Get App
Call 801-396-9357

Bountiful, Utah

Condos for Sale in Bountiful, Utah

Bountiful's condo market is smaller and tighter than what you'll see in Salt Lake or Lehi, mostly because the city is built out against the Wasatch foothills with limited room for new multifamily construction. Most inventory clusters in a few areas: the older garden-style complexes along 500 West and 5th South, the newer townhome-style condos near Renaissance Towne Centre and Five Points, and a handful of east-bench developments with valley views toward Antelope Island and the Great Salt Lake. Buyers here tend to fall into two camps — downsizers from larger Bountiful and Centerville homes who want to stay in the Davis School District and close to family, and commuters who like being 10 minutes from downtown Salt Lake via I-15 or the Woods Cross FrontRunner station.

Pricing runs lower than comparable Salt Lake County condos, though the gap has narrowed since 2021. Expect HOA fees in the $200-$400 range, with most associations handling exterior maintenance, snow removal (a real factor given Bountiful's bench-effect winters), and landscaping. Lifestyle here leans quiet and residential: easy access to Mueller Park Canyon for hiking, the Bountiful Ridge Golf Course, and Main Street's small-town restaurants and shops. The city also sits inside one of the lower property-tax areas along the Wasatch Front. Browse the active condo listings below to see what's currently on the market, and reach out when you want to walk through a unit or pull HOA documents.

May 2026 · Bountiful market

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

Full Bountiful market report
Median sale
$583,000
36 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
7 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
98.5%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
101
active + pending

21 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Prefer the map?

See all 21 condos for sale on a map

Pan around Bountiful and refine by drawing your own boundary.

🗺 Open map view

Common questions

About condos for sale in Bountiful.

What's the typical price range for condos in Bountiful?

Most Bountiful condos trade in the mid $300s to low $500s, depending on age, size, and whether the unit has a garage or a view of the valley. Newer townhome-style condos near Renaissance Towne Centre or off 500 West tend to push toward the upper end, while older units near 5th South run lower.

Are there HOA fees, and what do they usually cover?

Yes, nearly every condo in Bountiful carries an HOA fee, generally $200-$400 per month. Fees typically cover exterior maintenance, landscaping, snow removal (which matters here from November through March), trash, and sometimes water. Always ask for the HOA financials and reserve study before writing an offer.

How long is the commute from Bountiful condos to downtown Salt Lake City?

Bountiful sits about 10 miles north of downtown SLC. Driving I-15 in non-rush hours takes 15-20 minutes; morning rush can stretch it to 30-40. The FrontRunner Woods Cross station is a 5-minute drive from most condo complexes and gets you to Salt Lake Central in under 15 minutes.

Are Bountiful condos a good fit for downsizers?

They're one of the most common downsizer choices in South Davis County. Empty nesters selling larger homes in Bountiful, Centerville, or North Salt Lake often want to stay in the Davis School District boundaries and near LDS meetinghouses, medical care at Lakeview Hospital, and family. Single-level condo floor plans with attached garages are in steady demand for this reason.

Do any Bountiful condos have mountain or valley views?

Units on the east bench, particularly above 1300 East, can have direct Wasatch views or west-facing views over the Great Salt Lake. These tend to command a premium of $30,000-$75,000 over comparable units down on the flats. Top-floor units with west-facing decks catch the sunsets over Antelope Island.

Is financing a condo here different from financing a single-family home?

It can be. Lenders require the HOA to meet certain criteria (owner-occupancy ratio, reserve funding, no pending litigation) before approving conventional or FHA loans. A few older Bountiful complexes are non-warrantable, meaning you'd need a portfolio lender or larger down payment. Your agent should pull the HOA questionnaire early in the process.