Get App
Call 435-962-9044

Bridgeland, Utah

Homes with Views for Sale in Bridgeland, Utah

Bridgeland sits in the Uintah Basin about 15 miles southwest of Roosevelt, a quiet stretch of Duchesne County where the landscape opens up toward the Tavaputs Plateau to the south and the Uinta Mountains to the north. View lots here aren't manufactured by HOA setbacks — they're a function of the basin itself. Homes on the higher benches and along the bluffs above the Duchesne River pick up long sightlines across hay fields, sage flats, and the snowcapped southern face of the High Uintas, which stays white well into June. Because the area is rural and lot sizes typically run from one acre to 40-plus, neighbors don't block what's in front of you the way they would in a Wasatch Front subdivision.

Buyers drawn to view property in Bridgeland are usually a mix of energy-industry workers commuting to the Altamont and Monument Butte fields, hobby ranchers, and people leaving the I-15 corridor for darker skies and elbow room. Expect dry high-desert conditions, around 6,000 feet of elevation, real winters with wind, and summer evenings that drop into the 50s. Well and septic are the norm, and many view parcels also carry irrigation shares off the Lake Fork or Yellowstone systems. Price points run well below Heber or Park City for comparable acreage and sightlines. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market in and around Bridgeland.

May 2026 · Bridgeland market

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

Full Bridgeland market report
Median sale
$125,000
1 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
42 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
91.2%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
1
active + pending

1 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Prefer the map?

See all 1 homes with views on a map

Pan around Bridgeland and refine by drawing your own boundary.

🗺 Open map view

Common questions

About homes with views in Bridgeland.

What kind of views do Bridgeland homes typically have?

Most view homes here look north toward the south slope of the Uinta Mountains, including Marsh Peak and the Bollie Lake area, or south across the basin toward the Tavaputs cliffs. Homes set on the benches above the Duchesne River corridor often get both directions. Open agricultural land in between means sightlines stay clear for miles.

How much land usually comes with a view property in Bridgeland?

Acreage is the norm rather than the exception. Most view listings sit on 1 to 10 acres, and larger ranch parcels of 20 to 80 acres come up regularly. Zoning through Duchesne County is generally agricultural, so horses, livestock, and outbuildings are typically allowed.

Are utilities and water rights a concern on view lots out here?

Yes — this is rural Utah, so private well and septic are standard, and power may need to be extended on the more remote parcels. Many properties include irrigation shares from the Moon Lake Water Users system, which matter a lot for keeping pasture green through the dry summer.

How do prices compare to view homes on the Wasatch Front?

Bridgeland view property generally trades at a significant discount to Heber Valley, Park City, or the Salt Lake foothills. You can often pick up a home on acreage with mountain views for the price of a starter condo in Lehi. The trade-off is distance from major services and a roughly 2.5-hour drive to Salt Lake City.

What's the weather like at this elevation?

Bridgeland sits around 5,900 to 6,200 feet. Winters bring cold snaps into the single digits and steady wind off the basin, while summers are warm and dry with low humidity. Spring runoff from the Uintas keeps the view ridges green into early summer before things turn gold.

How many view homes are usually for sale in Bridgeland at one time?

Inventory is thin — this is a low-population area, so active listings typically number in the single digits at any given moment. New listings can sit for a while or move quickly depending on whether energy hiring is up. Setting up MLS alerts is the most practical way to catch the right property.