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Mountain Green, Utah

Horse Properties for Sale in Mountain Green, Utah

Mountain Green is one of the few places within a 35-minute drive of Salt Lake where you can still keep horses on real acreage without the Park City price tag. The community sits in a narrow valley along I-84 between Weber Canyon and Morgan, tucked under the north face of the Wasatch with the Weber River running through it. Parcels here tend to run from one acre up to ten-plus, and Morgan County zoning is genuinely friendly to livestock — most lots over an acre allow horses outright, and pasture irrigation rights often convey with the property. That combination of commutable location, water, and usable flat-to-rolling ground is what keeps equestrian buyers focused on this stretch of Morgan County.

What separates horse properties in Mountain Green from comparable acreage elsewhere along the Wasatch Front is the riding access. Trails leave directly from many neighborhoods into the foothills toward Snowbasin and the Durst Mountain area, and the river corridor gives flatter options for conditioning rides. Winters are real — expect snow from December into March at roughly 5,000 feet of elevation — so well-built barns, frost-free hydrants, and covered arenas show up often in the listings worth touring. Inventory is usually tight, with anywhere from a handful to a couple dozen qualifying properties on the market at a time. Browse the active listings below to see which Mountain Green horse properties are currently available, and reach out when you want to walk fence lines, check water shares, or verify zoning on a specific parcel.

June 2026 · Mountain Green market

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

Full Mountain Green market report
Median sale
$863,500
4 closed in June 2026
Median DOM
55 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
94.9%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
23
active + pending

1 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About horse properties in Mountain Green.

How much land do most horse properties in Mountain Green sit on?

Most equestrian-friendly parcels here run from 1 to 5 acres, with a handful of larger spreads up Old Highway Road and along the foothills running 10 acres or more. Morgan County zoning in the Mountain Green area generally allows horses on lots of one acre or larger, though you should always verify the specific parcel's zoning and any HOA rules before writing an offer.

Is there public riding access near Mountain Green?

Yes. The Weber River corridor, the trails up into the Wasatch behind the valley, and connections toward Snowbasin and the East Canyon area give riders direct access from many properties. A number of homes back to open BLM or state land, which means you can ride out the gate rather than trailering.

What should I check on the water rights before buying a horse property here?

Mountain Green properties typically rely on a mix of culinary water from Mountain Green Water District and separate irrigation shares or a private well for pasture and stock water. Confirm how many shares convey, whether they're enough to irrigate your acreage, and whether stock water is included. Your agent should pull the water rights record from the Utah Division of Water Rights during due diligence.

How long is the commute from Mountain Green to Salt Lake or Ogden?

It's roughly 35 minutes to downtown Salt Lake via I-84 and I-80 through Parleys, and about 20-25 minutes to Ogden or Riverdale. That's why Mountain Green draws buyers who want acreage and horses without giving up a Wasatch Front job — it's one of the closer true horse communities to the SLC metro.

What do horse properties in Mountain Green typically cost?

Smaller homes on 1-2 acres with basic shelter and fencing generally start in the upper $700Ks to low $800Ks, while larger custom homes on 5+ acres with arenas, barns, and outbuildings frequently run $1.3M to $2.5M+. Inventory is thin, so pricing moves with what's actually listed at any given moment.

Will winters at this elevation be hard on horses and facilities?

Mountain Green sits around 5,000 feet and gets real winter — expect snow on the ground from December through March and overnight lows in the teens. Most established properties have heated waterers, enclosed run-ins or barns, and plowed lanes. Budget for hay storage and a tractor; both are standard equipment up here.