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Midvale, Utah

Homes with Pools for Sale in Midvale, Utah

Midvale sits right in the middle of the Salt Lake Valley, which means pool owners here get the full Wasatch Front summer — roughly 90 days a year above 90°F, dry heat, and long evenings that stay warm into September. A backyard pool in Midvale typically gets used from late May through mid-September, with the shoulder months handled by a heater or solar cover. Most pool homes in town are concentrated in the older East Midvale neighborhoods near Union Park and along the benches above 700 East, where lots are larger (often 0.20–0.35 acre) and there's actual room for a pool plus grass. Newer infill near Bingham Junction and the Jordan River corridor tends to have smaller yards, so in-ground pools there are rarer and command a premium.

Price-wise, a Midvale home with a pool generally runs $50,000–$100,000 above a comparable poolless property, depending on whether the pool is in-ground gunite, vinyl-liner, or above-ground, and whether it includes a heater, auto-cover, or saltwater system. Buyers should also factor in Salt Lake County's secondary water situation — most Midvale homes are on culinary water for irrigation and pool fill, so summer water bills climb noticeably. Proximity to I-15, the TRAX Blue Line, and a 20-minute drive to downtown SLC or the airport keeps demand steady from commuters who want a yard without leaving the valley. Browse the active listings below to see which pool homes are currently on the market in Midvale.

May 2026 · Midvale market

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

Full Midvale market report
Median sale
$474,900
47 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
26 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
99.7%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
125
active + pending

4 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About homes with pools in Midvale.

How long is the pool season in Midvale?

Realistically, late May through mid-September for unheated pools — about 14 to 16 weeks of comfortable swim weather. With a gas or heat-pump heater you can stretch that into early October, but the cost of heating in shoulder seasons climbs quickly given cool overnight temps in the valley.

What's the price premium for a Midvale home with a pool?

Most comparable sales show a $50,000 to $90,000 bump over a similar non-pool home in the same neighborhood. The range depends heavily on pool age, equipment condition, and whether it's a simple rectangle or a more elaborate setup with a spa, water features, or a pool house.

Are there water restrictions that affect pool owners?

Jordan Valley Water Conservancy District serves most of Midvale and has had voluntary and stage-level restrictions during recent drought years. Pool fills are generally still allowed, but topping off and backwashing schedules can fall under the same watering-day rules as lawn irrigation during stage 2 or higher.

Do most Midvale pool homes have heated pools?

No — heated pools are the exception, not the rule. Owners who do heat typically use natural gas heaters since gas lines are already run to the house. Solar covers are common as a low-cost way to add a few weeks to the season without a heater.

What should I check during inspection on a pool home here?

Get a dedicated pool inspection separate from the general home inspection. Key items: plaster or liner age, pump and filter age, heater function if equipped, electrical bonding, the fence and self-closing gate hardware required by Midvale City code, and any signs of structural settling around the deck.

Which Midvale neighborhoods have the most pool homes?

Older East Midvale streets between 7200 South and Fort Union Boulevard, plus the Union Park area, have the highest concentration. These were built when quarter-acre lots were standard, leaving room for a pool. Newer developments like Jordan Bluffs and parts of Bingham Junction rarely have them due to tighter lot dimensions.