Homes with Solar Panels for Sale in Fruit Heights, Utah
Fruit Heights sits on the bench above Kaysville in southern Davis County, with the Wasatch climbing straight up behind it and views west toward the Great Salt Lake. It's a small town — under 6,000 residents — built largely on the old orchards that gave it its name, and the housing stock leans toward established single-family homes on larger lots, plus newer construction tucked into the foothills off Mountain Road and Nicholls Road. Buyers here are typically commuting to Hill Air Force Base, Lagoon, downtown Ogden, or pushing south to Salt Lake on I-15. Davis School District is a major draw, and homes generally trade in the upper range for the county, with most listings well into the $700Ks and up.
Solar makes real sense in Fruit Heights for a few reasons worth knowing. The bench location gets strong, unobstructed southern exposure, and Utah averages around 230 sunny days a year — production numbers here hold up. Rocky Mountain Power's net metering rules have tightened since 2017, so check whether a listing's array is grandfathered under the older transition program, which can meaningfully affect monthly bills. Larger lots common to this area also leave room for ground-mount systems or future battery additions. Pay attention to whether the panels are owned outright, financed, or leased — that detail changes the closing process and what transfers with the home. Browse the active listings below, and reach out if you'd like a closer look at any of these properties.
May 2026 · Fruit Heights market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Fruit Heights right now.
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