New Construction Homes for Sale in Hideout, Utah
Hideout is one of the youngest towns in Utah, incorporated in 2008 on the ridges above Jordanelle Reservoir, and most of what's standing today was built in the last fifteen years. That makes new construction the dominant product type here — entire neighborhoods like Hideout Canyon, Klaim, Soaring Hawk, Deer Springs, and the Outpost are still being phased in, with builders like Brookfield, Toll Brothers, and several Park City–based custom shops actively delivering homes. Buyers shopping new construction in Hideout are usually weighing it against resale Park City stock fifteen minutes west, and the math often pencils out: similar Wasatch Back access, Park City school district, but typically $200–$400 per square foot less than comparable finishes inside Park City limits.
The terrain matters more here than in most Utah towns. Lots are cut into steep hillsides facing Jordanelle and the Deer Valley ridgeline, so floor plans are heavily walkout-basement driven and most new builds prioritize the view side with stacked decks and floor-to-ceiling glass. Expect tight HOAs, architectural review boards that limit exterior colors and roof materials, and snow-load engineering appropriate for 7,000-foot elevation. Mayflower Mountain Resort — the new Deer Valley East Village — is roughly ten minutes away and has pushed both prices and builder activity up considerably since 2022. Browse the active new construction listings below to see what's currently available across Hideout's subdivisions, including spec homes ready now and to-be-built opportunities on remaining lots.
June 2026 · Hideout market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Hideout right now.
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Common questions
About new construction homes in Hideout.
Why is so much of Hideout's inventory new construction? ▾
Hideout incorporated in 2008 and most of its developable land has been platted in the last 15 years. Communities like Hideout Canyon, Deer Springs, Soaring Hawk, and Shoreline Estates are still in active build-out phases, so new construction makes up a large share of what trades each year. Resale homes exist, but buyers shopping Hideout will see far more spec and to-be-built product than in older Wasatch Back towns.
Which builders are currently active in Hideout? ▾
Recent activity has come from Ivory Homes, Toll Brothers (in Deer Springs and Shoreline), Holmes Homes, Stack Living, and a rotating list of custom builders working on view lots above the reservoir. Production builders dominate the townhome and twin-home segment, while custom builds tend to cluster on the ridgelines facing Jordanelle and the Deer Valley peaks.
What do new construction homes in Hideout typically cost? ▾
Townhomes and twin homes generally start in the high $700s to low $1M range, single-family production homes run roughly $1.2M to $2.5M, and custom ridge-lot builds with Jordanelle views routinely list from $3M into the $6M+ range. Lot premiums for water and ski-resort views are significant — often $200K to $500K over an interior lot in the same community.
Can new construction homes in Hideout be used as short-term rentals? ▾
Yes, Hideout is one of the few municipalities near Deer Valley and Park City that broadly permits nightly rentals, which is a major reason investors target new builds here. Specific HOAs still set their own rules, so confirm rental policy at the subdivision level before writing an offer — Deer Springs, for example, has different terms than some of the Hideout Canyon phases.
How close is Hideout to Deer Valley's new East Village? ▾
Hideout sits directly across Highway 248 and SR-248 from the Deer Valley East Village expansion, with the new gondola base roughly 5 to 10 minutes from most Hideout neighborhoods. That proximity is the single biggest driver of new construction demand right now and has pushed land prices up sharply since the expansion was announced.
What should I check on a to-be-built contract in Hideout? ▾
Pin down the price-lock terms, allowance schedule, change-order policy, and the builder's delivery window — Wasatch Back winters can push completion dates. Also verify HOA dues, nightly rental rules, and whether the lot sits in a SID or special assessment area, since several Hideout communities carry bond payments tied to roads and utilities.