Get App

Hideout, Utah

5+ Bedroom Homes for Sale in Hideout, Utah

Hideout sits on the east side of the Jordanelle Reservoir in Wasatch County, about ten minutes from Park City's Kimball Junction and roughly 35 minutes from Salt Lake City International. The town has grown fast over the last decade, and most of the larger floor plans here live in newer master-planned communities like Hideout Canyon, Soaring Hawk, Klaim, and the Deer Springs area near Mayflower. Five-bedroom-plus homes in Hideout tend to fall into two camps: newer mountain-modern builds with walkout basements designed to sleep extended family or rental groups, and larger custom homes higher on the bench with direct Jordanelle and Deer Valley East Village views. Lot sizes vary widely, from townhome-style products around a quarter acre to half-acre-plus single-family lots.

Price ranges for 5+ bedroom homes in Hideout typically run from the low $1.5M range for newer production builds up to $5M+ for custom view lots near the reservoir. Short-term rentals are allowed in much of Hideout, which is unusual for Wasatch Front cities and a major reason larger floor plans hold their value here — buyers can offset costs through nightly rentals when they aren't using the home themselves. Winters bring real snow (Hideout sits around 6,500 feet), so heated driveways, mudrooms, and oversized garages show up often in this size range. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market in Hideout at five bedrooms and up.

May 2026 · Hideout market

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

Full Hideout market report
Median sale
$1,099,950
6 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
80 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
95.0%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
49
active + pending

12 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About 5+ bedroom homes in Hideout.

Why are there so many large homes in a town as small as Hideout?

Hideout was incorporated in 2008 and most of its housing stock is newer master-planned construction aimed at second-home buyers and Park City commuters. Developers built to the demand, which skews toward 4-6 bedroom layouts that work for families plus guests. It's one of the few Wasatch Back towns where 5+ bedroom inventory is relatively common.

Can I run a short-term rental out of a 5-bedroom home in Hideout?

In most Hideout subdivisions, yes — nightly rentals are permitted, which is a key difference from neighboring Park City proper where STRs are heavily restricted. HOA rules still apply and vary by community, so confirm the specific subdivision's CC&Rs before writing an offer. Larger floor plans often pencil well as rentals because they sleep 12-14 guests.

How close are these homes to Deer Valley and Park City skiing?

Hideout is adjacent to the new Deer Valley East Village (the Mayflower expansion), which has its own base area and lifts. Park City Mountain's Canyons Village is about 12-15 minutes by car, and Old Town Park City is roughly 20 minutes depending on traffic and the season.

What's the typical lot size for a 5+ bedroom home here?

Most fall between 0.15 and 0.5 acres. Townhome and twin-home products on the smaller end still hit five bedrooms by going three stories with finished basements. Larger custom lots above the reservoir can run an acre or more, but those are the exception rather than the rule.

Are property taxes higher because of the short-term rental zoning?

Homes used as primary residences in Utah get a 45% residential exemption on assessed value. Second homes and rentals don't, so effective tax rates on non-primary Hideout homes run roughly 1.1-1.3% of market value versus about 0.55-0.7% for primary residences. Factor that into your carrying-cost math.

What utilities and services should I check on at this size?

Most Hideout homes are on culinary water through the Hideout Special Service District and use natural gas for heating. Larger homes with hot tubs, snowmelt systems, and pools push winter gas bills higher than buyers from lower elevations expect. Internet is generally fiber or high-speed cable in the newer subdivisions.