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Fillmore, Utah

Homes with Solar Panels for Sale in Fillmore, Utah

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Fillmore sits roughly halfway between Salt Lake City and St. George along I-15, which puts it in one of the better solar production zones in the state. The town averages around 250 sunny days a year, sits at about 5,100 feet, and has the cool, dry air that keeps photovoltaic panels operating closer to their rated efficiency than they would in a humid climate. For buyers who've watched power bills climb, a home with an already-installed array means you skip the 4-8 month process of permitting, ordering, and inspection — and you avoid the upfront $20,000-$35,000 cash outlay that a typical residential system runs in rural Utah.

The wrinkle specific to Fillmore is the utility. Most of town is served by Fillmore City Power, the municipal provider, not Rocky Mountain Power, so net metering credits and interconnection rules are set locally rather than by the PSC. That matters when you're underwriting the actual monthly savings — ask the listing agent for 12 months of utility bills and the system's production data before assuming the panels will cover your usage. You'll also want to know whether the system is owned outright, financed, or on a third-party lease, because each scenario changes how the solar transfers at closing and how your lender treats it. Browse the active solar-equipped listings below to see what's currently on the market in Fillmore and the surrounding Millard County area.

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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

1 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About homes with solar panels in Fillmore.

Does Fillmore get enough sun to make solar worthwhile?

Yes. Millard County averages around 240-260 sunny days a year, and Fillmore sits at about 5,100 feet elevation with low humidity, which actually improves panel efficiency. Most south-facing roof installs here produce strong output from March through October, with reduced but usable production in winter.

Is the solar system owned or leased on most listings?

It varies. Some Fillmore sellers have paid-off systems that transfer free and clear, while others have an active loan or a lease/PPA through providers like Sunrun or Sunnova. Always ask for the system paperwork upfront — a transferable lease can affect your loan approval and monthly budget.

Who is the utility provider and does Fillmore have net metering?

Most of Fillmore is served by Fillmore City Power, a municipal utility, rather than Rocky Mountain Power. Net metering terms with city power are different than what you'd see in Salt Lake or St. George, so call the city utility office directly to confirm current buyback rates before you assume the system will zero out your bill.

Will solar panels affect my mortgage or appraisal?

Owned systems generally add appraised value and are treated like any other improvement. Leased systems are trickier — the lease is a UCC filing on the property and the lender will require you to qualify with that payment included. FHA and VA both have specific rules about assuming solar leases.

What should I inspect on a solar home before closing?

Get the install date, panel and inverter warranties, production history (most systems have a monitoring app), and any roof penetrations checked during the home inspection. Inverters typically need replacement around year 10-15, so an older system may have a known upcoming cost.

Are there many solar-equipped homes on the market in Fillmore?

Inventory is modest. Fillmore is a small town of roughly 2,500 people, so the count of active solar listings is usually in the single digits at any given time. The listings below update directly from the MLS, so they reflect what's actually available right now.