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Millcreek, Utah

New Construction Homes for Sale in Millcreek, Utah

New construction in Millcreek looks different than it does in places like Herriman or Daybreak. Millcreek is a built-out, mature city wedged between Salt Lake City and Holladay, so most new builds here are infill projects — tear-downs on older quarter-acre lots along streets like 3300 South and 3900 South, small townhome and brownstone developments near the new Millcreek Common, and occasional luxury rebuilds in the Olympus Cove and Mount Olympus foothills. You won't see 200-home master-planned subdivisions because the land simply isn't there. What you will see are higher-density projects close to the I-215 corridor and custom single-family rebuilds on existing lots where the original 1950s rambler has been scraped.

Pricing reflects that scarcity. Newly built townhomes near Millcreek City Hall and the Common typically run in the high $500Ks to mid $700Ks, while custom single-family new construction up against the Wasatch foothills regularly crosses $1.5M and climbs from there with a view lot. Buyers gravitate here for the 15-minute commute to downtown Salt Lake, easy access to Millcreek Canyon trailheads, and Granite School District boundaries. Build timelines on infill lots tend to run 10–14 months once permits clear, and Millcreek's planning department has gotten stricter about height, setbacks, and tree preservation since the city incorporated in 2016. Browse the active listings below to see what builders and custom projects are currently on the market.

May 2026 · Millcreek market

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

Full Millcreek market report
Median sale
$625,000
34 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
10 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
100.0%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
137
active + pending

29 matching · page 2 of 2

Active listings

Common questions

About new construction homes in Millcreek.

What kind of new construction is actually available in Millcreek?

Mostly infill — single-lot tear-downs and rebuilds, small townhome clusters of 6 to 30 units, and the occasional brownstone or condo project near Millcreek Common. Large tract subdivisions don't exist here because the city has been fully developed since the 1970s. If you want a brand-new home on a half-acre, you're usually buying an older home, demolishing it, and building custom.

How much should I budget for a new build in Millcreek?

New townhomes near the Millcreek Common and along Highland Drive generally list in the $550K–$750K range. Detached new construction on a standard lot starts around $1.1M, and custom homes in Olympus Cove or with foothill views routinely sell in the $1.8M–$3M+ range. Lot acquisition alone in the foothills can run $500K–$900K before you build.

Which school district covers new construction in Millcreek?

Granite School District serves all of Millcreek. Common feeder patterns include Upland Terrace, Oakridge, and Canyon Rim elementaries into Evergreen or Churchill Junior High, then Skyline or Olympus High. School boundaries vary by exact address, so confirm with the district before writing an offer based on a specific school.

How long does it take to build on an infill lot here?

Plan on 10–14 months from closing on the lot to a finished home, sometimes longer. Millcreek's planning department reviews setbacks, height limits, tree preservation, and design standards, and demolition permits add a few extra weeks up front. Working with a builder who has done recent projects inside city limits saves real time.

Are there HOA fees on new Millcreek townhomes?

Yes, almost always. Townhome and brownstone projects typically run $200–$400 per month covering exterior maintenance, landscaping, snow removal, and sometimes water. Detached new construction on a private lot has no HOA unless it's part of a small pocket development with shared driveways or common space.

Can I find new construction within walking distance of Millcreek Common?

Yes — the area around 1300 East and 3300 South has seen the most recent vertical development, including condos, townhomes, and mixed-use projects tied to the Common, the new city hall, and the ice ribbon. These tend to sell quickly because they're the only walkable new builds in the city.