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Dayton, Utah

Homes with RV Parking for Sale in Dayton, Utah

Dayton sits in the northern end of Cache Valley, just over the Idaho line area and a short drive from Preston, Richmond, and Smithfield. It's a small agricultural community where lot sizes still run generous — quarter-acre, half-acre, and full-acre parcels are common — which is exactly why RV owners look here instead of tighter subdivisions down in Logan or North Logan. Homes flagged with RV parking in Dayton typically offer a real concrete pad with a gate wide enough for a fifth wheel or Class A motorhome, not just a strip of gravel next to the garage. Many also include 30- or 50-amp electrical, a sewer cleanout for dumping, and water spigots positioned for rig hookups.

The practical case for RV parking up here is straightforward: Bear Lake, Logan Canyon, the Wellsville Mountains, and a half-dozen Forest Service campgrounds are all within easy towing distance, and Cache County winters mean you need somewhere secure and ideally covered to park a rig from November through March. Newer builds on the south and west edges of town often include detached RV garages with 14-foot doors, while older farmhouse-style properties tend to have the raw lot space to add one. Prices in Dayton generally undercut comparable Logan-area homes, so buyers get more land for the money. Browse the active listings below to see which Dayton homes currently have the RV setup you need.

April 2026 · Dayton market

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

Full Dayton market report
Median sale
$600,000
1 closed in April 2026
Median DOM
140 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
96.0%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
1
active + pending

2 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

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Common questions

About homes with rv parking in Dayton.

What counts as RV parking on a Dayton listing?

Most Dayton listings flag RV parking when there's a dedicated pad, an extended driveway, a side gate with at least 10-12 feet of clearance, or a detached RV garage. Some properties go further with 30/50-amp hookups, a dump station, or covered shelters. Check the listing remarks closely — agents in this part of Cache Valley usually spell out pad dimensions and hookups since it matters to buyers here.

Are there HOA or county restrictions on parking an RV at the house?

Dayton is in Cache County and most of the town sits outside formal HOAs, which is one reason RV owners gravitate here. Where HOAs do exist in newer subdivisions, rules vary — some allow RVs behind a fence or setback line, others restrict long-term street parking. Always pull the CC&Rs before closing if the home is in a planned community.

How much lot do I need for a Class A motorhome or fifth wheel?

A 40-foot Class A with slide-outs typically needs a pad around 12 feet wide by 45 feet long, plus turning room. Many Dayton properties sit on half-acre to one-acre lots, which gives you space to build a proper pad and still keep a yard. Corner lots and homes on the west side toward the foothills tend to have the easiest access.

Do Dayton homes with RV parking cost more than comparable homes without?

A dedicated RV pad with hookups generally adds a few thousand dollars to list price, while a fully enclosed RV garage can add $40,000-$80,000 depending on size and finish. The bigger driver in Dayton is lot size — homes with enough room for RV parking are usually on larger parcels, which carries its own premium.

Is winter storage a problem in Dayton's climate?

Cache Valley winters run cold with extended inversions and snow on the ground from December through February. Most owners winterize their rigs by Thanksgiving and either cover them or park them in an enclosed RV garage. Plumbing freezes are the main risk, so heated storage buildings show up as a feature on higher-end Dayton listings.

How close is Dayton to RV-friendly destinations?

That's part of the appeal. Bear Lake is about an hour northeast, the Logan Canyon corridor is 20 minutes away, and you can be at Yellowstone's west entrance in roughly three hours. Hyrum Reservoir, Porcupine, and several Forest Service campgrounds in the Wellsvilles are all short tow distances from town.