Homes with Solar Panels for Sale in Clinton, Utah
Clinton sits in northern Davis County between Layton and Syracuse, with most of the city built out on flat, open lots that face long stretches of west and south sky — exactly the orientation rooftop solar likes. The bulk of Clinton's housing stock is single-family homes built from the late 1990s through the 2010s, plus a steady wave of newer construction near 1800 North and the Legacy Parkway corridor. Roofs here tend to be simple gable or hip layouts without heavy tree cover, which keeps installation costs lower than in older, tree-shaded SLC neighborhoods. Median sale prices in Clinton generally run in the upper $400Ks to mid $500Ks, and buyers shopping this filter are usually commuters working at Hill Air Force Base, the Freeport Center in Clearfield, or Layton's medical and retail corridor who want to lock in predictable utility costs.
The solar conversation in Clinton is really a Rocky Mountain Power conversation. Utah's export credit rate has stepped down over the past several years, so systems installed under earlier tiers carry better economics than new installs do today — meaning a home with an existing, grandfathered system can be a genuine financial asset. Summer cooling loads are real (July highs regularly hit the mid-90s), and winter inversions occasionally dent production for a few weeks, but annual output across the Wasatch Front is strong. Pay attention to whether the system is owned outright, financed, or leased, since that changes the closing process significantly. Browse the active Clinton listings with solar below to see what's on the market and what each system includes.
May 2026 · Clinton market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Clinton right now.
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Common questions
About homes with solar panels in Clinton.
How common are solar panels on homes in Clinton? ▾
Solar adoption picked up noticeably along the north Davis County corridor between 2017 and 2022, when Rocky Mountain Power's net metering credits were more generous and federal tax credits were stacked with state incentives. You'll see panels on a mix of older Clinton ramblers and newer builds in subdivisions off 1800 North and around the Clinton City Park area. It's not the majority of listings, but enough that filtered searches usually return active inventory.
Are the solar panels owned or leased on most listings? ▾
Both show up in Clinton. Owned systems (paid in full or financed through a fixed loan like Mountain America's solar loan) transfer cleanly at closing. Leased systems or PPAs through companies like Sunrun or Vivint require the buyer to qualify and assume the contract, which can complicate financing. Always check the listing remarks and ask your agent to pull the solar disclosure early.
Does Clinton get enough sun to make solar worthwhile? ▾
Yes. The Wasatch Front averages around 220+ sunny days a year, and Clinton's relatively flat terrain and south-facing roofs in newer subdivisions produce solid output. Winter inversions can cut production for a few weeks in December and January, but annual generation typically offsets 70-100% of a typical Clinton household's electric usage depending on system size.
What's Rocky Mountain Power's current net metering policy? ▾
Utah moved off the old 1:1 net metering to an export credit program several years ago, and rates have continued to step down. Systems installed under earlier tiers were grandfathered at better rates, so an existing system may actually carry a more favorable export rate than a brand-new install would today. Ask the seller which tier their system was approved under.
Do solar panels add resale value in Clinton? ▾
Owned systems generally appraise as a value-add, especially when paired with documented production history and transferable warranties. Leased systems are more neutral or sometimes a negative if the remaining payments are high. Clinton buyers tend to be cost-conscious commuters working at Hill AFB, Freeport Center, or in Layton, and lower utility bills are a real selling point.
What should I ask the seller before writing an offer? ▾
Request the install date, system size in kW, inverter type, warranty paperwork, last 12 months of production data, and the loan or lease payoff if applicable. Also confirm the roof age underneath the panels, since removing and reinstalling panels for a roof replacement runs $2,000-$4,000. Your agent can request these documents during the due diligence period.