We have beds available for men and are taking applications for women.
We have beds available for men and are taking applications for women.

1927 W 8th Ave Spokane, WA. Hutton House is located on the west end of South Hill 2 blocks from Alano Club with several AA/NA and other meetings every day. Located a short walk to Maple and Walnut Street bus routes. All Utilities including wifi included. Capacity of 8 people max with 4 shared bed rooms. Tankless water heater so there is never a cold shower.

Location: 1927 W. 8th Spokane, WA. Hutton House is a large home located on the West end of the South Hill in the Cannon neighborhood

Hutton House features an oversized living area with a large smart TV and plenty of comfortable seating to enjoy the big game or watch a quiet movie. This living area is the primary meeting area for fellowship and fun.

After 3 years in a row listed as best of Spokane Hutton House is officially an Hall of Famer!

Need a place to do your job search, figure out finances, or do online classes? Our large office space is for client use and has offers a large desk with computer and printer. Of course, high Speed internet is available throughout the house by wifi

Our Laundry Room features state of the Art Washer and Dryer, plenty of cabinet space, and a countertop for folding clothes.

How about a place to read a book, have a personal conversation, or maybe play a board game with one or two others? Our library is just the place.

Our Kitchen features two full size refrigerators, a dishwasher, microwave, and gas range. There is plenty of cabinets for storage and pots, pans, dishes, silverware is all provided.
There is a story about a mustard seed — one of the smallest seeds a person can plant. It is easy to overlook. It looks insignificant, almost like nothing at all. If you didn’t know what it could become, you might wonder whether it was worth planting in the first place.
But when the seed is placed in good soil and given time, something remarkable happens.
It sends roots down before anything appears above the ground. Long before there is growth you can see, something is already happening underneath — strength is forming quietly, out of sight. There is no rush. No sudden transformation. Just steady, patient work.
In time, the seed breaks through the surface. What emerges doesn’t look impressive at first. It is small, fragile, and easy to miss. But it keeps growing. Slowly. Consistently.
Eventually, the mustard seed becomes a plant large enough to offer shelter. Birds find rest in its branches. What once seemed insignificant now provides safety and life for others.
The power of the mustard seed was never in its size — it was in its potential, and in the willingness to plant it and wait.”