New Listings in Farmington, Utah
Farmington sits at the north end of the Legacy Parkway, about 17 miles from downtown Salt Lake and 12 minutes from the SLC airport, which keeps demand steady year-round. The city has a split personality that shapes what hits the MLS: the historic grid around State Street and the old tabernacle offers century-old homes on mature lots, while the benches east of Highway 89 and the newer subdivisions near Station Park and Shepard Lane bring in modern construction with Wasatch views. Davis School District boundaries — especially Farmington High and Farmington Junior — drive a lot of the buyer activity, and inventory in those feeder areas tends to move quickly once it's listed.
Watching new listings here matters because Farmington is a low-volume market compared to neighbors like Layton or Kaysville. Fewer homes change hands each month, so a fresh listing in a desirable pocket like Oakridge, Farmington Ranches, or the foothills above Compton Road can draw multiple offers within days. Price points vary widely: starter townhomes near Station Park, mid-range family homes in the 1990s-2000s subdivisions, and custom estates on the bench with views from Antelope Island to Ben Lomond. Browse the active new listings below to see what just came on the market, and reach out if you'd like to set up day-of-listing alerts tuned to your price range and neighborhood preferences.
May 2026 · Farmington market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Farmington right now.
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Active listings
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Common questions
About new listings in Farmington.
How often are new listings added in Farmington? ▾
Farmington is a smaller market than Layton or Kaysville, so new inventory tends to trickle in rather than flood the MLS. On a typical week you might see a handful of new listings, with spring and early summer running heaviest. Setting up an automated alert is the best way to catch homes the day they hit the market.
What price range should I expect on new Farmington listings? ▾
Farmington skews higher than the Davis County average. Entry-level townhomes in places like Station Park's vicinity often start in the upper $400s, single-family resale homes commonly run $650K to $900K, and the foothill estates in Farmington Ranches and along the bench can clear $1.5M. New construction near Shepard Lane and the south end pushes the median up further.
Which Farmington neighborhoods see the most turnover? ▾
Oakridge, Farmington Ranches, and the newer pockets near Burke Lane and Shepard Creek tend to produce the most resale activity. The historic core around State Street and 200 East moves less frequently because owners hold onto those older homes for decades.
Are most new listings resale or new construction? ▾
Both are active. Resale dominates the older grid neighborhoods and the foothill subdivisions built in the 1990s and 2000s. New construction is concentrated on the south and west sides near the Legacy Parkway corridor and around Station Park, where builders are still finishing phases.
How fast do new Farmington listings go under contract? ▾
Well-priced homes in the Davis School District boundaries, especially anything feeding Farmington High, often go pending within a week or two. Higher-end foothill properties above $1M typically sit longer, sometimes 45 to 90 days, because the buyer pool is narrower.
Can I tour a new listing the day it's posted? ▾
Usually yes. Most Farmington sellers allow showings starting the first day, though some hold offers for a weekend open house. If you want first access on listings that match your criteria, we can set you up with same-day MLS alerts and pre-arrange showings.