Horse Properties for Sale in Antimony, Utah
Antimony is a working ranch town of roughly 125 residents sitting in Garfield County's Grass Valley, halfway between Bryce Canyon and Otter Creek Reservoir. The whole valley was settled in the 1870s as cattle and sheep country, and that character still drives the local real estate market — most parcels here are zoned agricultural, fences are already up, and irrigation ditches off the East Fork of the Sevier River feed pasture that's been grazed for 150 years. For buyers looking specifically for horse property, this is one of the few corners of Utah where you can still pick up genuine acreage with water rights, a barn, and direct trail access to Dixie National Forest without paying Heber or Kamas prices.
The trade-off is remoteness. Antimony is about 3.5 hours from Salt Lake City and a little over an hour from St. George via Cedar City, so this market draws buyers who want a real horse operation rather than a hobby paddock close to commuter rail. Winters bring snow at 6,400 feet, summers stay dry and cool enough to ride midday, and the Paiute ATV Trail and Otter Creek fishing are minutes away. Listings turn over slowly — sometimes only a handful of qualified horse properties trade hands in a given year — so it pays to watch the inventory closely. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market in and around Antimony.
January 2026 · Antimony market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Antimony right now.
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Active listings
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Common questions
About horse properties in Antimony.
How much acreage do horse properties in Antimony usually include? ▾
Most equestrian parcels here run anywhere from 2 to 40+ acres, with a fair number of larger ranches in the 80-160 acre range tied to historic ag operations. Smaller in-town lots near the Antimony townsite tend to be 1-5 acres with a barn or loafing shed, while the bigger spreads sit out toward Black Canyon, Poison Creek, or the East Fork of the Sevier.
Does Antimony have water rights attached to most horse properties? ▾
Many older parcels carry shares in the Antimony Irrigation Company or pull from the East Fork Sevier River, but water rights vary lot by lot and should never be assumed. Always have your agent pull the deed history and confirm shares with the local water company before writing an offer. Properties with senior rights and a year-round creek frontage command a meaningful premium.
What's the climate like for keeping horses year-round in Antimony? ▾
Antimony sits around 6,460 feet elevation, so winters bring real snow and lows in the teens and single digits, while summers are dry and mild with highs in the mid-80s. Most owners run heated stock tanks November through March and put up enough hay in summer to carry through a 5-month feeding season. Pasture grass typically greens up in May and holds through September.
How close is Antimony to a large-animal vet, feed store, or trailer-in arena? ▾
The closest full-service feed and tack runs are in Panguitch (about 35 minutes south) and Richfield (roughly 75 minutes north), with Richfield also being the nearest reliable large-animal vet hub. Bryce Canyon and the Paiute ATV Trail are right out the back door, and several local outfitters run guided horse trips into Dixie National Forest from properties in this valley.
Are there zoning or HOA restrictions on horses in Antimony? ▾
Antimony is unincorporated Garfield County with agricultural zoning across most of the area, meaning horses, cattle, and other livestock are allowed by right on nearly every parcel. There are essentially no HOAs in this part of the county, so fencing, outbuildings, and animal counts are governed by county code rather than covenants. That's a big reason buyers from the Wasatch Front end up here.
What price range should I plan for a working horse property in Antimony? ▾
Bare horse land with water typically runs $15,000-$35,000 per acre depending on irrigation and access, while improved properties with a livable home, barn, and fencing generally trade between $550,000 and $1.4 million. Larger legacy ranches with senior water rights and river frontage can push well past $2 million. Inventory is thin, so the active list below is usually the full picture.