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Harrisville, Utah

Homes with Acreage for Sale in Harrisville, Utah

Harrisville sits just north of Ogden along Highway 89, and it's one of the few Weber County cities where you can still find homes on a half-acre, full acre, or more without driving up into the foothills. The town grew out of farmland — much of the original Harrisville settlement was orchards and small dairies — and pockets of that agricultural zoning still exist between the newer subdivisions off Larsen Lane, Wall Avenue, and 2000 North. That mix is why acreage shoppers end up here: you get a rural feel with city water available in most areas, Weber School District boundaries, and a 10-minute commute to downtown Ogden or the Ogden Regional Medical Center.

Lot sizes on the current market typically run from a third of an acre on the smaller end up to 2-5 acre parcels closer to the Pleasant View border and along the Four Mile Creek corridor. Buyers shopping acreage here are usually after room for a shop, RV parking, a few horses or 4-H animals, or simply a buffer from neighbors — and Harrisville's animal ordinances are friendlier than Ogden city proper, which matters if livestock is part of the plan. Prices vary widely based on whether the land is flat irrigated pasture, a sloped view lot looking west toward the Great Salt Lake, or a flag lot tucked behind existing homes. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently available, and reach out if you want help comparing zoning, water shares, or outbuilding allowances on a specific property.

May 2026 · Harrisville market

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

Full Harrisville market report
Median sale
$435,000
17 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
4 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
99.4%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
35
active + pending

4 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About homes with acreage in Harrisville.

What counts as an acreage property in Harrisville?

Most buyers and agents around here use a half-acre (about 21,780 sq ft) as the working minimum, since standard subdivision lots in Harrisville run closer to a quarter-acre. True rural-feel acreage usually means one acre or more, and the larger 2-5 acre parcels tend to sit along the city's north and west edges near Pleasant View and Farr West.

Can I keep horses or livestock on acreage in Harrisville?

Yes, in most cases — Harrisville allows horses, chickens, and small livestock on appropriately zoned lots, with animal counts typically tied to lot size. The exact number depends on your zoning designation (A-1 agricultural lots are the most permissive), so always confirm with Harrisville City before writing an offer if animals are non-negotiable.

Do acreage homes here come with irrigation water?

Many do. A lot of the older parcels carry shares in Pineview Water Systems or have secondary water rights tied to Four Mile Creek or local ditch companies. Irrigation shares are a real value-add for keeping pasture green through Utah's dry summers, and they don't always transfer automatically — confirm in the seller's disclosures.

How does pricing compare to acreage in nearby cities?

Harrisville generally prices below Pleasant View and North Ogden for comparable acreage, and well below Eden or Liberty up in Ogden Valley. You're trading mountain-valley views for flatter, more usable land and a shorter commute. Expect acreage homes to run a meaningful premium over standard subdivision homes in town, with the spread widening as lot size and outbuilding square footage increase.

Are there shop or outbuilding restrictions?

Harrisville is reasonable about detached shops and barns, but maximum size, height, and setbacks depend on your zone and lot size. Larger ag-zoned parcels can support sizable shops, while smaller residential acreage lots have tighter caps. If a 40x60 shop is on your wish list, verify the specific lot will support it before going under contract.

How long is the commute from Harrisville to Hill Air Force Base or downtown SLC?

Hill AFB runs about 20-25 minutes south via I-15. Downtown Salt Lake City is roughly 40-45 minutes off-peak, longer in rush hour. Ogden's FrontRunner station is about 10 minutes away if you'd rather train into Salt Lake than drive.