Horse Properties for Sale in Harrisville, Utah
Harrisville sits at the north end of the Ogden metro, tucked between Pleasant View, Farr West, and North Ogden, and it's one of the few Weber County cities that still carries genuine agricultural pockets inside its boundaries. The older sections west of Washington Boulevard and north along 2600 North hold the bulk of the horse-zoned parcels — half-acre to five-acre lots with existing barns, loafing sheds, riding arenas, and in many cases shares in the Pineview Water Systems irrigation network. Buyers shopping horse properties here are usually weighing Harrisville against Plain City, Farr West, or Eden, and the trade-off is straightforward: Harrisville keeps you within ten minutes of Ogden Regional Hospital, Weber State, and the I-15 interchange at 2700 North while still allowing livestock on properly zoned lots.
Climate matters when you're keeping horses on the northern Wasatch Front. Winters bring real snow load on barn roofs and frozen automatic waterers from December through February, and summer pasture needs irrigation water to stay green past June. Most of the legitimate horse setups in town were built before the 2000s subdivision push, so expect a mix of older farmhouses, mid-century ramblers, and the occasional newer custom build on retained agricultural ground. Harrisville City's zoning is specific about animal units per acre and setbacks for corrals, so verify the parcel's zoning designation before assuming any lot will support horses. Browse the active listings below to see which Harrisville parcels currently have the acreage, water, and outbuildings to actually function as a horse property.
April 2026 · Harrisville market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Harrisville right now.
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Common questions
About horse properties in Harrisville.
What size lot do I need for horses in Harrisville? ▾
Harrisville's zoning generally requires at least a half-acre for one horse, with additional acreage needed per extra animal in residential agricultural zones. Properties in the A-1 and RE (Residential Estates) zones tend to be the most horse-friendly. Always confirm the specific zoning and animal count with Harrisville City Planning before writing an offer.
Are there riding trails or arenas nearby? ▾
Riders in Harrisville have quick access to the Weber River Parkway and the foothill trails east of North Ogden, plus the Golden Spike Event Center in Ogden for shows, rodeos, and indoor arena rentals. Many local boarding facilities also offer round pens and outdoor arenas for those without space at home.
What does a horse property in Harrisville typically cost? ▾
Most horse-friendly properties in Harrisville run from the high $500s for older homes on roughly an acre up to $1M+ for newer builds on 2–5 acres with barns and outbuildings. Pricing depends heavily on water rights, existing fencing, and whether a barn or shop is already on site.
Do horse properties here come with irrigation water? ▾
Many parcels in Harrisville carry secondary (pressurized irrigation) water shares through Pineview Water Systems or local irrigation companies, which is what makes pasture viable through the dry summer. Confirm the share count and delivery schedule during due diligence — culinary water alone is rarely enough to keep pasture green.
How's the winter for keeping horses in this part of Weber County? ▾
Harrisville sits around 4,300 feet, so expect cold winters with 50–60 inches of annual snowfall and stretches of single-digit nights in January. Most owners run heated stock tanks and need a covered shelter or three-sided run-in; full barns aren't required but are common on larger spreads.
How close is Harrisville to Ogden and I-15? ▾
Harrisville borders north Ogden and sits right off Highway 89, with I-15 access about five minutes west via 2700 North. That makes it one of the more convenient horse-property towns on the Wasatch Front — you can keep acreage at home and still reach downtown Ogden in 10 minutes or Salt Lake City in under an hour.