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Ogden, Utah

Homes with Views for Sale in Ogden, Utah

Ogden sits at the foot of the Wasatch Range where the mountains aren't a distant backdrop — they're right there, rising sharply above the valley floor. Homes with views in Ogden tend to fall into a few distinct pockets: the east bench neighborhoods climbing toward Ogden Canyon, the hillside streets above Harrison Boulevard, and the newer developments along the northern benches near Liberty and Plain City Road. From these elevations, buyers get unobstructed sightlines across the Great Salt Lake basin to the west and dramatic Wasatch peaks — including Ben Lomond at 9,712 feet — directly to the east. That dual-exposure opportunity is genuinely rare along the Wasatch Front, where most valley cities give you one or the other. Median home prices in Ogden run considerably lower than Salt Lake City or Park City, meaning you can often land a home with legitimate panoramic views in the $400,000–$600,000 range — a price point that would buy you a view-free townhouse in some neighboring markets.

The practical case for a view home in Ogden goes beyond aesthetics. Weber County averages around 240 sunny days per year, so those mountain and valley vistas are on display most of the time — not just on clear summer afternoons. Ogden's proximity to Snowbasin, Powder Mountain, and Nordic Valley means buyers who prioritize views are often the same buyers who want quick access to ski terrain, and east-bench homes can put you at a resort base in 20–30 minutes. Commuters to Salt Lake City are roughly 35 miles from downtown SLC, with FrontRunner rail service making that trip car-free on weekdays. If you want a view home that also connects to real mountain recreation and urban employment, Ogden delivers that combination at a price point few Utah cities can match. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market.

May 2026 · Ogden market

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

Full Ogden market report
Median sale
$385,000
77 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
12 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
98.6%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
370
active + pending

289 matching · page 10 of 13

Active listings

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Common questions

About homes with views in Ogden.

What kinds of views do Ogden homes typically have?

The two big ones are Wasatch mountain views (Ben Lomond, Mount Ogden, Malan's Peak) and valley views looking west toward the Great Salt Lake and Antelope Island. East-bench neighborhoods tend to capture the mountains right out the back windows, while homes higher on the foothills above Harrison Boulevard often get both ranges plus city lights at night.

Which Ogden neighborhoods are known for the best views?

Shadow Valley, Eastwood, Mount Ogden Estates, and the streets climbing east off Harrison toward 36th and 46th are the classic view pockets. North Ogden Divide homes look straight at Ben Lomond, and parts of the Ogden Country Club area pick up valley and lake sunsets. Each has a different price point and lot character.

Do view homes in Ogden cost significantly more?

Yes, expect a meaningful premium — often 10–25% over a comparable home without the sightline, more if it's an unobstructed mountain view from a primary living space. The premium is steepest for homes where the view can't be built out by future construction below.

Are wildfire and slope risks something to check on east-bench view lots?

Worth paying attention to. Homes backing the foothills sit in the wildland-urban interface, so insurers may ask about defensible space, roof material, and vegetation. A few streets also have steeper slopes that affect foundation type and drainage — a local inspector who knows the bench is useful.

Will my view stay protected over time?

It depends on what's below you. Lots backed by Forest Service land, the Bonneville Shoreline Trail corridor, or a golf course tend to keep their sightlines. Homes looking over private parcels or infill-zoned land are more vulnerable, so check the zoning and any planned developments before writing an offer.

How is winter sun and snow on view properties up the bench?

Ogden's east bench picks up real lake-effect snow and can be 5–10 degrees cooler than downtown in winter. South-facing view homes melt off driveways faster; north-facing ones hold snow longer. The trade-off is worth it for most buyers — those same slopes mean Snowbasin and Powder Mountain are 20–40 minutes away.