Get App
Call 801-410-7917

Midway, Utah

Homes with Views for Sale in Midway, Utah

Midway sits in the Heber Valley at roughly 5,600 feet, ringed by Mount Timpanogos to the south, the Wasatch Back to the east, and the rolling pasture land that gives the town its Swiss-village character. View homes here aren't a single thing — a lot above Interlaken looks straight down the valley to Deer Creek Reservoir, a home on the Memorial Hill benches frames Timpanogos through the front windows, and a parcel along the Soldier Hollow golf corridor trades peaks for fairways and open space. Because so much of the surrounding ground is state park, agricultural, or under conservation easement, a meaningful share of these sightlines are protected from future build-out, which matters when you're paying a premium for what's outside the glass.

Buyers shopping view properties in Midway tend to fall into two camps: full-time residents who want Wasatch scenery without the Park City price tag and traffic, and second-home owners using the valley as a basecamp for Deer Valley, Soldier Hollow Nordic skiing, and summer at Jordanelle and Deer Creek. Price points run wide — entry-level view homes start in the high $800Ks, while custom builds on the bench can clear $4M. Lot orientation, snow load, driveway grade, and whether the view is truly protected all matter more here than in flatter markets, so read the plats carefully. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market.

May 2026 · Midway market

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

Full Midway market report
Median sale
$966,500
9 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
12 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
96.0%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
105
active + pending

124 matching · page 2 of 6

Active listings

Prefer the map?

See all 124 homes with views on a map

Pan around Midway and refine by drawing your own boundary.

🗺 Open map view

Common questions

About homes with views in Midway.

What kinds of views are most common in Midway?

Mount Timpanogos to the south is the headline view, with the Wasatch Back ridgeline running east and Deer Creek Reservoir visible from elevated lots on the west side. Homes up against Memorial Hill or in the benches above Interlaken pick up valley views across the Heber Valley pastures. Golf course frontage on Soldier Hollow and Crater Springs also counts as a view for a lot of buyers here.

Do view homes in Midway carry a noticeable price premium?

Yes. A Timpanogos-facing lot or a parcel on the higher benches typically runs 15-30% above a comparable home on an interior street, and protected views (where open space or agricultural easements sit between you and the mountain) push higher. Lots that back to pasture land in the valley floor are some of the most competitive listings in town.

Are mountain views protected from future development?

Some are, some aren't. Midway has strong dark-sky and rural-character ordinances, and a lot of the surrounding ground is in agricultural protection or owned by Wasatch Mountain State Park, which limits what can be built. Still, always check the parcel maps and HOA docs — a few subdivisions have height restrictions specifically to preserve sightlines, others don't.

How does winter affect view properties here?

Midway sits at about 5,600 feet and gets real winter — snow on the ground from December through March is normal. South- and west-facing view lots clear faster and stay warmer, while north-facing slopes hold snow longer but give you a front-row seat to Timpanogos in full white. Heated driveways are common on the steeper bench properties.

Is Midway a good fit for a second home or short-term rental?

Many view homes in Midway are second residences for Salt Lake and out-of-state owners drawn to Soldier Hollow, Deer Valley (about 20 minutes over the hill), and the Homestead Crater. Short-term rental rules vary by subdivision — places like Interlaken and Casperson Hollow have specific nightly-rental allowances, while much of the older town grid does not. Confirm before you write an offer.

How far is Midway from Salt Lake City and the airport?

About 55 miles to SLC International, typically 60-75 minutes depending on Parley's Canyon traffic. Park City is 20 minutes via Highway 248, and Provo is about 45 minutes down Provo Canyon. That access is a big reason view buyers pick Midway over more remote Wasatch Back options.