New Construction Homes for Sale in Draper, Utah
Draper sits at the south end of the Salt Lake Valley where the Wasatch and Oquirrh ranges pinch together, and that geography shapes where new construction is actually being built. Flat ground has been built out for years, so most new product now goes up on the east bench above Corner Canyon, in the SunCrest community on top of Traverse Mountain, and in pocket infill projects and townhome communities closer to I-15 and the Draper FrontRunner station. Buyers shopping new builds here are usually weighing three things at once: commute (Draper is roughly 20 minutes to downtown SLC and 25 to the Silicon Slopes tech corridor in Lehi), elevation (SunCrest sits around 6,200 feet and gets real winter, while the valley floor stays milder), and school boundaries, since Draper straddles both Canyons and Alpine districts.
The new-construction inventory ranges from attached townhomes in the mid $500s to custom homes on view lots above $2M, with most production single-family falling in the $800K–$1.3M band. Corner Canyon trail access, the Draper Temple, the Loveland Living Planet Aquarium, and proximity to Lone Peak and Bell Canyon hiking are the lifestyle anchors most buyers cite. Builders active in the city include Ivory, Edge, Toll Brothers, Destination Homes, and a rotating list of smaller local custom builders on the bench. Incentives, lot premiums, and finish allowances vary widely between communities, so it pays to compare what's actually included. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market.
May 2026 · Draper market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Draper right now.
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Common questions
About new construction homes in Draper.
Where is most of the new construction happening in Draper right now? ▾
The bulk of new building is on the east bench above Highland Drive and up toward Suncrest on Traverse Ridge, plus infill projects near SunCrest and along the Corner Canyon foothills. South Mountain and the area near Draper Parkway also see periodic new townhome and small-lot single-family projects. West Draper near the FrontRunner station has more attached product and higher-density builds.
What price range should I expect for a new build in Draper? ▾
New townhomes typically start in the upper $500s to mid $600s, detached single-family on a standard lot generally runs $800K to $1.3M, and custom or semi-custom homes on the east bench with Salt Lake Valley views regularly clear $1.5M and climb past $2.5M. Lot premiums for view lots in Corner Canyon or SunCrest can add $100K or more.
Which builders are active in Draper? ▾
You'll see homes from Toll Brothers, Edge Homes, Ivory Homes, Destination Homes, Holmes Homes, and several local custom builders depending on the subdivision. SunCrest has had multiple builders rotate through over the years, and east-bench custom work is often done by smaller Utah-based firms.
What school district serves new construction in Draper? ▾
Draper is split between Canyons School District (most of the city, including Corner Canyon High) and Alpine School District (the SunCrest area, which feeds into Lehi schools). Corner Canyon High has been one of the higher-rated public high schools along the Wasatch Front, which is a real factor in resale on the east side.
Are new builds in Draper eligible for builder rate buydowns or incentives? ▾
Yes — production builders in Draper have been running 2-1 buydowns, closing cost credits, and forward commitments through their preferred lenders for the past couple of years. Incentives are larger on standing inventory and spec homes than on to-be-built contracts, so ask which homes qualify before you write.
How long does a to-be-built home in Draper typically take to finish? ▾
Plan on 6 to 10 months from contract for production builders once a lot is released, and 12 to 18 months for a true custom on the east bench. Winter weather at higher elevations like SunCrest and Traverse Ridge can stretch foundation and exterior work, so timelines there tend to run longer than valley-floor projects.