Luxury Homes for Sale in Milford, Utah
Milford is a working town of about 1,400 people in Beaver County, sitting in the high desert between the Mineral Mountains and the Escalante Desert. The luxury end of the market here looks nothing like Park City or St. George — at this price point buyers are generally purchasing acreage, a custom-built ranch house, or a turnkey equestrian setup rather than a polished subdivision home. Geothermal and wind energy jobs at Blundell and the Milford Wind Corridor have brought steady professional money into the area, and a handful of ranchers and out-of-state buyers have pushed the top of the market past the million-dollar mark on larger parcels with water rights.
Expect homes in this tier to come with real land — 5 to 160 acres is common — plus shops, barns, irrigation shares, and frequently a secondary dwelling or guest quarters. The trade-off for the privacy and elbow room is distance: Cedar City is about 55 minutes south, St. George is just under two hours, and Salt Lake City is roughly 200 miles north. Buyers who land here usually want that buffer. Climate is high-desert, with cold winters, dry summers, and the dark skies that make this corner of Utah popular with astronomy buyers. Inventory at the upper end moves slowly, so the listings worth watching tend to stay available long enough to tour properly. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market.
April 2026 · Milford market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Milford right now.
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Active listings
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Common questions
About luxury homes in Milford.
What counts as a luxury home in Milford? ▾
Milford is a small Beaver County town where most homes trade well under $400K, so the luxury tier here usually starts around $600K and runs into seven figures for larger acreage parcels. At this price point buyers are typically getting a custom build, a working ranch, or a substantial land package rather than a tract home with upgrades.
Why would someone buy a high-end property in Milford specifically? ▾
The draws are land, privacy, and proximity to the geothermal and wind energy corridor plus quick access to the Tushar Mountains and Mineral Mountains. Buyers tend to be ranchers, recreation-focused families wanting OHV and hunting access, or remote workers who want acreage without the price tag of Heber or Kamas.
Do luxury listings here usually include acreage or water rights? ▾
Most do. Sub-acre luxury lots are rare in Milford — the upper end of the market is dominated by 5 to 160+ acre parcels, often with irrigation shares, well rights, or grazing allotments attached. Verify water rights through the Utah Division of Water Rights before writing an offer.
How is financing handled on rural high-end properties? ▾
Conventional jumbo loans work for straight residential, but parcels with significant ag use or outbuildings often need a Farm Credit West or USDA-style ag loan. Appraisals can take longer because comps are thin in Beaver County, so build extra time into your contract.
What's the climate and elevation like for year-round living? ▾
Milford sits around 4,960 feet with cold winters, hot dry summers, and roughly 250 sunny days a year. Snowfall is moderate compared to the Wasatch Back, and the high desert setting means low humidity and big temperature swings between day and night.
How long do upper-tier homes typically sit on the market? ▾
Days on market for luxury Milford properties runs longer than the Wasatch Front — often 90 to 200+ days — simply because the buyer pool is smaller. That works in a buyer's favor on price negotiation, especially on properties that have been listed through a full season.