Homes with Views for Sale in Aurora, Utah
Aurora is a small Sevier County town tucked between the Pahvant Range to the west and the cliff bands lining I-70 to the east, which means almost every elevated lot in town has something worth looking at. View homes here generally fall into a few buckets: properties on the benches above town with long sightlines across the Sevier River Valley toward Salina and Redmond, parcels backing up to the red and buff sandstone cliffs near Black Knoll, and acreage west of Highway 89 where Pavant sunsets stretch across open pasture. Unlike Wasatch Front view homes, you're not paying a steep premium for the scenery — Aurora's median prices sit well below the Utah average, and lot sizes tend to be larger because much of the surrounding land is still agricultural.
The trade-off is rural living. Aurora has roughly 1,000 residents, no stoplights, and most errands run through Richfield about 10 minutes south. Snow falls in winter but the valley sees less accumulation than the high country, and summer temperatures are noticeably milder than St. George thanks to the 5,200-foot elevation. Internet has improved with fiber expansion through Central Utah, which has made the town more workable for remote employees who want acreage and quiet. School-aged kids attend South Sevier district schools. Browse the active listings below to see which view properties are currently on the market, and reach out if you'd like a closer look at lot orientation or what's behind the fence line.
May 2026 · Aurora market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Aurora right now.
1 matching · page 1 of 1
Active listings
Prefer the map?
See all 1 homes with views on a map
Pan around Aurora and refine by drawing your own boundary.
Common questions
About homes with views in Aurora.
What kind of views do homes in Aurora actually have? ▾
Most view properties in Aurora look out over the Sevier Valley, the red and tan cliffs along I-70, or the farmland stretching toward Redmond and Salina. Homes on the benches west of Highway 89 tend to get the widest valley sightlines, while parcels closer to the cliffs trade distance for dramatic rock-face backdrops. Pavant Range sunsets are a common feature on west-facing lots.
Is Aurora considered a rural market? ▾
Yes. Aurora sits in Sevier County with a population under 1,000, and most view homes come with larger lots, outbuildings, or acreage rather than HOA-managed subdivisions. Buyers here are typically comfortable with septic systems, well or secondary water shares, and a 10-15 minute drive into Richfield for groceries and services.
How much do view homes in Aurora typically cost? ▾
Pricing varies widely because lot size drives value as much as the house itself. Smaller homes on standard lots with valley views often trade in the $300K-$450K range, while acreage properties with cliff or panoramic views can run $500K-$800K+. Inventory is thin, so active listings change month to month.
Will views be protected long-term from new construction? ▾
Sevier County zoning is generally agricultural or low-density residential around Aurora, which limits dense development blocking sightlines. That said, no view is permanently guaranteed unless protected by deed restriction or conservation easement. Ask your agent to check zoning on adjacent parcels before writing an offer.
What's the drive to bigger cities and recreation from Aurora? ▾
Richfield is about 10 minutes south on Highway 89, Salt Lake City is roughly 2.5 hours north on I-15, and St. George is about 3 hours southwest. For recreation, Fish Lake is under an hour, Capitol Reef sits about 90 minutes east via I-70, and the Pahvant and Fishlake National Forest trailheads are close enough for weekday evenings.
How many view homes are usually on the market in Aurora? ▾
Aurora is small, so active inventory typically runs in the single digits at any given time, and homes specifically marketed for their views are a subset of that. The listings below pull live from the MLS, so what you see is current. Setting up a saved search is the most practical way to catch new ones.