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Fairview, Utah

Homes with RV Parking for Sale in Fairview, Utah

Fairview is a working ranch town of about 1,250 people at the north end of Sanpete Valley, roughly 90 minutes south of Provo on US-89. It sits at the base of Fairview Canyon — the main paved route over the Wasatch Plateau to Huntington and the San Rafael Swell — which is exactly why so many homes here are built around RV, trailer, and toy storage. Locals run cattle, pull horse trailers up to summer range, haul side-by-sides to Skyline Drive, and tow campers to Palisade and Huntington Reservoir most weekends from May through October. Lot sizes reflect that lifestyle: quarter-acre to five-acre parcels are typical inside city limits, and double gates, gravel pads, and 30-amp hookups show up on listings that would be considered rare finds further north.

For buyers coming from Utah County or the Salt Lake area, the trade-off is straightforward. You give up a 15-minute commute and chain restaurants; you get a detached shop with a 12- or 14-foot RV door, room to park a fifth-wheel without an HOA letter, and direct access to some of the best public land in the state. North Sanpete School District serves the town, and most daily shopping happens 12 miles south in Mt. Pleasant or Ephraim. If a place to actually keep your trailer at home is non-negotiable, Fairview is one of the more practical markets in central Utah. The active listings below show what's currently available with RV parking, pads, or oversized garages.

May 2026 · Fairview market

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

Full Fairview market report
Median sale
$400,000
2 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
49 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
99.2%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
31
active + pending

26 matching · page 2 of 2

Active listings

Common questions

About homes with rv parking in Fairview.

Why is RV parking so common on Fairview homes?

Fairview sits at the mouth of Fairview Canyon, the gateway to Skyline Drive, Huntington Reservoir, and the Manti-La Sal trail system. Most households here own at least one trailer, side-by-side, snowmobile, or horse rig, so wide gravel pads, drive-through gates, and 30/50-amp hookups are standard rather than a luxury upgrade.

What does RV parking typically look like on a Fairview listing?

On larger parcels you'll see graveled or concrete pads 12-14 feet wide running alongside the home or behind a back gate, often with a 30-amp or 50-amp outlet and a sewer cleanout. In-town lots usually offer a graded side yard with double gates wide enough for a fifth-wheel or horse trailer.

Are there city rules about parking an RV at my Fairview home?

Fairview City is more permissive than Wasatch Front cities, but RVs generally need to be on an improved surface and not blocking sidewalks or sight lines. A few subdivisions on the south end have CC&Rs that restrict long-term street parking, so check the recorded docs before closing.

Do these properties usually have room for horses or livestock too?

Many do. Sanpete County zoning allows animals on most acreage parcels, and it's common to find homes in Fairview with RV parking plus a small barn, loafing shed, or corral on a half-acre to five acres. If livestock matters, filter for properties zoned A-1 or RA-1.

How does winter affect RV storage here?

Fairview sits around 6,000 feet and gets real snow, so most owners winterize trailers by October and either tarp them or pull them into a detached shop. Covered RV bays and tall detached garages (14-foot doors and up) command a noticeable premium on local listings.

What price range should I expect?

Homes with usable RV parking in Fairview generally run from the upper $300s for an older in-town home with a side pad up to $700K+ for newer builds on an acre with a heated RV garage. Acreage and shop size drive most of the price spread.