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Duchesne, Utah

Homes with RV Parking for Sale in Duchesne, Utah

Duchesne is one of the easier places in Utah to own an RV, a boat, a horse trailer, or all three at once. Lots are bigger than what you'll see in Heber or along the Wasatch Front, county zoning is straightforward, and HOAs barely exist outside a handful of subdivisions. That combination means RV parking shows up on a large share of local listings — sometimes as a poured concrete pad with 50-amp service and a sewer cleanout, sometimes as a 40-foot detached shop with a 14-foot door, and often just as a graded side yard wide enough to swing a fifth-wheel through a gate. Median prices here run well below the state average, and you get more land and more outbuildings for the money than almost anywhere within two hours of Salt Lake.

The feature matters in Duchesne for a practical reason: this is a recreation and energy-economy town. Moon Lake, the Uinta Mountains, Starvation Reservoir, and the Green River are all within an hour, and a lot of households use trailers for work in the oilfield or on ranches. Buyers looking at homes in Myton, Tabiona, Altamont, and Bluebell tend to treat RV parking as a baseline requirement rather than a bonus. Pay attention to door height on shops, pad drainage for the freeze-thaw winters, and whether utility hookups are already run. Browse the active listings below to see which Duchesne County homes currently have RV parking that fits your rig.

May 2026 · Duchesne market

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

Full Duchesne market report
Median sale
$283,500
2 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
11 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
94.3%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
28
active + pending

18 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

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Common questions

About homes with rv parking in Duchesne.

What counts as RV parking on a Duchesne MLS listing?

Most listings flag RV parking when there's a dedicated gravel or concrete pad beside the house, a wide gated side yard, or an oversized detached shop with a 12-14 foot door. In Duchesne it's common to see properties on a half-acre or more where the RV pad is just part of the graded yard rather than a formal improvement. Always check photos and the property description for hookups (30/50 amp, sewer dump, water) since those add real value.

Do I need a permit or HOA approval to park an RV at a Duchesne home?

Most of Duchesne County is unincorporated or governed by light county zoning, so RV parking on your own lot is generally allowed without a permit as long as it's not used as a full-time residence. Inside Duchesne city limits and in subdivisions like those near Starvation Reservoir, check the specific ordinance or CC&Rs. HOAs are rare here compared to the Wasatch Front, which is part of the appeal for RV and toy owners.

Why is RV parking so common on Duchesne listings?

The Uinta Basin is a launching point for Moon Lake, the High Uintas Wilderness, Starvation State Park, and a lot of oilfield and ranch work that involves trailers and campers. Lots tend to be larger and flatter than along the Wasatch Front, and county setbacks are forgiving, so builders and owners routinely add an RV pad or a shop with tall doors. It's closer to a default than a premium feature out here.

Should I look for hookups or just a parking pad?

If you actually use your RV more than a few weekends a year, hookups matter — a 30 or 50 amp plug, a frost-free water spigot, and a sewer cleanout turn a pad into a real staging area. Homes with full hookups typically command a few thousand more but save you the cost of adding them later, which runs $3,000-$8,000 depending on how far the pad sits from the panel and septic.

Are detached shops with RV bays common in Duchesne?

Yes, and they're one of the things that pulls buyers here from Heber, Vernal, and even out-of-state. A 30x40 or larger shop with a 12-foot or 14-foot roll-up door shows up regularly on rural listings, often with concrete floors, 220 power, and a wood stove. Expect to pay a premium of $40,000-$80,000 over a comparable home without the shop, but it holds value well in this market.

How's winter access for RV parking in Duchesne?

Duchesne sits around 5,500 feet and gets real winters — cold inversions, snow, and frozen ground from December through February. Concrete pads handle the freeze-thaw cycle better than gravel over the long haul, and south-facing pads clear off faster. If you're storing a trailer through winter, blow out the lines and check that the pad drains away from the house and the rig.