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Fillmore, Utah

Horse Properties for Sale in Fillmore, Utah

Fillmore sits halfway between Salt Lake and St. George along I-15, which makes it one of the more practical places in Utah to own real horse acreage without paying Wasatch Front prices. The town was Utah's original territorial capital, and the agricultural character never left — alfalfa fields, irrigation ditches, and small ranches still define the valley floor. Buyers shopping horse properties here generally land on parcels between 1 and 20 acres, often with established water shares from Corn Creek or the Pahvant irrigation system. Elevation runs around 5,100 feet, so you get four real seasons: cold winters with manageable snow loads, hot dry summers in the mid-90s, and a long shoulder season that keeps pastures productive from April through October.

The features that matter most on Fillmore horse properties are water rights, fencing, and outbuildings — a barn, loafing shed, or covered arena often matters more to the price than the house itself. Riding access is genuinely good: the Pahvant Range climbs straight up east of town with forest service trails, and the open BLM ground west toward the Cricket Mountains gives you room to ride for hours. Hay is local and cheap, the vet community is small but capable, and Delta's larger equine services are 35 minutes away. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently available, and pay close attention to listed water shares — that detail will shape your real cost of ownership more than anything else.

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

12 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About horse properties in Fillmore.

How much acreage do most Fillmore horse properties include?

Listings typically run from 1 to 5 acres inside the city limits, with larger parcels of 10 to 40+ acres available out toward Flowell, McCornick, and the foothills west of I-15. Anything over 5 acres usually comes with established water rights, which matter more than the land itself in Millard County.

Are water shares included with horse properties here?

Often yes, but always verify. Properties pull from a mix of Corn Creek irrigation, well rights, and shares through local irrigation companies. Ask the listing agent for the specific water share count and the secondary water schedule before writing an offer — pasture viability depends on it.

What's the zoning situation for keeping horses in Fillmore?

Most rural-residential and agricultural zones in Millard County allow horses with minimum acreage requirements, generally one horse per half-acre or acre depending on the zone. Properties inside Fillmore city limits have their own animal ordinances, so confirm the specific parcel's zoning with the county before assuming you can build a barn or arena.

How does Fillmore compare to Wasatch Front horse property prices?

Significantly cheaper. Comparable acreage with a home, barn, and water in Fillmore often runs 40-60% less than similar setups in Heber, Erda, or Eagle Mountain. The trade-off is the two-hour drive to Salt Lake and limited services, which is exactly why buyers priced out up north keep looking here.

Is winter hay and feed easy to source locally?

Yes. Millard County is alfalfa country — Delta and the surrounding valley produce some of the state's largest hay crops, so buying direct from growers is straightforward and prices stay below Wasatch Front rates. Most owners stockpile in fall when fields are baling.

What riding access exists near Fillmore?

Pahvant Range trails sit immediately east of town, with forest service access into Chalk Creek, Maple Hollow, and Pioneer Pass. To the west, the Cricket Mountains and open BLM ground give you hundreds of square miles of undeveloped riding. Most owners trailer 10-20 minutes and ride straight off public land.