Homes with Views for Sale in North Salt Lake, Utah
North Salt Lake sits on the eastern bench of Davis County, wedged between the Wasatch Front and the Great Salt Lake basin — a geography that almost guarantees elevated lots deliver serious scenery. Homes on the hillside streets above Eaglewood Golf Course or along the upper reaches of Orchard Drive frequently frame unobstructed views of the Salt Lake Valley, the Oquirrh Mountains to the west, and on clear days, the shimmering expanse of the Great Salt Lake itself. Because the city climbs sharply from valley floor to benchland, the difference of a single block in elevation can mean the difference between a standard backyard and a panoramic west-facing deck that catches every sunset. That elevation also keeps North Salt Lake slightly cooler in summer than downtown SLC — typically 5–8°F — which makes those outdoor living spaces genuinely usable from April through October.
From a practical standpoint, North Salt Lake is roughly 8 miles and 15 minutes from Salt Lake City International Airport and sits inside the Davis School District, consistently one of Utah's higher-rated districts. The I-15/US-89 corridor gives commuters fast access to both downtown Salt Lake and the tech employers clustered in Bountiful and Farmington. View homes here span a wide range — entry-level townhomes on the lower bench with partial valley views start around the mid-$400s, while custom single-family homes on premium ridge lots with full panoramic exposure can push past $900K. Because view lots are finite on the Wasatch bench, these properties tend to hold their value well when the broader market softens. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market.
May 2026 · North Salt Lake market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in North Salt Lake right now.
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Common questions
About homes with views in North Salt Lake.
What kind of views do North Salt Lake homes typically offer? ▾
Most view homes here look west across the Great Salt Lake and Antelope Island, or south down the Salt Lake Valley toward the downtown skyline. Bench-level properties in Eaglewood and the Foxboro hills also pick up Wasatch ridgeline views to the east. The mix of lake sunsets and city lights at night is the main draw.
Which North Salt Lake neighborhoods have the best view lots? ▾
Eaglewood is the premier address for elevated lots, with homes built into the foothills above the golf course pulling in valley and lake views. The Cherry Hill and Tunnel Springs benches also sit high enough for unobstructed sightlines, while parts of Foxboro on the north end catch lake and Antelope Island angles.
Do view homes in North Salt Lake cost significantly more? ▾
Yes — a comparable home on a view lot in Eaglewood or the upper benches typically runs $100K–$300K more than a similar floor plan on a flat interior lot. Premiums depend on whether the view is protected by topography or could be blocked by future construction below.
Does the inversion affect view properties in winter? ▾
It can. Davis County sits in the same airshed as Salt Lake, so January inversions sometimes leave valley homes under a haze layer. Higher bench homes above roughly 4,700 feet often sit above the inversion line on bad days, which is one reason elevated lots here command a premium.
How close are these homes to downtown Salt Lake and the airport? ▾
North Salt Lake is one of the closest-in view markets on the Wasatch Front. Downtown SLC is about 10–15 minutes south on I-15, and Salt Lake International Airport is roughly 12 minutes away. That commute access is a big part of why bench lots here hold value.
Are there HOAs or view protections in place? ▾
It varies by subdivision. Eaglewood and several newer hillside communities have HOAs with height and landscaping rules that help preserve sightlines, but protections are not universal. Always check the CC&Rs and look at the topography below the lot before assuming a view is permanent.