Homes with RV Parking for Sale in Beaver, Utah
Beaver is one of the few I-15 towns in Utah where keeping a motorhome, fifth wheel, or toy hauler at the house is still genuinely easy. Lot sizes here run larger than anything on the Wasatch Front — quarter-acre in-town parcels are common, and once you move toward Greenville, Adamsville, or the county roads east of town, one- to five-acre properties with shops and gated side yards show up regularly. Combine that with mild zoning, almost no HOAs outside a couple of newer subdivisions, and an elevation of 5,900 feet that keeps summers in the 80s instead of the 100s, and you have a town built around the kind of buyer who actually uses their rig.
The RV parking flag on a Beaver listing can mean a lot of things: a concrete pad with 30-amp service, a 14-foot-door shop big enough for a Class A, a graveled side yard behind a rolling gate, or simply an acre of flat ground next to the driveway. Winters do matter here — snow, hard freezes, and wind off the Tushars mean enclosed or covered storage carries a real premium over open pads. Proximity to Eagle Point, Minersville Reservoir, Fishlake, and the Bryce/Zion corridor is the reason most buyers land in Beaver in the first place. Browse the active listings below to see which homes currently have the parking setup that fits your rig.
May 2026 · Beaver market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Beaver right now.
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Active listings
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Common questions
About homes with rv parking in Beaver.
What counts as RV parking on a Beaver listing? ▾
Most Beaver listings flag RV parking when there's a dedicated gravel or concrete pad alongside the home, a gated side yard wide enough for a Class A motorhome, or a detached shop with an oversized bay. Some rural properties on the edges of town include full hookups (30/50 amp, sewer dump, water spigot), which is worth confirming in the agent remarks.
Are there HOA or city rules about parking an RV at the house? ▾
Inside Beaver city limits, RVs generally need to be parked on an improved surface and off the public right-of-way. The city is fairly relaxed compared to Wasatch Front suburbs, and most subdivisions in and around Beaver don't have HOAs at all. Properties on county land south of town or out toward Manderfield have even fewer restrictions.
Why is Beaver a practical home base for RV owners? ▾
Beaver sits right on I-15 at exit 109, roughly halfway between Salt Lake and St. George, which makes it a natural staging point for trips to Zion, Bryce, Lake Powell, and the Tushar Mountains. Elk Meadows and Eagle Point are 20 minutes east, and Minersville Reservoir is a short tow west. Buyers who travel six months a year often pick Beaver specifically for that location.
Will my RV survive a Beaver winter parked outside? ▾
Beaver sits at about 5,900 feet and gets real winters — single-digit nights, snow loads, and freeze-thaw cycles from November through March. Most local owners either winterize and tarp, park under a steel carport, or buy a property with an enclosed RV garage (14-foot doors are the number to look for). Heated shops show up on larger lots and command a premium.
What size lots typically come with RV parking in Beaver? ▾
In-town lots on streets like 400 North or Main often run a quarter to a half acre, which is enough for a side pad behind a gate. Once you head out toward Adamsville, Greenville, or the county fringe, lots of one to five acres are common and can fit multiple rigs, a shop, and pasture. Pricing scales accordingly.
How many RV-friendly homes are usually on the market here? ▾
Beaver is a small market — the county has under 7,000 residents — so active inventory with explicit RV parking usually runs a handful of listings at a time rather than dozens. New ones turn over weekly during spring and summer, so checking back or setting a saved search is the realistic approach.