Condos for Sale in Centerville, Utah
Centerville sits in the middle of Davis County, roughly 15 minutes north of downtown Salt Lake City and 10 minutes south of the Layton job corridor. For condo buyers, that location is the whole pitch: you get FrontRunner access at the Parrish Lane station, quick I-15 on-ramps, and Davis School District boundaries — all at a price point that's usually $100K+ below a comparable single-family home in the same zip code. Most of the condo inventory clusters in two pockets: the newer townhome-style projects west of Main Street near Founders Park, and older stacked-flat communities tucked behind Parrish Lane's shopping. Buyers here tend to be first-time owners, downsizers from larger Bountiful and Farmington homes, and commuters who want low-maintenance living within walking distance of a Smith's, a Harmons, or the Legacy Parkway trail.
Climate matters more than people expect when shopping condos along the Wasatch Front. Centerville gets real winters with lake-effect snow, so HOA-handled snow removal and exterior maintenance are genuine value — not just line items. Summers are dry and warm, and most complexes sit close enough to the foothills that you'll catch evening canyon breezes. Pay attention to HOA reserves, roof age, and whether the project is FHA- or VA-approved if those loans matter to your financing. Active inventory in Centerville stays tight, so what's listed today may not be there next week. Browse the current condo listings below to see what's on the market right now.
May 2026 · Centerville market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Centerville right now.
4 matching · page 1 of 1
Active listings
Prefer the map?
See all 4 condos for sale on a map
Pan around Centerville and refine by drawing your own boundary.
Common questions
About condos for sale in Centerville.
How many condo developments are there in Centerville? ▾
Centerville is a small city of about 17,000 residents, so the condo inventory is modest compared to neighboring Bountiful or Farmington. Most condo and townhome communities sit along the Frontage Road corridor near 400 West and around Parrish Lane, with a handful of older projects closer to Main Street. On any given week the active MLS count is usually in the single digits.
What price range should I expect for a Centerville condo? ▾
Most attached units trade in the $300K–$500K range depending on age, square footage, and whether it's a stacked condo or a townhome-style unit. Newer builds near Legacy Parkway with attached garages tend to push toward the upper end, while older 2-bedroom condos without garages sit at the lower end. HOA dues typically run $200–$350 per month.
Are condos in Centerville FHA and VA approved? ▾
It varies by complex. Some of the established projects carry current FHA/VA approval, but others have lapsed and require a spot approval or conventional financing. Before writing an offer, have your lender pull the current approval status for the specific HOA — it can change the financing options significantly.
What's the commute like from Centerville to downtown Salt Lake? ▾
Centerville sits about 12 miles north of downtown SLC. With Legacy Parkway, I-15, and the Frontrunner station in Farmington just minutes away, most condo owners reach downtown in 20–25 minutes outside of rush hour. The Frontrunner option is popular with buyers who want to skip the I-15 bottleneck near the 600 North merge.
Do Centerville condos typically include garages? ▾
It splits roughly half and half. Townhome-style condos built after 2000 usually come with a 1- or 2-car attached garage, while older flat-style condos often have a covered carport plus assigned surface parking. Garage units command a noticeable premium, especially given the snow load Davis County gets each winter.
What amenities are common in Centerville condo HOAs? ▾
Most HOAs cover exterior maintenance, landscaping, snow removal, and trash. A handful of communities include a pool or clubhouse, but it's not the norm here — many buyers rely on the Centerville rec center and the trail system at the base of the foothills instead. Always request the HOA financials and reserve study before closing.