New Construction Homes for Sale in Park City, Utah
New construction in Park City covers a wide spectrum, from ski-in/ski-out condos at Canyons Village and Empire Pass to single-family builds in Promontory, Glenwild, Silver Creek, and the Jordanelle benches above Deer Valley East Village. Builders here have to design for serious elevation — most of Park City sits between 6,500 and 8,000 feet — which means heated driveways, snow-shedding rooflines, triple-pane glazing, and HRV systems are standard rather than upgrade items. Expect to see ICF foundations, in-floor radiant heat, and mudrooms sized for ski gear and dog washing stations. Price points run from roughly $1.5M for newer Jordanelle townhomes up past $15M for custom Deer Crest and Empire Pass builds, with most production-style new homes in Silver Creek and the Jordanelle area landing in the $2M–$4M range.
Timing matters more here than in most Utah markets. Park City's short building season (frost typically holds construction crews back until May, and finish work pushes into October) means inventory of truly move-in-ready new homes is thin, and pre-sale contracts on lots can stretch 14–20 months to completion. Nightly rental zoning varies block by block — Canyons Village and parts of Deer Valley allow it, most of Old Town and Park Meadows do not — so verify use before writing an offer if rental income is part of the math. Browse the active new-construction listings below to see what's currently available and what's still under contract with builders.
May 2026 · Park City market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Park City right now.
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Common questions
About new construction homes in Park City.
Which Park City neighborhoods have the most new construction right now? ▾
The heaviest new-build activity is around the Jordanelle Reservoir — Deer Valley East Village, Hideout, and the Mayflower development — along with Promontory, Silver Creek, and Canyons Village. Old Town and Park Meadows see scattered teardown-rebuilds rather than tract development because the lots are largely built out.
Do new homes in Park City allow nightly rentals? ▾
It depends entirely on the zoning of the specific parcel. Canyons Village, parts of Deer Valley, Hideout, and most of the Jordanelle resort areas permit nightly rentals, while Promontory, Glenwild, Park Meadows, and most of Old Town do not. Always confirm with the HOA and municipality before assuming rental income.
How long does it take to build a custom home in Park City? ▾
Plan on 16–24 months from groundbreak to certificate of occupancy for a custom build, longer if you're at high elevation in Deer Crest or Empire Pass. The frozen-ground window from roughly November through April limits foundation and exterior work, which is the main driver of those timelines.
What's the price range for new construction in Park City? ▾
Newer Jordanelle-area townhomes and condos start around $1.5M, single-family production homes in Silver Creek and Hideout run $2M–$4M, Promontory custom builds typically land $4M–$8M, and Empire Pass or Deer Crest ski-in/ski-out customs regularly clear $10M–$20M.
Are builders offering rate buydowns or incentives in Park City? ▾
Yes, particularly on completed spec homes that have been sitting. The most common incentives right now are 2-1 rate buydowns, closing cost credits, and design-center allowances. Custom and pre-sale contracts rarely include rate concessions since the builder isn't carrying the loan.
What features are standard on new Park City homes that aren't standard elsewhere in Utah? ▾
Heated driveways and walkways, snow-melt systems on key roof valleys, radiant in-floor heat, oversized mudrooms, ski/boot storage rooms, and high-efficiency mechanical with HRV or ERV ventilation. Triple-pane windows and spray-foam envelopes are also typical because of the elevation and 20-below winter nights.
How does altitude affect new home construction here? ▾
At 6,500–8,000 feet, builders specify higher snow-load roof structures (typically 90–150 psf depending on location), larger heating systems, and appliances rated for altitude. Gas fireplaces and water heaters often need high-altitude orifice kits, and concrete cure times run longer in the shoulder seasons.