Homes with RV Parking for Sale in North Salt Lake, Utah
North Salt Lake sits right where the Wasatch Front meets the Great Salt Lake, which means a lot of households here own the toys that go with Utah living — boats headed to Pineview or Bear Lake, side-by-sides for the Knolls, travel trailers for weekend runs to Moab or the Uintas. Homes with usable RV parking are in steady demand because the city's older neighborhoods east of Highway 89 often have narrow lots and tight side yards, while the newer benches above Eaglewood and Foxboro tend to have the extra-wide driveways, drive-through gates, and graveled side pads that actually fit a 30-foot fifth wheel. Knowing which pocket of town you're shopping in matters more than the listing photos suggest.
Lot grade is the other piece worth checking in person. North Salt Lake climbs hard from about 4,300 feet near Redwood Road up to 4,900+ on the Eaglewood bench, so a "side RV pad" on a steep lot may actually be unusable without serious leveling. Look for properties with rear-access lanes, flat corner lots in Foxboro, or the larger half-acre parcels in older Orchard Drive sections where deeper setbacks make backing in a trailer realistic. HOA rules also vary widely — some Eaglewood subdivisions prohibit visible RV storage entirely, while unincorporated pockets and older platted areas are far more permissive. Browse the active listings below to see which homes currently on the market actually have the room and access to park what you own.
May 2026 · North Salt Lake market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in North Salt Lake right now.
7 matching · page 1 of 1
Active listings
Prefer the map?
See all 7 homes with rv parking on a map
Pan around North Salt Lake and refine by drawing your own boundary.
Common questions
About homes with rv parking in North Salt Lake.
Does North Salt Lake city code restrict RV parking on residential property? ▾
North Salt Lake allows RV and trailer parking on private property, but there are rules about setbacks from the front property line, parking on hard surfaces in some zones, and not blocking sidewalks. Long-term parking in the public right-of-way is restricted. Always confirm the specific zoning on a property before closing — code does get enforced when neighbors complain.
Which North Salt Lake neighborhoods are most RV-friendly? ▾
Foxboro on the west side has wider lots and newer homes designed with three-car garages and side pads. Older sections along Orchard Drive and Center Street often have deep lots with rear access. The Eaglewood bench varies — some custom homes have huge concrete pads, but several subdivisions there have HOAs that prohibit visible RV storage.
Do most HOAs in North Salt Lake allow RVs parked at the home? ▾
It's mixed. Foxboro and several Eaglewood communities have CC&Rs that either ban visible RV parking or require it behind a six-foot fence. Non-HOA neighborhoods, which make up a large portion of the older city, generally only follow city code. Always pull the CC&Rs during due diligence rather than relying on what you see parked on the street.
What should I check on the lot itself before assuming an RV will fit? ▾
Measure the gate or side-yard width (12 feet is comfortable, under 10 gets tight), check the grade — North Salt Lake has serious slope in places — and look for low-hanging eaves, power drops, and tree branches. Also verify the surface: gravel is allowed in most zones, but some require concrete or pavers.
Is covered RV storage common on listings here? ▾
Detached RV garages and tall covered carports show up occasionally, mostly on larger parcels in the older parts of town and on a handful of custom builds on the bench. They command a noticeable price premium — often $30,000 to $75,000 over a comparable home with just an open pad — because they're hard to add later given lot constraints and city setback rules.
Are there public RV storage options nearby if a home doesn't have space? ▾
Yes. There are several storage facilities along Redwood Road and in Woods Cross and Bountiful within a 10-minute drive, with both open and covered spots. Monthly rates typically run $50 to $150 depending on size and coverage, which is worth factoring in if a home you love doesn't quite have the room.