Homes with RV Parking for Sale in Downey, Utah
Quick note on geography: Downey is actually a small town in southeast Idaho, about 20 minutes north of the Utah state line off I-15, not a Utah city. We've kept this page live because a lot of Cache Valley and northern Utah buyers cross the border looking for acreage, lower property taxes, and room to store an RV without fighting an HOA. If you're searching from Logan, Tremonton, or Brigham City, Downey is a reasonable commute-adjacent option, and the RV-parking inventory here looks very different from what's available south of the line.
Properties in and around Downey tend to sit on larger lots — half-acre in-town parcels up to multi-acre spreads toward Red Rock Pass and the Bannock Range foothills. That means RV parking on a Downey listing usually isn't a token gravel strip; it's a graveled or concrete pad with a 12-foot gate, a detached shop with 14-foot RV doors, or a full hookup pad with 30/50-amp power and a septic clean-out. Winters are real up here (think single-digit January nights and serious snow load), so covered RV storage and heated shops command a premium over open pads. Price points generally run below comparable Cache Valley acreage, which is the main reason cross-border buyers keep looking this direction. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market.
June 2026 · Downey market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Downey right now.
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Active listings
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Common questions
About homes with rv parking in Downey.
What counts as RV parking on a Downey listing? ▾
It varies. Some listings mean a graveled or concrete pad on the side of the house with a gate wide enough for a fifth-wheel, others mean a detached shop or RV garage with 14-foot doors and full hookups. Read the remarks carefully — in rural Bannock County, a lot of sellers built their own pads, so size and surface differ property to property.
Are there HOA or zoning rules against parking an RV in Downey? ▾
Most of Downey and the surrounding unincorporated areas of Bannock County have no HOA, and zoning is generally agricultural or low-density residential, so storing an RV on your own lot is typically fine. Inside city limits there can be setback rules about parking in the front yard, but side-yard and rear pads are standard. Always confirm with the city clerk before closing.
How much land do these properties usually sit on? ▾
Downey listings with RV parking commonly sit on half-acre to 5-acre parcels, with some larger spreads toward Hatch and Red Rock Pass. That acreage is part of why buyers come here in the first place — room for the RV, a shop, horses, or all three without crowding a neighbor.
Can I get RV hookups (power, water, sewer) at the pad? ▾
On a fair number of Downey properties, yes — 30 or 50 amp service, a frost-free hose bib, and either a septic clean-out or a dedicated dump connection. It's less common on starter homes in town and more common on the rural acreage listings. Ask the agent to confirm what's actually installed versus what's just stubbed.
Will my RV survive Downey winters parked outside? ▾
Downey sits around 4,800 feet and gets real winters — single-digit nights, snow load, and ice. Outdoor parking is workable if you winterize properly, but a covered carport or enclosed RV shop holds resale value better and is why heated shops show up so often in local listings.
How far is Downey from Lava Hot Springs and the main travel routes? ▾
Lava Hot Springs is about 15 minutes east on Highway 30, and I-15 runs right past the west side of town, putting Pocatello roughly 30 minutes north and the Utah border about 20 minutes south. That access is the practical reason RV owners like Downey — you're on the freeway before the coffee cools.