Horse Properties for Sale in Randlett, Utah
Randlett sits in the Uintah Basin about 20 minutes southwest of Roosevelt, on the Uintah and Ouray Reservation between the Duchesne and Green Rivers. This is open, rural country — sagebrush flats, irrigated hay ground, and big sky — where horse ownership is closer to the default lifestyle than a hobby. Lots here tend to run from a couple of acres up to working spreads of 20, 40, or more, and many parcels come with established water shares from the Uintah Indian Irrigation Project or local ditch companies, which is what makes pasture and alfalfa viable at this elevation (roughly 5,000 feet). Winters are cold and dry, summers hot, and the riding season out to the Book Cliffs, Tabby Mountain, and the Ashley National Forest is long.
Buyers shopping horse properties around Randlett typically want what the area actually delivers: room for a barn or loafing shed, a tack room, a round pen or arena, and direct access to BLM and tribal land for riding without trailering. Prices generally run well below Wasatch Front horse country — you can still find acreage with a modest home, outbuildings, and irrigation for what a quarter-acre lot costs in Lehi. Vernal is about 30 miles east for feed stores, large-animal vets, and the regional hospital, and Roosevelt covers most day-to-day needs. Browse the active listings below to see which Randlett-area horse properties are currently on the market, and reach out if you want help comparing water rights, outbuildings, or acreage between parcels.
August 2025 · Randlett market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Randlett right now.
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Common questions
About horse properties in Randlett.
How much acreage do horse properties in Randlett typically include? ▾
Most listings fall between 2 and 40 acres, with a meaningful share in the 5–20 acre range. Larger working ranches with hay ground and multiple pastures do come up periodically, especially along the Green River bottoms and out toward Ouray.
Do Randlett horse properties usually come with water rights? ▾
Many do, and it matters a lot at this elevation — without irrigation, pasture browns out by midsummer. Shares typically come from the Uintah Indian Irrigation Project or local ditch companies. Always verify the share count, delivery schedule, and whether rights transfer with the deed before writing an offer.
Is there public land nearby for riding? ▾
Yes. BLM ground, tribal land (with appropriate permits), and the Ashley National Forest to the north all offer thousands of miles of trail and dirt-road riding. Many owners can ride straight off their property without loading a trailer.
Where do I find a large-animal vet and feed near Randlett? ▾
Vernal, about 30 miles east, has the closest large-animal veterinary clinics and the Uintah Basin's main feed and tack suppliers. Roosevelt, 20 minutes north, also carries hay, grain, and basic farrier supplies.
How harsh are winters on horses in the Uintah Basin? ▾
Winters are cold — single digits at night are routine in January — but the basin is dry, so snow load is manageable compared to higher elevations. Most properties have loafing sheds or covered runs rather than fully enclosed barns, and frost-free hydrants are standard.
Are horse properties here cheaper than along the Wasatch Front? ▾
Significantly. Comparable acreage with a home, outbuildings, and irrigation in Randlett often lists for a fraction of what similar setups bring in Heber, Erda, or Eagle Mountain. The trade-off is distance — Salt Lake City is roughly a three-hour drive.