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Fillmore, Utah

Homes with Views for Sale in Fillmore, Utah

Fillmore sits in Millard County's Pahvant Valley, with the Pahvant Range rising sharply to the east and open high-desert basin stretching west toward the Cricket Mountains and Sevier Lake bed. That geography means view lots here aren't a marketing line — most properties on the east bench look straight up at peaks topping 10,000 feet, while parcels on the valley floor pick up long sunset views across sagebrush flats. Fillmore is also one of the only Utah towns where you can buy acreage with real mountain frontage at prices well under what comparable land runs along the Wasatch Front, with many view homes trading in the $350K–$650K range depending on lot size and proximity to the foothills.

The town itself is small (population around 2,600), the former territorial capital, and roughly an hour south of Provo on I-15. That makes it a practical pick for buyers who want quiet, dark night skies, and a real horizon line without giving up highway access. View homes here tend to fall into a few buckets: older brick homes on tree-lined streets near the historic Statehouse, newer builds on 1–5 acre east-bench lots, and rural properties west of town with unobstructed valley views. Wildfire setbacks, well versus culinary water, and grazing rights on adjacent BLM land are all real factors worth checking before you write an offer. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market in Fillmore.

April 2026 · Fillmore market

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

Full Fillmore market report
Median sale
$330,400
3 closed in April 2026
Median DOM
155 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
94.4%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
25
active + pending

40 matching · page 1 of 2

Active listings

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Common questions

About homes with views in Fillmore.

Which areas of Fillmore have the best mountain views?

The east bench neighborhoods climbing toward the Pahvant Range get the most direct mountain frontage, including lots off Canyon Road and the streets east of Main. Properties on the north and west edges of town trade peak views for wide valley and sunset views across the Pahvant Valley toward the Cricket Mountains.

Are view lots in Fillmore on city water or wells?

It depends on location. Homes inside Fillmore city limits are typically on culinary water and city sewer, but acreage parcels on the bench or out in the valley often rely on private wells and septic systems. Always confirm water rights and well share details on the title report before closing — water rights are a real asset in Millard County.

How much of a price premium do view homes carry in Fillmore?

View premiums here are modest compared to Park City or St. George — usually 10–20% over a comparable home on a flat in-town lot. Acreage with unobstructed mountain views runs higher per square foot than standard subdivision homes, but the entry point is still much lower than equivalent view property north of Nephi.

Is the Pahvant Range visible year-round, or do storms obscure it often?

Fillmore averages around 230 sunny days a year, so the Pahvants are visible most days. Winter inversions do roll into the valley occasionally and summer afternoon thunderstorms can cloud the peaks, but extended whiteout periods are rare compared to Cache Valley or the Salt Lake basin.

Are there building or height restrictions that protect views in Fillmore?

Fillmore City zoning includes standard setback and height limits, but there's no formal view-protection ordinance like you'd see in some resort towns. On bench lots, the bigger consideration is whether neighboring parcels are buildable and where future homes could sit relative to your sightlines — worth checking the plat and county GIS before you offer.

What should I watch for when buying a view home on Fillmore's east bench?

Wildfire defensible space is a real factor since the foothills carry oak brush and grass that burn hot in late summer. Also check access road maintenance (some are county-maintained, some are private), and ask about snow drift patterns — east-bench lots can pick up significant winter drifting off the canyon mouths.