Homes with RV Parking for Sale in Deweyville, Utah
Deweyville sits along the Bear River in Box Elder County, about 15 minutes north of Brigham City and roughly an hour and fifteen from Salt Lake City International. It's a small agricultural community where lot sizes still run large by Wasatch Front standards — half-acre to multi-acre parcels are normal, and zoning leans rural-residential. That combination is exactly why RV parking is such a common ask here. Buyers coming from Layton, Ogden, or Davis County are often trading smaller suburban lots for room to actually store a fifth-wheel, toy hauler, or Class A without fighting an HOA or a 10-foot side yard. Proximity to the Golden Spike country, Bear Lake, the Raft River range, and southern Idaho fishing means a lot of Deweyville households genuinely use their rigs several weekends a month.
What "RV parking" looks like on local listings varies a lot. Some properties have a simple gravel pad behind a gate, others include a 14-foot-tall detached shop with a 50-amp hookup and a dump cleanout, and a few have full RV garages built into the home. Pricing tracks accordingly — a basic pad adds little, while a heated insulated shop with RV bay can push a property well above the Box Elder County median. Because Deweyville has no municipal HOA covering most parcels and county setbacks are workable, building or expanding RV storage after purchase is also realistic on many lots. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market.
December 2025 · Deweyville market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Deweyville right now.
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Active listings
No active homes with rv parking in Deweyville right now.
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Common questions
About homes with rv parking in Deweyville.
Are there HOA restrictions on RV parking in Deweyville? ▾
Most of Deweyville is unincorporated or lightly governed rural-residential property without a homeowners association, so the typical HOA rules against parking RVs in driveways or side yards don't apply. Box Elder County setback and screening rules still govern where you can place a structure, but day-to-day storage of a personal RV on your own lot is generally fine. Always verify on a specific parcel before writing an offer.
What size RV can typical Deweyville properties accommodate? ▾
Lots here are usually big enough for 40-plus-foot motorhomes and long fifth-wheels, including the tow vehicle. The bigger question is the structure: existing detached shops range from 12-foot doors that fit a travel trailer up to 16-foot doors built specifically for Class A diesel pushers. Listing photos and shop dimensions in the MLS remarks are the fastest way to filter.
Do homes here typically include RV hookups (power, water, sewer dump)? ▾
It's a mixed bag. Many properties have at least a 30- or 50-amp outlet near the pad, and homes built or remodeled in the last 10 years more often include a sewer cleanout for dumping holding tanks. Full hookups with potable water spigot and dedicated dump are a feature worth confirming in writing — they're common but not universal.
How does RV parking affect resale value in Box Elder County? ▾
A covered RV bay or tall detached shop is one of the higher-ROI features in this market because demand from outdoor-recreation buyers consistently outpaces supply. A finished, insulated RV shop with power can add $40,000 to $80,000 of value depending on size and finish. An open gravel pad adds far less but still helps the home stand out.
Can I build a new RV garage on a Deweyville property after I buy? ▾
On most parcels, yes. Box Elder County allows detached accessory structures with permits, and lots of an acre or more typically have room to meet setbacks. Height limits, total accessory square footage relative to the home, and septic location are the usual constraints. Talk to county planning before closing if a future build is central to your plans.
Is well or city water more common, and does it matter for RV use? ▾
Deweyville has a mix of culinary water connections and private wells, with secondary irrigation shares on many older parcels. For rinsing rigs and filling fresh tanks, secondary irrigation water shouldn't be used as drinking water, so confirm which tap feeds the RV hookup. Wells generally have plenty of capacity for occasional RV fills.