliving residents typically rent fully furnished, more affordable, community-oriented spaces in urban areas, often based on a membership model that allows for moving amongst locations.

Spiritual/Religious

These communities are organized around shared spiritual or religious beliefs, including some of the oldest forms of intentional community (such as monasteries and ashrams).

Tiny House Village

Communities that consist mainly of tiny houses or small homes, often with shared facilities, are increasingly found in urban communities with a few tiny houses in the backyard or as affordable living project for the unhoused.

Senior Community

Senior intentional communities have 50+ or other age restrictions for membership, often they are cohousing communities.

Commune

Commune refers to a partial or fully income-sharing community that practices egalitarian decision making. Also known as egalitarian communities or income-sharing communities.

See the full article on What is a Commune.

Camphill Communities

Camphill is a network of residential communities and schools designed for people with and without special needs, based on the principles of anthroposophy. L’Arche has a similar mission.

Kibbutzim

Collective communities in Israel called kibbutz were traditionally based on agriculture, although many are now private. There are a growing number of Jewish kibbutz-inspired intentional communities.

Catholic Worker

Catholic Worker communities are committed to nonviolence, voluntary poverty, prayer, and hospitality for the homeless, exiled, hungry, and forsaken, inspired by Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin.

Resident Owned Communities (ROC)

ROCs are neighborhoods of manufactured homes owned by a cooperative of homeowners who live there, as opposed to an outside landlord.

Community-led Initiatives (CLI)

CLI refers to any form of action undertaken by self-organized groups to improve their social and environmental conditions. A term increasingly used in Europe to encompass a range of communities movements, including Transition Towns and countless neighborhoods fostering more intentionality.

And more types of intentional communities…

activist collectives, artist communities, agrihoods, retreat centers, ashrams, community land trusts, permaculture farms, pocket neighborhoods, veteran intentional communities, communities for the formerly incarcerated, reinhabited abandoned villages, decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs), the list goes on!


Intentional Communities Type Quiz

What ties together all the above community types is that the residents choose to live near each other on the basis of explicit values. They share resources, facilities, group agreements, regular communication, and often a deeply held common purpose. 

Whatever shared terms or labels they may identify with, one thing is certain, no two communities are alike. Each has created a unique culture that is best experienced by spending time with the people and their place. 

Your Next Steps for Learning about the Types of Intentional Communities

To continue your search into intentional communities, I suggest exploring the Communities Directory that’s searchable online and as a print book. The Directory is intended to be an umbrella resource including all types of intentional communities. However, you may find additional communities through the websites and maps of the networks associated with each of the types listed above. Here is a full list of many intentional community directories.

People tend to be attracted to one or more community types based on their values and interests. For quick guidance on the type of community that is a fit for you, take the free Community Type Quiz.

It can be challenging to know what type is best for you if you are just getting started exploring the thousands of intentional communities out there. That’s why I’ve developed a community matchmaking service to help folks determine which types of communities are a good fit and recommend specific communities to visit or join.

Copyright 2022, Cynthia Tina and Communities magazine. This article first appeared in Communities: Life in Cooperative Culture, September 2022; for further information on Communitiesgen-us.net/communities.

Drop a comment if you think there is a category of community missing from the list. I’m looking forward to growing our collective knowledge of the movement with you!

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13 Comments
  1. michael

    Some groups could easily fall in more than one category. For example, the Hutterites could be equally well categorized as cultural preservation and identity and spiritual/religious and commune. And speaking of the Hutterites, they are such a fantastic success story. A going concern for four hundred years, twice they were persuaded by unusual circumstances to switch to individual farmsteads but both times they reconstituted, and now they occupy hundreds of self sufficient communes in the US and Canada divided into three people-groups called leuts each with its own cultural twists. Although it is almost unheard for outsiders to join them (although they do not in principle reject converts), they are still an expanding network of communities because their defection rate is very low. Compare this with the recruiting treadmill that most intentional communities find themselves on just to avoid extinction. I really don’t understand why so few new communities try to imitate them. Another group of insular religious communities that live in less isolated environments but also appear to be quite stable as best I can tell is the Exclusive Brethren, an English sect which I believe has gone back to using its original 1820’s name of Plymouth Brethren. Even if one does not wish to imitate either of these groups down to the smallest detail, there still must be something valuable that post-1960’s intentional communities can learn from these much older and durable communities, neither of which is a revolving door organization. Yet it seems that more recent communities which struggle with membership retention (which seems to indicate that many of their members are less than satisfied with their lives in these new-style communities) are very unwilling to imitate or even investigate the success of these older communities. Frankly, I find it puzzling. Can it simply be explained by a “not invented here” mentality?

    Reply
  2. Lesley

    Hi Cynthia,
    I am looking for a community like the “Haven Village in Tennessee” in Europe or Germany.

    Reply
    • Cynthia Tina

      Hi Lesley, great! What aspects of Haven Village are you looking for in a European community?

      The directory of ecovillages at https://ecovillage.org/ecovillages/map/ would be a great place to start your search. There are many communities in Europe!

      Any additional details you can offer would be helpful. You can also write to me at cynthia@communityfinders.com. Hope this helps 🙂

      Reply
  3. Marilee

    Maybe include freedom communities and sovereignty/PMA-based communities?

    Reply
    • Cynthia Tina

      Great idea, Marilee! I’ll add that in the next round of updates.

      Reply
  4. Mara

    This is a good list! I often conceptualize things on a kind of graph, with one axis being the degree of consensus decision making, and the other axis being the degree to which your labor is your contribution to the community (not money).
    This graph isn’t entirely a value judgement, but is interesting. It can also be very hard to place a community on it without visiting and talking closely with members. For example, a community has an inner circle which you can join after 9 months. The whole community uses consensus, but you can only join the inner consensus group to make financial decisions when that circle lets you in. I don’t see that as a full consensus community, but it takes a visit and some one on one to learn about all that.

    These days I live in a NASCO affiliate housing co-op. Full consensus, but you have to pay a low rent in addition to 5 hours labor a week. Trade-offs!

    Reply
    • Cynthia Tina

      Thanks Mara! I really like the idea of a graph to visualize the different types of communities. Something for me to add to the list to create!

      Reply
  5. b junahli hunter, phd

    hi, cynthia, wld you pls send me, also, a list of artists’ & vegan communities – or where i could find such?

    Reply
      • Dean McNeilly

        Hi Cynthia,
        I’m looking for rural communities that into self-sufficient off-grid living.

        What’s the difference between agrihoods, permaculture farms, community land trusts, and retreat centers?

        Thanks.

        Reply
        • Cynthia Tina

          Hi Dean, thanks for your question. I’ll answer briefly below and sounds like we should have a community matchmaking session to dive deeper.

          Agrihood = neighborhood with a farm incorporated into it
          Permaculture farm = farm that follows permaculture principles and may not have residential housing
          Community Land Trust = specific non-profit legal structure that allows for affordable housing
          Retreat Center = place that hosts programs and may or may not have a residential community

          Hope this helps!

          Reply
  6. Jennifer Hindy

    Hi, artists and vegan community?

    Reply
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Cynthia Tina

Hi! I’m Cynthia.

I’ve visited 150+ intentional communities — ecovillages, cohousing, coops, spiritual, permaculture, & more types of community. I created CommunityFinders to help you on your community journey. How is your journey going? How can I help?

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