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Antimony, Utah

Homes with Acreage for Sale in Antimony, Utah

Antimony sits in Garfield County at roughly 6,460 feet elevation, tucked between Otter Creek Reservoir and Bryce Canyon along Highway 22. The town itself has fewer than 150 residents, and most of the surrounding land is divided into parcels measured in acres rather than square feet — five, ten, forty, and occasionally several hundred acres backing up to BLM or Dixie National Forest ground. Buyers searching here are typically after a working hobby ranch, a hunting base camp for units 25 and 27, or a quiet second home with room for horses, hay, and outbuildings. Water rights, irrigation shares from the East Fork Sevier, and fenced pasture matter more than countertops, and listings with senior water rights or established alfalfa fields tend to move first.

Expect real high-desert ranch conditions: cold winters with regular sub-zero nights in January, dry summers in the 80s, and roughly 220 frost-free days at lower elevations dropping fast as you climb toward the Tushar foothills. Power is on-grid along the main valley but off-grid solar is common on the back parcels. Cell service is spotty, internet usually runs on fixed wireless or Starlink, and the nearest full-service grocery is in Panguitch (30 minutes) or Richfield (about an hour). Salt Lake International is roughly 3.5 hours north; St. George is about 2.5 hours southwest. Acreage prices vary widely based on water, access, and improvements — bare land can run a few thousand per acre while irrigated parcels with a home command much more. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market.

January 2026 · Antimony market

Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Antimony right now.

Full Antimony market report
Median sale
$329,500
1 closed in January 2026
Median DOM
151 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
94.1%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
active + pending

9 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

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Common questions

About homes with acreage in Antimony.

What size parcels are typical in Antimony?

Most acreage listings fall between 5 and 40 acres, though larger ranches of 100+ acres come up a few times a year. Smaller 1-5 acre lots exist near the town center, while the larger holdings sit along the East Fork Sevier corridor or up against public land on the east and west sides of the valley.

Do these properties usually come with water rights?

Some do, some don't — and it makes a major price difference. Irrigated parcels often carry shares in the Antimony Irrigation Company or direct East Fork Sevier rights, while dry-land acreage relies on a domestic well or cistern. Always verify water rights through the Utah Division of Water Rights before writing an offer; a deeded share is not the same as an active certificate.

Can I run livestock or build outbuildings on Antimony acreage?

Yes. Garfield County zoning across most of the Antimony valley allows horses, cattle, sheep, chickens, and agricultural outbuildings without the restrictions you'd hit in Wasatch Front counties. Setbacks and septic permits still apply, and parcels under restrictive covenants (a few subdivisions have them) may limit animal counts.

Is the area good for hunting access?

It's one of the main reasons buyers land here. Antimony sits inside the Plateau, Boulder/Kaiparowits and Mt. Dutton hunt units, with deer, elk, turkey, and the occasional cougar tag drawing serious applicants. Many acreage parcels border BLM or forest service ground, which means you can hunt or ride out the back gate without trailering.

What's the road and winter access situation?

Highway 22 is paved and plowed by UDOT year-round, but side roads to back parcels are often gravel or dirt and may drift shut in heavy storms. A high-clearance vehicle or 4WD is standard equipment for most rural addresses here from November through March.

How long do acreage listings typically stay on the market?

Longer than Wasatch Front properties. Antimony is a thin market with a small buyer pool, so well-priced parcels with water and a livable home can sell in a few months, while raw land or overpriced ranches sometimes sit for a year or more. Patience and a willingness to negotiate on terms (seller financing is not uncommon) usually pay off.