No HOA Homes for Sale in Hurricane, Utah
Hurricane sits at the edge of Utah's red rock country, about 20 minutes east of St. George and right next to Sand Hollow Reservoir, Sand Mountain, and the Hurricane Cliffs trail system. It's the kind of town where people own side-by-sides, boats, and horse trailers — and HOA restrictions on RV parking, outbuildings, fence height, or paint colors are a real deal-breaker for a lot of buyers moving here. HOA-free properties tend to cluster in the older grid streets near downtown, on the Hurricane bench, and on the larger lots stretching toward LaVerkin and Sand Hollow, where parcels were carved out before master-planned subdivisions took over the area.
Going HOA-free in Hurricane usually means more flexibility with toys, animals, and additions, plus no monthly dues eating into your budget — meaningful in a town where roughly 250+ days of sunshine a year mean people actually use their garages, shops, and side yards. The tradeoff is that you're responsible for your own standards: no architectural committee, no shared pool, no enforced landscaping rules next door. For buyers who want a shop, a casita, a garden, or just the freedom to park a fifth-wheel without asking permission, that tradeoff is the whole point. Browse the active no-HOA listings below to see what's currently on the market in Hurricane and the surrounding neighborhoods.
May 2026 · Hurricane market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Hurricane right now.
293 matching · page 5 of 13
Active listings
Prefer the map?
See all 293 no hoa homes on a map
Pan around Hurricane and refine by drawing your own boundary.
Common questions
About no hoa homes in Hurricane.
Are no-HOA homes common in Hurricane? ▾
Yes — Hurricane has a higher share of HOA-free properties than newer Washington County cities like Washington or Ivins. Older neighborhoods near downtown, the Sky Ranch area, and many of the larger lots out toward Sand Hollow and the Hurricane bench were platted before HOAs became standard. Newer subdivisions like Sienna Hills and parts of Coral Canyon do have HOAs, so the no-HOA inventory skews toward established streets and acreage parcels.
Can I park an RV or boat at a no-HOA home in Hurricane? ▾
Usually yes, which is a big reason buyers want HOA-free here. With Sand Hollow Reservoir and Sand Mountain OHV area minutes away, RV and toy storage is a real lifestyle factor. You'll still need to follow Hurricane City zoning — most residential zones allow RV parking on a hard surface beside or behind the home, but check setbacks and screening rules before you close.
Do no-HOA properties in Hurricane allow short-term rentals? ▾
No HOA does not automatically mean short-term rentals are allowed. Hurricane City restricts nightly rentals to specific zones — most of the legal STR inventory sits in designated resort zones near Sand Hollow, not in standard residential neighborhoods. If nightly rental income is part of your plan, verify the zoning with Hurricane City Planning before writing an offer.
Can I keep horses or chickens on a no-HOA lot here? ▾
On larger parcels, often yes. Much of the land on the Hurricane bench and out toward LaVerkin is zoned for animals, and lots in the half-acre-plus range frequently allow horses, chickens, and small livestock. Smaller in-town lots are typically limited to chickens under city ordinance. Confirm the specific zoning designation on any property you're considering.
What's the price difference between HOA and no-HOA homes in Hurricane? ▾
It varies more by age and lot size than by HOA status. Older no-HOA homes in central Hurricane often run lower than comparable square footage in Sienna Hills or Coral Canyon, but newer custom builds on HOA-free acreage can price well above the city median. Skipping HOA dues — usually $40 to $150 a month locally — also improves monthly affordability.
What should I watch for when buying a no-HOA home? ▾
Without an HOA, neighborhood upkeep depends entirely on the people next door. Drive the street at different times, look at fence conditions and yard maintenance, and ask about any shared wells, private roads, or irrigation ditches — those sometimes carry separate user agreements even when there's no formal HOA. A clean title report and a careful look at recorded CC&Rs are worth the effort.