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Kaysville, Utah

Homes with Solar Panels for Sale in Kaysville, Utah

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Kaysville sits on the Davis County bench between Farmington and Layton, with most neighborhoods running up against the foothills below Francis Peak. The combination of high elevation, dry air, and roughly 230 sunny days a year makes solar a practical investment here — output stays strong from March through October, with the biggest hit coming during winter inversion weeks when the valley fogs in. Homes listed with solar in Kaysville tend to fall into two groups: newer builds in subdivisions like Sundance Meadows, Spring Run, and the developments off Mutton Hollow Road where solar was added during construction, and established homes near Barnes Park or Mills Park where owners retrofitted systems to offset Rocky Mountain Power bills that climb fast with air conditioning load in July and August.

If you're shopping solar-equipped homes here, the single biggest question is ownership status. A paid-off owned array is a real asset that transfers with the deed; a leased system or PPA means qualifying with the solar provider and taking over monthly payments, which can complicate the loan. Ask early about system size in kW, age, warranty coverage, and whether the home is on the older net metering rate or the newer export credit program — that one detail can swing the annual savings by hundreds of dollars. Battery storage is still uncommon in Kaysville but starting to appear on higher-end listings. Browse the active solar-equipped listings below to see what's currently on the market in Kaysville.

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April 2026 · Kaysville market

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

Full Kaysville market report
Median sale
$731,000
24 closed in April 2026
Median DOM
14 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
97.8%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
73
active + pending

4 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About homes with solar panels in Kaysville.

Does Kaysville get enough sun to make rooftop solar worthwhile?

Yes. Davis County averages roughly 230+ sunny days a year, and Kaysville's east-bench orientation gives most rooftops strong southern exposure. Production typically dips in December and January when inversion fog rolls into the valley, but annual output is generally strong enough to offset a large share of a typical Rocky Mountain Power bill.

Is the solar system owned or leased on most Kaysville listings?

It varies, and it matters a lot for financing. Owned systems (paid off or financed and being paid off at closing) add value and transfer cleanly. Leased systems or PPAs require the buyer to qualify with the solar company and assume the contract. Always ask the listing agent for the system documents before writing an offer.

How does Rocky Mountain Power's net metering work for Kaysville homes?

Kaysville is served by Rocky Mountain Power, which currently uses an export credit program rather than full retail net metering for new interconnections. Credits for exported power are lower than the retail rate you pay, so systems sized to match daytime usage tend to pencil out better than oversized arrays. Existing pre-2017 systems may still be grandfathered into the older net metering rate.

Do solar panels add resale value in Kaysville?

Owned systems generally do, particularly on homes in newer subdivisions like Sundance Meadows, Spring Run, and the developments off Mutton Hollow Road where buyers expect modern efficiency features. Appraisers in Davis County are increasingly familiar with solar valuation, though the premium depends on system age, size, and whether the panels are paid off.

Are there HOA restrictions on solar in Kaysville neighborhoods?

Utah state law limits an HOA's ability to prohibit rooftop solar, but HOAs can still regulate placement and appearance. In Kaysville's newer planned communities, expect architectural review of panel location, conduit routing, and ground-mount installations. Older established neighborhoods near Main Street and Mills Park typically have no HOA at all.

What should I inspect before buying a Kaysville home with solar?

Get the system's age, warranty status (panels are usually 25 years, inverters 10-15), production history, and a payoff statement if it's financed. Confirm the roof underneath has enough remaining life — replacing a roof under existing panels is expensive. Also verify the interconnection agreement with Rocky Mountain Power transfers to you at closing.