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Price, Utah

Homes with Pools for Sale in Price, Utah

Price sits at roughly 5,600 feet in Carbon County, which means a pool here is a three-to-four-month proposition rather than a year-round amenity. Summers run hot and dry, with plenty of stretches in the 90s through July and August, so an in-ground or above-ground pool gets real use once school lets out. The trade-off is a winter that dips well below freezing, so any pool listing you look at needs a plowed-and-buttoned-up story: a solid cover, drained lines, and a heater or pump that's been winterized properly. Ask about that maintenance history before you get attached to a listing photo taken in July.

Because Price's housing stock leans toward older ranch and split-level homes built for coal-industry families in the mid-1900s, pools tend to show up on larger lots in neighborhoods like the east bench above Price City or out toward Wellington and Helper, where there's more yard to work with. Inventory with a pool is thin at any given time — this is a small market, and a backyard pool is still something of a rarity rather than a standard feature, so when one hits the MLS it's worth a quick look even if the rest of the house needs updating. Buyers often weigh a pool against the cost of running one this far from a major metro, since parts and pool service techs sometimes mean a drive to Price from Vernal or south to Green River. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market.

June 2026 · Price market

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

Full Price market report
Median sale
$425,000
6 closed in June 2026
Median DOM
60 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
97.7%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
89
active + pending

1 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About homes with pools in Price.

How many months a year can you realistically use a pool in Price?

Most owners get solid use from late May through early September, with shoulder weeks in April or October if the pool is heated. Price's high desert elevation means nights cool off fast even in mid-summer, and by October freezing temperatures are common, so the swimming season is shorter than in St. George or the Salt Lake valley.

Are pool homes hard to find in Price?

Yes — Price is a small market and a backyard pool isn't a common feature, so at any given time there may only be a handful of listings with one. When a pool home comes up, it's often on an older, larger lot on the east bench or in the Wellington and Helper areas rather than in newer subdivisions.

What should I check on a pool that's been winterized?

Ask for the winterization records and find out whether the lines were properly blown out and the heater serviced before the last freeze, since a cracked pipe or damaged pump from a hard freeze is an expensive repair. Also ask how long the current owner has run the pool each season, since a pool sitting idle for a year or two often needs a full re-balance and equipment check before it's usable.

Is it expensive to maintain a pool in Price compared to bigger Utah cities?

Chemicals and basic upkeep cost about the same anywhere, but pool service technicians and specialty parts are less concentrated here than along the Wasatch Front, so some owners handle their own maintenance or plan for a longer wait on repairs. Heating costs also matter more given the shorter swim season, so a gas or electric heater's efficiency is worth asking about.

Do pool homes in Price cost noticeably more than comparable homes without one?

A pool typically adds a modest premium in this market rather than a dramatic one, since Price's overall price points are lower than St. George or the Wasatch Front and pools aren't a strong local expectation. The bigger driver of price is usually lot size and home condition, with the pool itself acting more as a bonus feature than the main value driver.

Are above-ground or in-ground pools more common in Price listings?

You'll see a mix, but in-ground pools tend to show up on older, established properties while above-ground pools are more common as owner-added upgrades on newer or mid-century homes. Either way, ask about the age of the liner or shell and any resurfacing history, since Carbon County's freeze-thaw cycles can be tough on pool structures over time.