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Kaysville, Utah

Townhomes for Sale in Kaysville, Utah

Kaysville sits about 20 miles north of Salt Lake City along the I-15 corridor, and its townhome market has grown steadily as buyers look for Davis County schools and a shorter commute without the price tag of a detached home in Farmington or Centerville. Most townhome communities cluster near Station Park, along the West Kaysville growth corridor, and within walking distance of the Kaysville FrontRunner station — a real factor for buyers who work downtown or at the University of Utah and would rather skip the I-15 crawl. Expect a mix of newer three-story builds with attached two-car garages and older two-story units from the early 2000s with smaller footprints and lower HOA dues.

Townhome buyers in Kaysville tend to fall into three camps: first-time buyers priced out of single-family inventory, downsizers who want to stay in Davis School District boundaries, and commuters who value lock-and-leave convenience. HOA fees typically cover exterior maintenance, landscaping, and snow removal, which matters more than people expect given Kaysville's lake-effect winters off the Great Salt Lake. Property taxes run roughly 0.55–0.65% of assessed value, and most communities sit minutes from Barnes Park, the Kaysville Theater, and the shops and restaurants at Station Park in adjacent Farmington. Browse the active townhome listings below to see what's currently on the market and how each community is priced.

May 2026 · Kaysville market

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

Full Kaysville market report
Median sale
$549,290
21 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
5 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
98.4%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
70
active + pending

5 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About townhomes for sale in Kaysville.

What's the typical price range for a townhome in Kaysville?

Most Kaysville townhomes trade in the mid $300s to low $500s depending on size, garage count, and whether the project backs up to open space or the Denver & Rio Grande Western Rail Trail. Newer construction in the west side developments tends to sit at the higher end, while older attached product near Main Street comes in lower.

Which Kaysville neighborhoods have the most townhome inventory?

The largest concentrations are on the west side off Angel Street and 200 North, plus newer pockets near the Kaysville FrontRunner station. You'll also see smaller attached communities scattered near Mutton Hollow Road and along the corridor heading toward Fruit Heights.

Are HOA fees high in Kaysville townhome communities?

Monthly HOA dues typically run $150 to $275 and usually cover exterior maintenance, landscaping, snow removal, and sometimes water. Communities with pools or clubhouses sit at the upper end. Always pull the CC&Rs and recent meeting minutes before writing an offer.

How's the commute to Salt Lake or Hill Air Force Base from a Kaysville townhome?

Hill AFB is roughly 10 minutes north via I-15, and downtown Salt Lake is about 25 minutes off-peak. The Kaysville FrontRunner stop puts riders in downtown SLC in under 35 minutes without dealing with I-15 traffic, which is a real draw for townhome buyers who commute.

What school district serves Kaysville townhomes?

Kaysville is in Davis School District, which consistently posts strong test scores. Most townhomes feed into Kaysville, Snow Horse, or Endeavour elementary schools, then Centennial or Shoreline junior high, and Davis High School. Boundaries shift, so verify with the district for any specific address.

Do Kaysville townhomes usually come with two-car garages?

Newer builds from the last 10 years almost always include attached two-car garages, which matters during Wasatch Front winters. Older attached product from the 1990s and early 2000s sometimes has one-car garages or tandem layouts, so check the floor plan carefully if garage space is a priority.