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Murray, Utah

55+ Community Homes for Sale in Murray, Utah

Murray sits right in the middle of the Salt Lake Valley, which makes it one of the more practical landing spots for active-adult buyers who want to stay close to family, medical care, and the airport without dealing with a long commute to anything. Intermountain Medical Center — one of the largest hospital campuses in the state — is right off State Street, and the TRAX Red Line runs through the city with stops at Murray Central and Fashion Place West, so downtown SLC and the U of U are a single train ride away. The 55+ communities here tend to be a mix of single-level patio homes, attached townhomes, and small condo developments, with HOAs that typically cover snow removal, landscaping, and exterior maintenance — the things most downsizers are trying to get off their plate.

Pricing in age-restricted Murray neighborhoods generally runs from the mid $300s for smaller condos up through the $700s for newer detached patio homes with two-car garages and finished basements. Buyers should expect HOA dues in the $200–$450/month range depending on what's covered. Murray Parkway, the Jordan River trail system, and Wheeler Historic Farm are all within a few minutes, and Fashion Place Mall and Costco are close enough to walk or take a short drive. Winters bring real snow — usually 50+ inches a season — so single-level floor plans and HOA-managed driveways are a genuine selling point, not just a marketing line. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently available in Murray's 55+ neighborhoods.

May 2026 · Murray market

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

Full Murray market report
Median sale
$495,250
42 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
10 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
99.1%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
149
active + pending

18 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About 55+ community homes in Murray.

Which 55+ communities exist in Murray?

Murray has a handful of age-restricted developments scattered around the city, including smaller condo and townhome projects near Vine Street and State Street, plus patio-home pockets closer to Murray Parkway. Inventory is usually thinner than in places like South Jordan or Lehi, so listings tend to move quickly when they hit the market.

What do HOA fees typically cover in these communities?

Most Murray 55+ HOAs cover exterior landscaping, snow removal from driveways and walks, common-area maintenance, and trash. Some include exterior building insurance and roof reserves, especially in townhome and condo projects. Expect monthly dues roughly between $200 and $450 depending on the community and what's bundled in.

Is at least one resident required to be 55, or both?

Under federal Housing for Older Persons rules, most communities require at least one occupant per home to be 55 or older, and typically no one under 18–19 living there full-time. Each HOA has its own CC&Rs, so it's worth reading the specific community's rules before writing an offer — a few are stricter.

How close are hospitals and medical care?

Intermountain Medical Center is in Murray itself, off 5300 South and State Street, and it's one of the largest hospital campuses in Utah with a full cardiac and cancer program. St. Mark's is about 10 minutes north in Millcreek, and the U of U hospital is roughly 20 minutes via I-15 or TRAX. Proximity to IMC is a big reason a lot of buyers pick Murray over outlying suburbs.

Are these homes mostly single-level?

Yes — most product built specifically for the 55+ market in Murray is single-level living, with the primary bedroom, laundry, and main living areas on one floor. Some patio homes add a finished basement for guests or storage, and townhome units occasionally have a loft, but ground-floor primaries are the norm.

How does Murray compare to age-restricted communities further south?

Murray trades the newer, larger master-planned feel of places like Daybreak's Garden Park or SunRiver in St. George for a more central, established location. You give up some amenities (big clubhouses, on-site pickleball complexes) but gain shorter drives to hospitals, the airport, family in other parts of the valley, and TRAX access. It's a better fit for buyers who want to stay plugged into the city.