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Laketown, Utah

Homes with RV Parking for Sale in Laketown, Utah

Laketown sits at the south end of Bear Lake at roughly 5,980 feet, and almost everyone who lives or vacations here owns something with wheels — a ski boat, a wakeboard tower rig, a side-by-side, a fifth wheel, or all of the above. That makes RV parking one of the most practical features a Laketown property can offer. Lots in town tend to run larger than what you'd see along the Wasatch Front, and many parcels on the outskirts toward Round Valley or up the Sweetwater bench give owners room for a dedicated gravel pad, a 30/50-amp hookup, or a full drive-through pull-thru next to the garage. Given that Bear Lake State Park's marina is about ten minutes north and the Raspberry Days crowds fill every commercial storage lot by June, having your rig at the house isn't a luxury — it's how you actually use the lake.

Buyers looking at RV-friendly homes in Laketown should pay attention to a few local realities: Rich County zoning is generally permissive about accessory parking, but HOA covenants in newer subdivisions like Sweetwater can be stricter, and winter snow load means any RV cover needs real engineering. Septic systems are the norm here, so a true RV dump connection is a nice-to-have rather than a given. Prices currently range from modest cabins in the $400s to lakeview homes north of $1.2M, and inventory turns fastest between April and July. Browse the active listings below to see which Laketown properties currently have the parking setup you need.

August 2025 · Laketown market

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

Full Laketown market report
Median sale
$1,087,500
2 closed in August 2025
Median DOM
171 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
91.1%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
1
active + pending

1 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About homes with rv parking in Laketown.

What counts as RV parking on a Laketown listing?

It varies widely. Some homes have a simple gravel or concrete pad alongside the driveway, others include a dedicated 14-foot-tall RV garage bay, and a few rural parcels offer full hookups with power, water, and a septic dump. The MLS remarks usually spell out which setup applies, but it's worth confirming amp service and clearance during showings.

Are there HOA or zoning rules in Laketown that restrict RV storage?

Rich County's general residential zoning is fairly RV-friendly, and most of Laketown proper has no HOA. However, planned communities along the Bear Lake shoreline and parts of Sweetwater do have CC&Rs that limit visible RV storage or require screening. Always pull the HOA docs before assuming you can park a 40-foot fifth wheel out front.

Can I get a full RV hookup at a Laketown home?

On larger lots outside the town core, yes — owners often install a 50-amp pedestal and tie into the home's septic for a dump connection. Inside town on smaller lots and shared septic systems, full hookups are less common. If a dump station matters to you, ask the listing agent directly rather than assuming.

Does RV parking add much to the price of a Laketown home?

It's less of a line-item premium and more of a tiebreaker. Two similar homes priced in the $600s will sell faster if one has a heated RV bay or a built-out pad. Dedicated RV garages with tall doors can add $40,000-$80,000 to comparable sales, depending on size and finish.

How does winter affect RV storage in Laketown?

Bear Lake Valley gets real winter — sustained cold, lake-effect snow, and snow loads that have collapsed plenty of carports over the years. Most full-time owners either pull the RV into a heated garage by November or use a freestanding metal cover built to the local snow load spec. Outdoor pads work fine in summer but plan for winterization.

When is the best time to shop for RV-friendly homes here?

Inventory peaks from late April through July, which is also when you can actually see the property without snow cover and test whether your rig fits the proposed parking spot. Fall buyers sometimes get better pricing as second-home owners decide not to carry a property through another winter.