Best Utah Real Estate

Download our Utah home search app

The Brokerage Almanac · Vol. 1

Historic Homes for sale in Utah.

Brick Victorians in the Avenues. Craftsman bungalows in Sugar House. Pioneer cottages above the State Capitol. Mining-era miners' rows in Park City. Below is every 1950-or-earlier home actively listed across the state — curated by city, with the inspection notes, loan guidance, and neighborhood context we wish every first-time historic buyer had.

A field guide

Where Utah's history still has a porch light on.

Salt Lake City — The Avenues + Capitol Hill

Utah's densest concentration of pre-1920 housing. The Avenues holds Queen Anne and Colonial Revival Victorians on narrow lots that climb the Wasatch foothills; Capitol Hill is mostly modest pioneer-era brick cottages and 1910s bungalows. Both are inside Salt Lake City's Historic Preservation districts — exterior changes need design review, but the inventory is the best in the state. Median sale today in Salt Lake City: $581,250; typical days-on-market: 8 days.

Sugar House — Streetcar-era Craftsman

Salt Lake's oldest streetcar suburb, developed 1900–1940. The signature stock is the Craftsman bungalow with deep front porch, exposed rafter tails, and original built-ins. Lots are 0.10–0.18 acre, walkable to Sugarhouse Park and 21st South. Renovation activity is high here — expect a mix of original-condition and tastefully-renovated listings.

Ogden — 25th Street + the East Bench

Ogden's railroad-era boomtown stock is one of Utah's best-kept secrets. Two-story brick Foursquares and Italianate Victorians line the side streets between Adams and Jefferson; the homes are bigger than equivalent Avenues stock and prices run 30–40% lower. 442 active listings today; median sale $392,500.

Provo — Joaquin + the Tree Streets

East-side Provo, walking distance to BYU. Early-1900s brick bungalows and Tudor Revivals on tree-lined streets named for native species (Cedar, Cherry, Locust). Strong rental demand from BYU + UVU keeps these moving at 19 days typical DOM.

Park City — Old Town miner's row

The smallest historic inventory in the state, and the priciest. These 1880s–1920s mining cottages along Main and Park Avenue trade above $2M regularly — you're buying land value, walkability, and a piece of the Silver Boom. Renovation is heavily regulated; engage a local architect familiar with the Historic District Commission before you offer.

Logan, Brigham City, Cedar City

Small-market value plays. Logan's Adams Neighborhood + Center Street district hold 1900–1930 brick Victorians under $400K. Brigham City and Cedar City have similar inventory and even lower price floors. If you love the architecture but the Salt Lake pricing doesn't pencil, these are the markets to look at.

1167 matching · page 3 of 49

Active listings

Prefer the map?

See 1167 historic Utah homes on a map

Open the map →

Before you offer

The four things every Utah historic buyer wishes they'd known.

01

Get the right inspectors

A general home inspector won't catch every issue specific to pre-1950 stock. Add an electrician (for branch wiring), a structural engineer (for unreinforced masonry), and a sewer-line camera scope. We have specialists we trust — ask.

02

Pre-qualify with a historic-savvy lender

Underwriters reject deals over knob-and-tube wiring or galvanized plumbing all the time. Pick a local lender who's closed historic deals before. FHA 203(k) and Fannie Mae HomeStyle Renovation loans roll the renovation budget into the mortgage.

03

Check the historic-district rules

If the home is inside an officially designated district (the Avenues, Capitol Hill, Old Town Park City, Ogden 25th Street), exterior changes need approval. Interior renovations are unrestricted. Build the review timeline into your offer if you have specific exterior plans.

04

Earthquake retrofitting

Most pre-1950 Utah homes are unreinforced masonry — the highest-risk category in a Wasatch Fault event. Retrofits run $8K–$25K and Salt Lake City's Fix-the-Bricks program offers grants. Worth it for both safety and resale.

Frequently asked

Buying historic Utah, answered.

What qualifies as a "historic" home in Utah?

Utah's historic-home inventory is generally defined as anything built on or before 1950 — that captures the territorial era (pre-1896 statehood), railroad-era brick Victorians (1880s–1910s), Craftsman bungalows (1900–1930), and pre-war Tudors. Officially designated historic districts also exist — Salt Lake City's Avenues, Capitol Hill, and University historic districts; Ogden's 25th Street Historic District; Provo's Joaquin neighborhood; and Park City's Old Town. A home in one of those districts is subject to additional design-review rules when you renovate exteriors. Right now we're showing 1,171 active homes built 1950 or earlier statewide.

Which Utah neighborhoods have the most historic homes for sale?

Salt Lake City — specifically the Avenues, Capitol Hill, and Sugar House — has the deepest inventory in the state. Ogden's East Bench and the 25th Street area come next, followed by Provo's Joaquin neighborhood near BYU and Logan's Adams Neighborhood near Utah State. Park City's Old Town has a smaller but highly sought-after inventory of 1880s–1920s mining-era cottages that trade at a significant premium. We surface live counts per city in the filter pills at the top of this page.

How much do historic Utah homes typically cost?

Across the active inventory we track right now, the median list price for a pre-1950 home is $450,000. Big variance by neighborhood: a Sugar House Craftsman might list in the high $600,000s while a comparable footprint in Capitol Hill clears $1.5M. Park City Old Town cottages routinely list above $2M because of land value, not the structure. Smaller-market cities like Logan, Brigham City, and Price tend to offer 1900–1930 brick houses under $400,000.

What inspections are critical for a pre-1950 home?

Beyond the standard buyer's inspection, get specialists in for: (1) the electrical panel + branch wiring — knob-and-tube and ungrounded two-prong outlets are common on pre-1940 stock and a major insurance flag; (2) the plumbing — galvanized supply lines fail by their 70-year mark and cast-iron drains by their 90-year mark; (3) the chimney + foundation — Utah's freeze-thaw cycles are hard on unreinforced masonry; (4) lead-based paint testing (pre-1978) and asbestos testing if the home has original duct insulation, tile flooring, or popcorn ceilings. Budget $800–$1,500 for the specialist trio on top of the general inspection.

Can I get a conventional loan on a historic home?

Yes, but the home has to be in livable condition at appraisal — meaning a working kitchen, no major structural issues, all major systems operable. Underwriters get nervous about pre-1940 homes with knob-and-tube wiring; some lenders will require it be remediated as a closing condition. If the home needs more than cosmetic work, look at FHA 203(k) or Fannie Mae HomeStyle Renovation loans — both bake the renovation budget into the mortgage. Local lenders familiar with Utah historic stock (we can refer you) often clear these deals more smoothly than a national bank.

Are historic Utah homes earthquake-safe?

Most pre-1950 Utah homes have unreinforced masonry foundations and walls — the same construction style flagged by the Utah Seismic Safety Commission as the highest-risk category in a Wasatch Fault earthquake. The good news: foundation bolting and brick veneer anchoring are well-understood retrofits and grant programs exist (the Fix-the-Bricks program in Salt Lake City has funded thousands of retrofits). Budget $8,000–$25,000 for a typical retrofit on a 1,500–2,500 sq ft home. Ask your inspector to flag URM construction so you can plan for it.

Do historic homes have renovation restrictions?

Only if the home is inside an officially designated historic district. In Salt Lake City, that includes the Avenues, Capitol Hill, South Temple, and University historic districts; exterior changes visible from the street (windows, doors, paint, additions) require Historic Landmark Commission approval. Interior remodels are unrestricted. Outside districts (most of the state's historic stock), you can renovate freely subject to standard building permits. Most buyers find the district rules add 2–4 weeks to exterior projects but don't meaningfully change what's possible.

Do historic homes hold their value as well as new construction?

In Salt Lake City, Park City, and the Wasatch Front more broadly — historically yes, often outperforming new construction in appreciation because the lots are typically larger, the neighborhoods more established, and the inventory finite. A 1920 Avenues bungalow on a 0.15-acre lot generally appreciates faster than a 2020 production home in a master-planned community. The trade-off is higher maintenance reserve — budget 1.5–2% of home value per year for ongoing repairs vs ~1% for new construction.

What condition should I expect on these listings?

Highly variable, and the listing photos don't always tell the story. About 60% of the active historic inventory has had at least kitchen + bath updates in the last 10 years; the rest is split between fully renovated (often a 20–30% price premium) and original condition. Original-condition homes are the better deal if you have a renovation budget — you're typically buying the right footprint at the right address for less. Walk a few in person before committing to a style; the patina on a real 1910 Craftsman is different from a 2020 reproduction.

How are historic Utah homes insured?

Insurance is the underestimated cost. Older homes mean higher replacement-cost estimates (period materials are pricier to source), and carriers often add surcharges for knob-and-tube wiring or galvanized plumbing — sometimes refusing to renew until the issues are fixed. Get a binding quote before you waive the inspection contingency. Some Utah carriers specialize in historic-home insurance (Cincinnati Insurance, Chubb Masterpiece for higher-end inventory); standard regional carriers are fine for homes that have been updated to modern systems.

I want to see one. What's next?

Save a few favorites and tell us when you'd like to tour — we'll line up showings and walk you through what to look for on each one. Pre-1950 home shopping rewards patience: the home you walk past on the way to your second showing is sometimes the one. Use the filter pills above to scope to your target city, and call us anytime — we know the local inspectors, lenders, and tradespeople who specialize in this stock.

Talk to a Utah historic-home specialist

We've walked hundreds of these homes.

Send us a few favorites from this page and we'll line up showings, flag the ones worth your time, and connect you with the right inspectors and lenders for pre-1950 stock. No pressure, no spam.