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Pleasant Grove, Utah

Homes with Solar Panels for Sale in Pleasant Grove, Utah

Pleasant Grove sits on the east bench of Utah County between Lindon and American Fork, with most neighborhoods looking straight up at Mount Timpanogos. That west-facing slope matters when you're shopping for a solar-equipped home: south and west roof exposures here pull strong production from spring through fall, and Utah County averages around 230 sunny days a year. Older neighborhoods like Grove Creek and Manila tend to have larger lots and simpler roof lines that work well for panel arrays, while newer builds in the foothills off 1100 North and the Battle Creek area were often pre-wired or installed with solar from day one. Rocky Mountain Power serves the city, and homes typically run on net billing rather than the older full net-metering structure, so understanding the interconnection date on a specific listing changes the math significantly.

Buyers shopping solar listings in Pleasant Grove tend to be families staying long-term — commuters to Silicon Slopes in Lehi, BYU faculty, and remote workers who run heavy home offices. Price points across the city generally run from the mid $500Ks for older ramblers up past $1.2M for newer custom homes near the mountain, and a paid-off solar system usually adds value rather than complicating financing. Leased systems and PPAs are a different conversation and worth flagging early with your agent. Browse the active listings below to see which Pleasant Grove homes currently have solar, and check the listing remarks for system size, ownership status, and the original install date.

May 2026 · Pleasant Grove market

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

Full Pleasant Grove market report
Median sale
$580,000
27 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
8 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
98.8%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
87
active + pending

2 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About homes with solar panels in Pleasant Grove.

Does solar actually pay off in Pleasant Grove's climate?

Yes, generally. Utah County gets roughly 230 sunny days a year, and summer production is strong enough to offset most cooling loads. Winter inversions and snow cover on panels do cut January and February output, so annual savings depend on system size and household usage rather than month-to-month parity.

How do I tell if the solar system is owned or leased?

Ask the listing agent for the original solar contract and any UCC filings against the property. Owned systems transfer with the home and typically add value; leased systems and PPAs require the buyer to qualify with the solar company and assume the remaining term, which can complicate closing if not addressed early.

What's the net metering situation with Rocky Mountain Power right now?

Rocky Mountain Power moved residential solar customers from full net metering to a net billing export credit structure several years ago. Homes interconnected under the older program may have been grandfathered for a set period, so the install date on a Pleasant Grove listing directly affects the credit rate the new owner inherits.

Will solar panels affect my mortgage or appraisal?

Owned, paid-off systems are usually treated as a value-add by appraisers, similar to a finished basement. Leased systems can be flagged by underwriters because the lease payment counts as a monthly obligation, and some lenders require the lease to be subordinated. Bring the solar paperwork to your lender before you go under contract.

Are there HOA restrictions on solar in Pleasant Grove neighborhoods?

Utah state law limits an HOA's ability to outright ban rooftop solar, but HOAs in newer Pleasant Grove subdivisions can still regulate placement and appearance. If a listing is in a community like The Ridge or Grove Creek Estates, request the CC&Rs and any architectural committee approvals from the seller before closing.

What roof orientation works best on Pleasant Grove homes?

South-facing roof planes produce the most year-round, with west exposures a close second for late-day summer production. Many homes on the east bench have good southern exposure because the lots step up the hillside. East-only roofs underperform, so check the array placement when reviewing photos or visiting the property.